Home

Sponsorship: A Key to Powerful Marketing

1

2007 Education Report

2008 Education Schedule

2008 Operating Council

3 Airlines Shut Down in One Week

3.15.06 Thoughts

3.15.06 TSEA Tips

5.1.07 News

4.15.08, Bits From Bob

Become a Speaker at TS2 2008 – THE Industry Event for Exhibit & Event Professionals

FREEMAN LAUNCHES CUSTOMER TRAINING PROGRAM FOR PART-TIME SHOW SITE STAFF

Krisam Group Announces Ecomomic Stimulus Plan for Meeting Planners

TSEA MEMBERS ONLY

Aaron Bludworth Joins GES as Vice President of Corporate Events

After The Show: Self-Analysis, A Critical Component to Improve Performance

April 1 Bits From Bob

April 1 Industry News

April 1 New Members

April 1 Thoughts from the Corner Office

April 1 TSEA Tips

April 2: TSEA Open House

Are You Throwing Money Away?

Begin at The Beginning: Three Secrets for Tradeshow Success

Best Booth at Expo! Expo!: ARI

Bits From Bob 5.1.07

Bits from Bob, Aug. 1, 2007

Bits from Bob, December 17, 2008

Bits from Bob, Feb. 1, 2008

Bits from Bob, Jan. 4, 2008

Bits From Bob, July 1, 2007

Bits From Bob, June 1, 2007

Bits from Bob, Mar. 3, 2008

Bits From Bob, November, 2007

Bits From Bob, October 1, 2007

Bits from Bob, September 1, 2007

Bits from Bob: May 1, 2008

Boothsmanship is Dead: "Preparedness" Reigns Supreme

Canon Communications Acquires Pharmapack

Carnival Refunds $40 Million

Chicago Convention & Tourism Bureau Unveils Online Video Marketing Tool for Customers

Cleveland’s I-X Center Expansion Completed in Record Time; Fed Ex Kinko’s Opens Three Gigs in Vegas

Creating Customer Evangelists

Eight Effortless Exercises to Improve Trade show Performance

Elaine Cohen Named Finalist in Stevie Awards for Women in Business

Emap To Sell Events Division for $1.97 Billion

ENK International to Acquire WSA Global Holdings LLC

Exhibiting the Easy Way

Exhibition Industry Revenue Grows 11.3 Percent in Second Quarter of 2007

Fairmont and WWF Join Forces to Address Climate Change

Four Generations In the Marketplace: What This Means For You

Freeman Announces Management Changes

Freeman Recycles 25 Million Square Feet of Used Carpet

Gaining Corporate Support

GES® Acquires Ethnometrics Business

Good Shows in Bad Times: Exhibiting When Your Industry is in Crisis

Great Connection Weekend: The Master's Retreat

Greenhill SAVP Completes Investment in BDMetrics, Inc.

Help Wanted!

Hey, You - Exhibitor Manners at a Trade Show

Hortec 2008 Postponed; Food Tec Middle East and Food + Hospitality Middle East Rescheduled

Hot Button Exhibiting

How to Avoid Eating Your Words: 10 Essentials for Networking at Tradeshows and Events

How to Avoid Eating Your Words: Ten Essentials for Networking at Tradeshows and Events

How to Stand Out on the Job and in the Booth

Hyatt Meetings Take Two Offer

Ian Twentey Named Experient Eastern Region Senior Vice President

iBAHN and IAEE Services, Inc. Launch World-Class Converged Network

Industry Expert Harris Schanhaut is Available for Hire

Industry News, August 15, 2007

Industry News, July 7, 2007

Industry News, June 15, 2007

Industry News, Mar. 3, 2007

It's Not What You Say, It's How You Say It: Body Language at Tradeshows

ITN International Scores Judy Fairbanks as Vice President of Marketing

JetBlue Now Offering Refundable Fares

Jones Joins 3D Exhibits as Sr. VP, Client Results Strategist

Las Vegas Sands Completes Initial Funding for Singapore's Marina Bay Sands

Learn More About Your TSEAConnect

Mack Brooks Exhibitions Announces the Acquisition of the International Converting Exhibition (ICE) Series

Meeting Planners Rate Toronto Top Canadian City

Member-of-the-Month, Bob Dallmeyer

National Capitol Area Chapter Launched

New Washington D.C. Chapter to Hold First Meeting January 28

News, April 16, 2007

News, May 15, 2007

Nick’s Cove & Cottages Announces Events Space

October's Webinar: Your Booth Staff and the Four Levels Of Proficiency

Open Skies: Deal is Sealed Between United States and EU

PCMA Names Mark Holmes New Chief Financial Officer

Penton Media Reorganizes

Reed Exhibitions in the News

Remaining Relevant: Tracking Trends for More Effective Exhibiting

Revenues Projected to Rise

Sandra Pizzarusso Joins Impact Unlimited as Director of Meetings and Events

Secrets to Increasing Off-Site Meeting Productivity

Sheraton and Four Points by Sheraton Hotels Go Smoke-Free

Strategic Acquisition in Fast-growing Dubai Market

The Six "P"s of Marketing?!

