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EXHIBITOR TRENDS

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... pre-show marketing, post-show follow-up. Integrating event themes with ... Lead Follow Up, ... Example: If follow-up on 126 qualified leads generated $637, ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: EXHIBITOR TRENDS


1
EXHIBITOR TRENDS LEAD MANAGEMENT RECOMMENDATIONS
2
Objectives
  • Trends Themes
  • Attendees
  • Exhibitors
  • Lead Management
  • QA

3
TRENDS THEMES
4
Attendee Changes Higher Stakes
Attendee trends
5
Attendee Facts
  • 76 of attendees arrive at the show with an
    agenda.
  • Attendees spend quality time with 26 exhibitors
    at a show.
  • Half of these 26 exhibitors scheduled these
    appointments in advance.
  • One to two months before each show, your company
    has to get on your clients' and prospects
    agendas.
  • Of total leads, 15 will close within three
    months, 26 within six months, and 45 within
    twelve months for you and your competitor.

Source Tradeshow Week
6
Most Tradeshow Leads are Never Followed-Up!
Do exhibitors follow-up on leads?
Source CEIR
7
80 of exhibitors say
The job is getting more complex.
Source Tradeshow Week Research
8
What is Driving Exhibitor Complexity?
  • Budgets more with less
  • Shorter product life-cycles strategy changes
  • Internet
  • More events

9
Exhibitors Say
  • The show itself is becoming more complex."
  • Were doing more with less in a year we are
    transitioning to a new name and look."
  • "Increased work loads due to annual
    re-organizations."
  • "Going from one brand to seven."

Source Tradeshow Week Research
10
Exhibitors Say
  • There are more products and more private events
    than ever."
  • "Longer schedules... more places to be during
    shows."
  • "I'm so busy I don't have any time to be
    proactive and innovative.
  • "We are no longer Exhibit Managers we are also
    Meeting and Event Planners."

Source Tradeshow Week Research
11
ATTENDEES
12
Attendees Why They Attend Shows?
  • Source new products, review exhibits, learn
    industry trends
  • Networking
  • Get educated, attend sessions, attain continuing
    educational credits
  • Stay current with technology, trends and
    contacts
  • Attend other meetings around the show
  • Compare vendors, products and vendor staff
    efficiently
  • Research
  • Employment opportunities

13
Attendees Pet-Peeves About Exhibitors
  • Too many lower-level staffers, not enough
    executives or engineers, etc.
  • Rude behavior, abruptly dropping one attendee to
    speak to another, etc.
  • Overly aggressive booth staff
  • Exhibitors that sell during educational
    conference sessions
  • Poorly conducted in-booth presentations

14
Attendees Pet-Peeves About Exhibitors, continued
  • Overly detailed in-booth questionnaires and
    lead forms
  • Lead retrieval machines and systems that dont
    work properly
  • Over-hyped give-aways that are junk or not as
    promised
  • Exhibitors that run out of giveaways, brochures
    and/or other materials
  • No post-show follow-up
  • Un-informed booth staff!

15
EXHIBITORS
16
Is There More Pressure to Demonstrate ROI from
Corporate?
Source Tradeshow Week Research
17
How Many Exhibitors Track ROI?
Source Tradeshow Week Research
18
How Do Exhibitors Drive Attendance to Their
Booths
Source Tradeshow Week Research
19
Who are Exhibitors Trying to Reach?
Exhibitors Primary Goals
1. (tie) Gathering Leads 1. (tie) Brand and
Awareness 2. PR and Media Impact 3. Providing
Audience Education and Interaction
1. (tie) Prospects already aware of company 1.
(tie) Unknown potential prospects 2. Current
clients
Source Tradeshow Week Research
20
Three Types of Attendees
  • The education seeker/browser/looker wants
    information
  • Can occupy a large portion of the booth staffs
    time best served with presentations and
    information cards.
  • The reinforcement visitor
  • Already doing business with you but wants
    reassurance they made the right decision.
  • The solution seeker
  • Visitor has a specific problem and wants to know
    if you can solve it. This person is the
    strongest prospect and can be turned into a
    qualified lead through productive interaction
    with staff.

