Trade
Shows
Trade shows are designed to let
entrepreneurs meet many potential customers face-to-face in a brief period of
time inexpensively. According to the Trade Show Bureau, more than 4,300 were
held nationwide in 1994, attracting 85 million visitors. Trade shows help level
the playing field for smaller firms, since booth space is generally inexpensive
($13 per square foot on average, with the typical small booth covering 100
square feet), and even small companies can usually afford attractive displays.
With creative marketing and booth design, small businesses can actually appear
as substantial as much larger corporations.
The Trade Show Bureau reports that of
the firms exhibiting at business-to-business shows, 44% have fewer than 50
employees. Sophisticated exhibitors do well at trade shows no matter what their
size, while the naive and inexperienced can waste thousands of dollars and
countless hours and possibly do more harm than good. Using trade shows
effectively takes only a little effort and planning.
Trade Show Benefits
Because trade shows generally take place at a single
location, have short runs (usually one to three days), and bring together thousands
of exhibitors and potential customers, they are a very powerful marketing
medium. The Trade Show Bureau claims that the average total cost of closing a
sale in the field is $1,080, while the cost of closing a sale to a qualified
trade show prospect is $419.
Because business-to-business shows typically do not allow
selling on the show floor, generating sales leads is the most common reason
exhibitors participate. Norm Hughes, president of Norda Technologies, a
software firm in Newton, New Jersey, uses the computer industry's major shows
as his primary marketing vehicle for introducing new products, another popular
reason for exhibiting. It is possible during the course of one trade show to
personally meet most of your important clients and suppliers, making shows a
good way to establish and reinforce relationships.
Common reasons for exhibiting include:
·
Generating
sales leads.
·
Generating
actual sales at the show.
·
Enhancing
your image and visibility.
·
Reaching
a specific audience.
·
Establishing
a presence in the marketplace.
·
Improving
the effectiveness and efficiency of your marketing efforts.
·
Personally
meeting your customers, competitors and suppliers.
·
Prospecting
for new customers.
·
Introducing
new products and services.
·
Demonstrating
your product in ways not possible using other marketing channels.
·
Recruiting
distributors or dealers.
·
Educating
your target audience.
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