The A-Zs of Exhibiting Overseas

The Nielsen Company Names Greg Farrar President of Nielsen Business Media

The Power of Asking Questions: 7 Strategies to Discovering what Your Prospects Really Want

The Tradeshow Curse

The Virtual Trade Show: The Top Four Things You Need To Know

The Wearing of the Green: Exhibiting for the Environmentally-Conscious Audience

Thoughts From the Corner Office

Thoughts from the Corner Office 5.1.07

Thoughts From the Corner Office, April 1, 2008

Thoughts from the Corner Office, April 15, 2008

Thoughts from the Corner Office, April 16, 2007

Thoughts from the Corner Office, Aug. 1, 2007

Thoughts From the Corner Office, August 15, 2007

Thoughts From the Corner Office, Dec. 3, 2007

Thoughts from the Corner Office, December 18, 2007

Thoughts from the Corner Office, Feb. 1, 2008

Thoughts From the Corner Office, Feb. 20, 2008

Thoughts from the Corner Office, Jan. 16, 2008

Thoughts from the Corner Office, Jan. 4, 2007

Thoughts From the Corner Office, July 16, 2007

Thoughts From the Corner Office, June 1, 2006

Thoughts From the Corner Office, June 15, 2007

Thoughts from the Corner Office, Mar. 3, 2008

Thoughts From the Corner Office, May 1, 2008

Thoughts From the Corner Office, May 15, 2007

Thoughts From the Corner Office, Nov. 1, 2007

Thoughts from the Corner Office, Nov. 16, 2007

Torch Passed to Next Generation at Hargrove, Inc.

Trump International Hotel & Tower Chicago Debuted January 30

TSEA at Expo! Expo! Dec. 10-12

TSEA Connect Book Club: Stimulating Conversation Underway!

TSEA Members: New Discount Affiliation with FCm Travel Solutions

TSEA New Members, Aug.1, 2007

TSEA Tips 5.1.07

TSEA Tips, April 16, 2007

TSEA Tips: The Scent of a Show

TSEA to Exhibit at Exhibitor 2008

TSEA's Career Center

TSEAConnect: the ONLY Online Community of Its Kind

TSNN.com Reports Dramatic Increase in Event Interest in 2008's First Quarter

Turn Your Team Around: Seven Strategies to Transform Trade Show Performance

Valera Global Joins Chicago Climate Exchange, Commits to Offset 100 Percent of Greenhouse Gas Emissions

Windy City Chapter Events for 2008

Windy City Logo Contest

Windy City News
Begin at The Beginning: Three Secrets for Tradeshow Success
You never get a second chance to make a first impression. It's a saying so true that it has become cliché--a phrase used by suit salesmen and purveyors of shampoo--but it's a saying that should serve as a motto for your booth staff.

A trade show is a non-stop series of beginnings. Every moment--from the second the doors open until they blink the lights signaling the end of the day--is a moment where you could be meeting customers for the very first time.

If all goes well, these crucial first moments will launch a mutually profitable relationship that will last for years. On the other hand, if the impression you create is not so positive, you've kissed a lifetime's worth of business goodbye.

Beginning well's means you're half done. Once you've established a rapport with the client, once that positive foundation has been laid, the hard work of negotiating a deal and closing a sale becomes so much easier. Here's what you need to know to create a favorable first impression time and time again, over the long hours and days that you'll be at the trade show.

What's for sale here?

Your company might make computers or luxury automobiles. You might sell scrub brushes. You could retail the finest gems found on the Indian sub-continent. It doesn't really matter. When you're at a trade show, what you're selling is YOU.

Today's buyers are nervous. They've been through the dot-com bubble. They've seen Enron blow up and corporate scandal follow corporate scandal. Yet they still have to do business. How do they know who they can trust?

There will always be a due-diligence component to business, but a surprising amount of decisions are made by people 'trusting their gut.' During those crucial first minutes where you're checking out the attendee, they're checking you out. They are, perhaps unconciously, assessing what they perceive as your intentions and motivations. Few people believe that they can get a good deal from someone they do not believe to be a good person.

Key Secret #1: People have to 'buy' you before they can buy your products.

Can you hear what I'm saying?

Non-verbal communication plays a huge role in creating first impressions. Attendees are constantly watching. If your body language conveys the fact that you don't want to be at the show, would prefer not to engage with attendees, or are just going through the motions, they'll pick up on that and go elsewhere.

Standing at the corner of your exhibit with your arms folded tells attendees "Stay away! I'm on guard." Sitting down, flipping through a magazine, or chatting with colleagues says "I've got better things to do." All togther, it means "You're not important to me," even if you ask the attendees what you can do for them today.

Key Secret #2: People won't come in if your body language says "Go away!"

The Wall of Noise

You have to approach attendees, engage them, welcome them into your booths. Unfortunately, many staffers take this to mean that they must offer up a constant stream of conversation, from the welcoming hello to the assurances that "We'll be in touch!" as the attendee hurries to a calmer, quieter exhibit.

Talking is important, but listening is more so. Shift the focus from your own sales spiel to actually listening to the customer and you'll find your results immediately improve. Ask attendees questions, and listen to their answers. Give them your full attention. Hear what they're saying and offer appropriate responses.

The fact that you're focused on the attendee, wholly engaged with them, and committed, however briefly, to solving their problems, is one of the easiest, most effective ways to create a positive first impression. It sets a good precedent, establishing how you will do business with this client further down the road. You're laying the foundation for that positive, profitable relationship.

Key Secret #3: Focus on the attendee for maximum results.

These three secrets will stand you well in the trade show environment. Remember that to begin new relationships, you must first create a positive impression. Being mindful of the fact that people need to trust you before they do business with you, avoiding off-putting body language, and listening more than you talk will help you do exactly that. And then you'll be well begun -- more than half done, well on the road to starting a new profitable relationship.

Written by Susan A. Friedmann, CSP, The Tradeshow Coach, Lake Placid, N.Y. Friedmann is an internationally-recognized expert who works with companies to increase their profitability at trade shows. She has also authored Riches in Niches: How to Make it BIG in a Small Market and Meeting & Event Planning for Dummies.”

Contact Us Search TSEA Site Map Join TSEA Members Area Buyers Guide Career Center News Advocacy Member Solutions Resources TS2 Education About Us Home Search TSEA Site Map Join TSEA Members Login News Buyers Guide Career Center Resources Advocacy Education Benefits About TSEA Home