21
What Leading Exhibitors are Doing New
  • More targeted show selection
  • Adding more educational elements
  • Developing more interactive exhibits

22
What Leading Exhibitors are Doing New, continued
  • Setting more on-site goals for booth, sales
    staff
  • More pre-show marketing, post-show follow-up
  • Integrating event themes with other marketing

23
Exhibitors Integrating Events with Other
Marketing
Source Tradeshow Week
24
What Leading Exhibitors are Doing New, continued
  • Focus on higher-level executives bringing
    higher-level employees
  • Setting more meetings and appointments in
    advance

25
Challenges Facing Corporate Exhibitors
Source Tradeshow Week Research
26
Before the Show Determine Realistic Goals
  • Obtain immediate orders
  • Introduce new products
  • Identify new prospects, especially decision
    makers
  • Meet difficult-to-reach prospects
  • Improve or change your firms image
  • Find new suppliers
  • Form a partnership for marketing your products
    or services
  • Find out what the competition is doing and
    offering
  • Identify emerging industry trends, and what they
    will mean to your industry, company and customers.

27
Measurable Tradeshow Objectives
  • Number of visitors to your booth
  • Booth visitors by target audience (by accounts,
    by industry, by title, etc.)
  • One-on-one meetings with key accounts
  • Number of qualified leads
  • Lead quality mix (percent of A, B, C leads, etc.)
  • Lead mix by geography or product interest
  • Lead mix by the day and by the hour of the show

28
Measurable Tradeshow Objectives, continued
  • Number and amount of sales confirmed
  • Number of international distribution deals
    completed
  • Number of requests for proposals received
  • Amount of media coverage received
  • Percentage increase in your company and/or
    product awareness among attendees after the show
  • Numbers of attendees exposed to your demo or live
    presentation
  • Number of questionnaires completed by target
    audience
  • Number and quality of strategic alliances
    confirmed with other exhibiting companies.

29
LEAD MANAGEMENT
30
What is a Lead
  • A lead is not a piece of paper or electronic
    record.

31
A lead is a customer with needs and questions
seeking a solution.
32
Ten Opening Lines
  • Are you enjoying the show?
  • Weve found a way to solve the X problem. Is
    this something you need to do?
  • Our new X can cut production time by as much as
    30. Are you involved in buying X?
  • Do you use X?
  • What kind of X do you currently use?

33
Ten Opening Lines, continued
  • Are you familiar with the savings/improvements
    you can make by using X?
  • Do the Xs you are currently stocking give you a
    50 margin?
  • What return are you enjoying from your current
    X?
  • If I could demonstrate how to X, would you be
    interested?
  • Which method of solving the X problem do you
    currently use?

34
How to Position Staff and Greet Customers in the
Booth
  • Avoid staff clustering.
  • Remind booth staff to smile which not only will
    draw more attendees but will also increase
    energy.
  • Stand to the side of any counter structure but
    avoid standing behind a counter or in the center
    of the exhibit.
  • Have staff hold a small sheet, not a full sheet,
    of white paper in their hands. It neutralizes the
    situation making attendees more comfortable.
  • Make eye contact for the first three seconds when
    meeting someone instead of looking at his or her
    badge.
  • Shake hands during introductions to build trust.
  • Use opening lines such as Thanks for visiting.
    What prompted your interest in our exhibit? or
    Thanks for coming in. How are you familiar
    with?

35
Do Exhibitors Follow Up on Leads?
Source Tradeshow Week Research
36
Importance of Lead Follow Up
  • 78 of first-time show attendees and 85 or
    veterans have buying authority
  • 61 of attendees plan to buy something exhibited
    at a show
  • 83 of attendees visiting an exhibit have not
    seen a salesperson from that company in the
    previous 12 months

Source Tradeshow Week
37
Importance of Lead Follow Up, continued
  • 54 of inquiries do not require a follow-up call
    or close
  • 35 of attendees are top and middle managers
  • It costs 70 less to close a tradeshow lead than
    a field sales call, and 0.7 calls to close a
    sale. This compares to national average of 3.5
    to 6.7 calls to close a sale.

Source Tradeshow Week
38
Importance of Lead Follow Up, continued
  • It costs 185 per-visitor-reached at a tradeshow
    versus 292 average cost for a sales call.
  • The difference is even greater when it comes to
    closing a sale. At tradeshows, it takes an
    average of 0.8 encounters to close a sale versus
    3.7 for a field sales call.
  • Thus, the cost to close a sale is 419 for a
    tradeshow compared with 1,080 for a sales call.

