Thursday, February 28, 2008

Using Creativity to Maximize Your Trade Show ROI

Those of us who work in or with corporate marcom departments know that the first six months of each year are trade show season. Whether it be Mobile World Congress, CeBIT, InfoSecurity or any other of the dozens "must exhibit" events, companies will spend huge amounts of energy and budget on these important industry showcases. Naturally, if you’re going to allocate the resources, you will definitely want to maximize your ROI in terms of sales leads and PR exposure.

Without discounting the role of the marcom writer in this effort (this is a copywriting blog after all), the writer’s contribution here is marginal when it comes to the actual success or failure of the show. Concept and design are the keys to success – your booth has got to stand out from the hundreds of others. Unless you're a Microsoft, budget limitations mean you can't be bigger or louder than the giants, so you've got to be smarter and more creative.

Here's a great example from an Internet security company I worked for a number of years ago. We sold security appliances and our standard modus operandi for major trade shows was to set up a booth with a few demo stations (each one demoing a different appliance), a plasma screen with the latest product video, and an attractive back wall with images of our appliances and posters listing the benefits for our enterprise and SMB customers. Naturally, we also had stands bursting at the seams with our latest collaterals.

While this was all done very professionally, in terms of concept it was no different from our competitors who had much larger budgets – i.e., they had larger booths, more advantageous hall locations, and better giveaways. Suffice it to say we never really came away with the traffic, leads and PR value that we had hoped for.

Then, one year we decided to be different. Instead of the product-oriented, "hard sell" approach, we turned our booth into an "Internet threats museum" which provided a graphic timeline, examples and descriptions of the different types of security threats discovered in the 12 months since the last trade show. Demo stations showing how the various threats actually work were manned by our security researchers, rather than salespersons. At the end of the "tour" each visitor received a white paper with in-depth explanations of the year's major security trends, rather than a product brochure. The feedback we received was tremendous, with customers and prospects applauding us for actually providing them with educational value, and then asking us (drum roll, please) how we solve these types of challenges.

So, when you start thinking about your next big trade show, don't be afraid to be different. Give your potential customers an experience they will remember and value. They will reward you with results.

Add to del.icio.us

2 comments:

Unknown said...

Hi David,
My name is Uriah from Oasis PR. What a great post about being creative at trade shows. As someone who 'competes' against trade shows to increase my share of my clients marketing budget, I found that most clients are indeed dissappointed by trade show results, unless they're a new company making a debut appearance. I do have one client that swears by trade shows, but not by taking booth space but instead working the halls. Of course, you need a certain personality and the right amount of contacts to pull that off. Great start on your blog!
Uriah

David Margolius said...

Hi Uriah -

The idea of competing for marketing budget is a very interesting angle indeed. Not a bad idea for a new post?

Anyway, I truly thank you for your words of encouragement to a new blogger.

Please visit again soon (and tell your friends).

David