Marshall Yard:

December 29, 2008

Exhibit Trends in a Recession

Making Better Pottery = Making Better/Trendy Trade Show Exhibit BoothsTrade show exhibit trends are, like all trends, always changing. The idea of being on the leading edge of a trend is SCARY to most exhibitors. TREND=EXPENSIVE in their minds. Why?

To many trade show attendees, especially those who rarely visit the conventions and expos that we see month in and month out, most of the exhibit booths that they see are impressive - not just the latest and greatest. A friend of mine attended a show this past October and marveled at the cheap rented trusses on the show floor. Yuck! Those are so 1992. But with a jury of amateurs, why should one have such high standards?

I would argue that trendy exhibits need not be expensive. You can have IMPACT at a reasonable budget [and trusses rarely have an IMPACT on those of us who go to more than 1 tradeshow per decade...]. It has everything to do with the business model of the exhibit company, since the physical components are not the largest cost centers involved. Here’s what I mean:

The components involved in a trade show exhibit are only one of the many costs involved in the process. The beams, the fabric, wall panels, the plexiglass- or whatever your exhibit may be made out of -are not as expensive as the designers, graphic artists, engineers/detailers, account managers, and fabricators required to deliver a high quality exhibit to the tradeshow floor. Consider, then, why you would sacrifice on materials, when the cutting edge in styles is only a minor increase in costs. But trends are more than just materials - it’s the designers, stupid.

A busy design team, paired with an engineering, graphics, and overall operation that is geared towards large scale, cutting edge exhibit booths, actually costs less than a low quality, slow design team, error-prone engineers, wasteful graphics, and a sloppily managed overall operation. If paid based on productivity, the trend-following, top-notch-team earns more. But they produce more. It can even be argued that if the sales team sells/leases enough booths, and if operations are run with an efficiency of scale, employees will produce a higher quality product regardless. Quality improves with the busier the team becomes. Trends are easier to introduce when you do so many exhibits. Trends need not be followed because you heard about them, but because you are experimenting amidst a large scale, custom rental exhibit program - i.e. constantly innovating with existing clients.

Trends aren’t expensive. In prosperous, overheated economic times, an exhibit house will raise its prices if demand merits this. In leaner times, when every nickel and dime is squeezed out of any exhibit budget, the busy company is likely the best. Trends included, they may be working at the same price as the less efficient, wastefully under-utilized company. Which sounds like a better value?

This post has been deemed “salesey” (classic overt, self-serving sales pitch that lacks humor and/or self-defecating), but is approved by the Blog Master.

3 Comments »

  1. Good Article.Its very useful to me.good luck.

    Comment by rainmaker — January 6, 2009 @ 12:16 am

  2. Not sure how it helps you, but thanks for reading (?) the blog.

    Designers are a key aspect of introducing cutting edge designs. Designs that turn trade show attendee heads are not just built of stuff that resembles the latest construction style (inner-space - extruded aluminum, in your case). Designs that turn heads and deliver real impact are at least a. customized around your company message and the desired attendees (marketing message, as well as non-explicit messages like “grammar” and style) b. built to “do” (functionality) everything that a client needs c. built to maximize the top priorities for the client. There are limitations (like budget, space, time…) on every trade show exhibit, but without going through design, you’re just flipping through a catalogue with budget in mind.

    Most companies lack the designers to do this. That’s what the point of this article is. Designers, kept busy, are the lifeblood of an effective booth. And they really don’t cost extra when you honestly evaluate your exhibit program.

    Comment by Catalyst — January 6, 2009 @ 11:03 am

  3. Great article, you must have done a fair amount of research for it eh? Well done on it, really.

    Comment by CD Rate — December 20, 2009 @ 2:51 pm

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