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  Home –› Business & Companies –› Sales
   
 

The Hardest Job Of A Trade Show

   
Author: Julia O'Connor

Youve heard this before: There were four people named Everybody, Somebody, Anybody and Nobody.

There was an important job to be done and Everybody was sure Somebody would do it. Anybody could have done it. Nobody did it. Somebody got angry because it was Everybodys job. Everybody thought that Somebody would do it. But Nobody asked Anybody. It ended up that the job was not done, and Everybody blamed Somebody, when actually, Nobody asked Anybody.

Question is - What was the Job?

At a trade show, the job that Anybody can do, and Everybody thinks Somebody will do, but winds up being that Nobody does it - well, thats the follow-up part.

The Center for Exhibition Industry Research (ceir.org) says research shows that up to 80% of leads gathered at a show are not followed up. Bottom line, that translates to - youve wasted 80% of your money.

Here are tips for recouping your investment and improving your bottom line:

1. Whats Your Purpose at the Show?
If its to gather leads, then that should be the main focus for the entire process - before, during and after the show. What if its something else, like meeting with clients or recruiting employees? That doesnt absolve you of following up leads. You still have to do it.

2. Whats a Lead?
Define before the show what you consider a lead. Is it a company that will purchase within a certain time period? Has a certain budget? Is looking for a particular product you sell? You can separate the contacts into levels - A, B, C or hot, medium, cool - and work them that way. But they still have to be contacted.

3. Whos Responsible?
Before you get into the Body problem - any, no, some and every - write out the process. Produce a schedule for following up. The first contact should come within 10 days of the end of the show. Otherwise people forget who you are. The trail becomes cool, then cold. Determine names and responsibilities at each step of the follow-up process. Accountability is important. Make certain people know what is expected of them, and who else is in the process. This is critical when the person staffing the booth is not the person who does the actual call. The farther and longer the process from the show site and date, the more chances there are to lose the lead.

4. Whats a Follow-up?
At minimum its a Thank You note to every contact you made. These people invested time and money to come to the show, time and effort to stop by your booth. The simple courtesy of a Thank You goes a long way in todays fast paced and impersonal world. If you listened properly and were able to gather specific information, you can provide a quote, supply answers and have a real reason for the follow-up call.

5. What Should You Send?
Unless requested, do not send the $20.00, 20-pound corporate package of literature that tells absolutely everything about your company. Do not send an obvious form letter (Thank you for visiting us at the ABC Expo in Booth 6543 six months ago...).

Do Send:

* your business card - people will remember a logo and spelling of names and companies
* information about your company - a generic piece is fine
* the specific answer to the question - My company can help your company ____ (crunch numbers faster, ship with less hassle, increase accuracy in testing)
* any samples, price lists or references which will help speed the sales cycle.

Remember - The job that Anybody can do, and Everybody thinks Somebody will do, but Nobody does - well, that changes when all understand the importance of trade show follow-up.

Author Bio:

Julia O'Connor

In one way or another, Julia has always been in sales. From the time her mortified mother found out that, as an enterprising 5-year-old, she was peddling homemade pot holders to the neighbors, to her current expertise in trade show marketing, she has been interested in results. And in order to get the results she wants, she will guide, train and teach.

Her careers range from public and professional education design, to freelance advertising-public relations, to real estate investment portfolio management.

Since 1982, Julia has been working with clients in trade show marketing. And, when she asked clients, "why are you going to that show?", she found most did not know. Time to teach.

After years of informal instruction, Trade Show Training was incorporated to provide structured training ranging from trade show basics to the ergonomics of exhibit design. She designed Camp Sho-M-Sel-M to improve sales staff performance in the trade show environment.

She holds degrees from The University of Georgia in Advertising, an MA in Mass Communications from The University of Iowa, and an Indiana University MBA in Marketing. She is a frequent speaker on marketing, networking, entrepreneurship and trade shows.

You can search for this article using: business sales, small business sales, sales leads for business, sales business plans, sales business
 
 
 

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