Source CEIR
39
Two Biggest Barriers to Lead Follow UP
  • You didn't talk with the person or people who
    have to follow up on the leads after the show to
    find out what they want and what format they want
    the lead information to be in to be most
    effective. 
  • 2) You didn't have the resources available after
    the show to follow up sort the leads, scrub the
    database, sort them by some criteria, have
    collateral ready for fast response, etc.

Source Trade Show Consulting
40
Average Exhibition Lead Follow Up Time
Source Tradeshow Week Research
41
Timeframe to Receive Bulk of Show-Related Sales
Source Tradeshow Week Research
42
Common Elements of a Qualified Lead
  • Accurate contact information correct title,
    phone number and EMAIL
  • A decision-making role in influencing,
    recommending or purchasing
  • Products and/or service interest who are they
    using now?
  • Expressed need for your solution to solve
    specific problem
  • Timeframe when the prospect needs the solution
  • Budget
  • Desire for specific post-show follow-up with
    timeframe

43
Lead Grading System
  • A lead large dollar volume, short time-frame
  • B lead small dollar volume, short time frame
    or large dollar volume, long time frame
  • C lead small dollar volume, long time frame
  • D lead send literature and/or add name to
    mailing list

44
Lead Forms
  • Reorienting your sales staff starts well before
    the show.
  • Dont impose a lead form or system without at
    least involving the sales manager.
  • Ask what minimum information they want on lead
    forms. Show them what you need to know.
  • By involving them in the issues of lead
    management, you educate them to the broader
    marketing task of turning inquiries to sales.
  • If you dont give them the chance to discover
    those issues, they are likely to ignore your lead
    form.

45
Lead Measurement Formulas Cost Per Lead
Measure Cost per lead Formula Total cost to
participate divided by total number of qualified
leads. Example If costs for one show are
18,000 and you collected 459 business cards,
your cost per lead is 39.22. However, if only
126 of those cards represent qualified leads,
your cost per lead is 142.85 (18,000 ? 126
142.85).
Source Tradeshow Week
46
Measurement Formulas Revenue Per Lead
Measure Revenue per lead Formula Revenue
generated from tradeshow leads divided by total
number of qualified leads. Example If follow-up
on 126 qualified leads generated 637,000 in
revenue, revenue per lead is 5,055.56. (637,000
? 126 5,055.56).
Source Tradeshow Week
47
Measurement Formulas Profit Per Lead
Measure Profit per lead Formula Revenue
generated from tradeshow leads minus cost of
goods sold to these new customers divided by
total number of qualified leads. Example If
follow-up on 126 qualified leads generated
637,000 in revenue with a total cost of goods at
339,500, profit per lead is 2,361.11. (637,000
- 339,500 ? 126 2,361.11).
Source Tradeshow Week
48
Measurement Formulas Weighted Ave. Sales Cycle
Measure Weighted average sales cycle
time. Formula This formula measures the average
time in the sales cycle, using a weighted
average. Example If a total of 126 leads
generate 54 sales over a period of six months
(predetermined tradeshow sales allocation period)
with the following distribution sales closed x
month 1 5 sales closed x month 2 20 15 sales
closed x month 3 45 12 sales closed x month 4
48 8 sales closed x month 5 40 4 sales closed x
month 6 24 182 The weighted average sales
cycle time is 182 ? 54 3.3 months.
49
Public Relations After the Show
  • Send the media post-show press releases reporting
    trends, statistics or information on significant
    newsworthy information/orders that resulted from
    the show.
  • Collate all publicized articles and media
    coverage before, during, and after the show, and
    send them to top management and your sales force.
    Include the best articles in mailings to
    customers and prospects.
  • Create a state-of-the-industry report based on
    your observations at the show and send it out or
    offer it free to prospects/customers responding
    to a post-show mailing.
  • Send your customers and key prospects an audio or
    video recording of your presentation or
    interesting interviews that took place during the
    show.

50
Conclusion
  • Higher stakes
  • Power shifting to attendees
  • More of everything
  • Most leads are not followed-up
  • Better pre-show planning and communications
  • Lead follow-up not how to do it, but whos to
    do it

51
A lead is a customer with needs and questions
seeking a solution.
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