
|

900
N. Kings Highway, Cherry Hill, New Jersey 08034
856.667.4100 ·
215.563.0276 · Fax:
856.667.3652
|
Business
Tip
of the Month
For the month of February 2010
|
Generate new business with an effective trade show display
Showing
off your stuff at a trade show can generate new business and help you
reach customers that otherwise might pass you by. On the other hand, a
hastily constructed and shoddily maintained display booth can drive
potential customers away and may even damage your business reputation.
In trade show marketing, as in so many other aspects of business, it
pays to focus on the details. If you're planning to use a display booth
to exhibit products or services, here are five well-tested tips.
- Keep it simple.
Customers should know right away what your company sells. They
shouldn't have to guess. Signs and literature should have clear,
visible headlines that answer frequently asked questions. At a trade
show your business may be competing with hundreds of other firms — all
of whom are vying for the attention of potential customers. So remove
clutter.
- Use color — but not too much. As
a general rule, choose no more than three colors for your display
elements. Again, the goal is simplicity. If your booth looks like an
Andy Warhol painting gone bad, it's time to scale back.
- Graphics are great.
Prominently display photos of completed projects. Lay out a notebook
with professional glossy pictures that customers can browse. Show how
your product is better than the competition by using bar charts, pie
charts and tables. Set up a laptop computer with a slide show that lets
customers see the benefits of your company's offerings.
- Keep it fresh and clean. Throughout
the day, take time to straighten up product samples that get moved
around, brochures that fall to the floor, and customer coffee cups that
end up on your display table. If your booth includes glass or acrylic
display cases, periodically remove fingerprints and smudges with glass
cleaner and a rag.
- Don't trap them.
Setting up a table at the booth's entrance may not be the best choice.
Consider using an open exhibit, a space that people can enter
comfortably without feeling like they're in a cage.
Of
course, the best display in the world won't compensate for sales staff
who are pushy or rude. So train your staff to greet onlookers with a
smile. Allow customers to browse without pressure. And be sure to use
your materials to answer questions and encourage sales.
[Current Business Tip]
[Business Information]
[Home]
|
| |
untitled
This site designed and maintained by the Information Technology experts at Alloy, Silverstein, Shapiro, Adams, Mulford,
Cicalese, Wilson & Co.
We appreciate comments concerning our website. Contact our webmaster .
Copyright © 1997 - 2004 Alloy, Silverstein, Shapiro, Adams, Mulford, Cicalese, Wilson &
Co.
All rights reserved.
|