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Linda Musgrove, the TradeShow Teacher authored the "Complete Idiots Guide to Trade Shows" Biography Media
Trade Show Resources
(Entrepreneur)
Top 3 “Detention Worthy” Plant and Floral Disasters to Avoid
Top 10 "Best of Show" Booths from EXHIBITOR 2008
Exhibit City News columnist selected to author "Complete Idiot's Guide to Trade Shows"
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Hello class. For this TradeShow Teacher lesson I decided to share with you some of the lessons I have learned over the years. Some of them I learned the hard way by making mistakes, others I picked up through guidance by professionals in the field. 7.) If you use a paper based lead system, have pens for prospects to answer questions about product needs and fill in contact information. Also have staplers and extra staples available to staple business cards to the form. 8.) One layer of floor padding is great, but don’t go overboard. Having two or more layers will give your booth floor the feel of a sandy beach and your booth staffer’s feet and legs will feel as tired as they would after a day walking in sand at the beach. 9.) Place your messaging on inexpensive banners, not on your large display. You may exhibit at a variety of shows with different target audiences where you need different messages to reach different prospects with different needs. This enables you to easily adjust messaging without the expensive cost of replacing your main display. 11.) Sometimes booth staffers, especially the ones that consider themselves veterans may be a little opposed to the idea of booth staff training. Ask if they can help you by training and mentoring new staffers. This usually appeases them and makes them happier to participate. 12.) With the combination of personalities assembled for booth duty hours, you should consider having these booth staffers always work the same shifts and learn how to work the booth as a team. 13.) Conversation Cheat Sheets: Create a pocket sized conversation cheat sheet for your trade show team, so they have an easy way to look up and memorize the top phrases. 16.) Always submit for a Best-of-Show award when available. Many companies don’t bother submitting, this increases your odds of winning an award at that show. 17.) For tracking competitor activities, including when they will be exhibiting; Google Alerts is a great tool to use for receiving automated updates. 18.) Every booth staff member should have time to check in with the office and answer important e-mails. Doing this in the booth during show hours however is not the place to do it. Ban cell phone and PDA usage on the show floor as much as possible. 19.) Exhibit halls are a great place to learn more about your competition and their marketing activities. Send someone who looks like a normal attendee to gather information. 20.) You might see marketing approaches that work well observing your competitors. Try to stay away from copying them. Doing so will make you like a follower, rather than a leader in the eyes of your common prospects. 21.) It’s OK for things to go wrong as long as you learn from them and don’t repeat those mistakes. 22.) Adding a kiosk or two near the aisles with a presentation running will give you a closer presence to anyone walking by. 23.) Consider displays that are light in weight, you will save money on shipping and material handling fees. 24.) If you are having a display custom built, ask if it can be built in a way that you can easily use components to assemble a a smaller sized booth. 27.) Make sure to remove old labels and clearly label all boxes and creates with the address you are shipping to. Place multiple labels on several sides of the crate. 28.) Having a check list of booth items and which container they belong in. This helps to pack the correct items into each box and manage supplies. 29.) Never use automated lead follow up or automated mailings on media contacts. They get way more information than they care for and anything you do should be personalized and specific to the media contact’s preferences. Linda Musgrove is President of the Trade Show Training firm, TradeShow Teacher. She focuses on significantly improving Trade Show Results through Products offered on the TradeShow Teacher website and strategic, customized Trade Show Training for individuals, departments or entire teams. Musgrove presents goal based Trade Show, Marketing and Networking Seminars at Industry Conferences and creates customized training programs for Trade Show Producers to offer exhibitors. She authored "The Complete Idiots Guide to Trade Shows", as well as a Trade Show Training Manual titled "Trade Show Training for Increased ROI" and writes columns for a variety of Trade Show industry publications. To learn more, and sign up for the FREE Trade Show Tactics Newsletter visit http://www.tsteacher.com CONTACT ME TODAY I I I I I I |
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