contentblade.com contentblade.com
   Main >> About Us >> Privacy >> Terms of Service >> Place Your Link >> Add Your Article
Search:   
 
 

Diversify Your Income

One of the most important things you should learn with your website is that you need to diversify yo ... - jclason
 

What To Do If You Forget Someone's Name

What should you do if you run into someone, and just can?t remember their name? This article gives y ... - Josiah Mackenzie
 

Diversity Management

The myth of diversity has been created by the companies and their diversity managers but diversity m ... - Sharon White
 
 

What to Do With Your Hands - Two Tips for Feeling Comfortable at Events

Maybe you are giving an informal presentation, at a networking event or a trade show, and you see th ... - Julia O'Connor
 

Notes for Newbies - Part Sixteen - Building Your Website

Here is information on building a website every newbie in the direct marketing business needs to get ... - William Rice-Johnston
 
 

Main –› Business & Companies –› Business & Work Practices
 

10 Trade Show Thanks for the New Year

 
Author: Julia O'Connor
 

To start out the New Year, we gave thanks for the people we love, the things we enjoy and made the obligatory resolutions for the New Year.

Now, lets get practical and give thanks to the people who make our industry function, make us look good and help us make money.

1. We thank the Show Sponsor who has the marketing vision and takes the financial risk to put on the event. Without both the will and the way, there would be fewer successful shows.

2. We thank the Show Organizer who, with the Sponsors vision and financial support, puts all the pieces together, draws the contracts, supervises the nitty-gritty and gets us all through the door for the show and out again.

3. We thank the Exhibitors who invest time, money and manpower to present their products to the world in this unique environment. Its how we find out whos who, whats what and become attuned to whats going to happen in our industry.

4. We thank the Attendees who also invest time, money and manpower to attend the trade show and who look, listen and learn about our firms. With the golden hope that Attendees beget Leads beget Clients, we give them much thanks.

5. We thank our Exhibit Managers who make it all go so smoothly. These detail wranglers handle minutia with a smile and professionalism unfathomable by most marketing types.

6. We thank the Exhibit Designers who take our many ..but I think... and I wanna... and turn them into dynamic, attention-grabbing and profitable conveyors of the right image at the right time.

7. We thank the Unions - yes, we do - for their dedication to their crafts, their ability to take boxes and cases and crates, and make them the magic we need for the show - and then pack it all up again.

8. We thank the Freight Folks, from the local courier to the big guys in trucks, trains and planes. We appreciate their understanding of time critical and fragile, and we especially thank them for customer service courtesy and online tracking. Bah Humbug to those who havent gotten the message yet.

9. We thank the Creatives, those promotion folks who run the gambit from defining the marketing experience for each show, selecting goodies to hand out, and pulling it all together so were successful on both sides of the aisle.

10. And, last but not least, we thank the Exhibit Staff. Theres no job description that says stand in the booth and hand out brochures, so staff is drawn from many disciplines throughout the company. Trade shows are hard work. They make you physically tired because of travel, long hours and a compact agenda. They drain you emotionally because you get more rejections than acceptances. And, they compound the amount of work you have to do because theres still your real job back at the office which youre still at the show.

Make this your New Years Resolution - a salute and a Thank You to all who make your trade shows successful.

 
 
 

Related Articles

 
The e-Commerce Revolution
 
Discover the Secret to Avoiding the Roller Coaster Income Syndrome
 
Finding a Bankruptcy Attorney in New Hampshire
 
Complaints? Cut 'm Off At The Pass Pardner
 
The Compliance Officer's Killer Application
 
Customer Service Done Right
 
Marketing Plan
 
Sales Professional's Characteristics That Make or Break
 
The Dangers of "Rent-Hopping"
 
Post Cards
 
 
 
Add Url
 

Self Healing

Medical Care

Travel & Vacation

Online & Board Games

Business & Companies

Academics & Education

Issues & News

Politics & Government

Sports & Adventure

Automotive

Careers & Employment

Finance & Investment

Children

Science & Space

Shopping & Auction

Recreation & Entertainment

Creative Arts

Estate & Realty

Society & Issues

Computers & Software

Cooking & Drinking

Garden & Home

Lifestyle & Fashion

Health & Therapy


 
Main >> Privacy >> Terms of Service
Copyright © www.contentblade.com - All Rights Reserved Worldwide