Wednesday, March 30, 2016

[New Post] Trade Show Marketing Tips for First-Time Exhibitors

 

Blogs

Trade Show Marketing Tips for First-Time Exhibitors

Caterina Lui

Trade Show Marketing Tips for First Time Exhibitors

Exhibiting at your first trade show can feel a lot like the first day of high school.

The bell rings, everyone else seems to know where they’re going, and you're not even sure you're in the right building.

It's easy to get overwhelmed, especially if you’re a small company at a big show.

As soon as you register for an event or sign a contract to exhibit, the mountain of tasks looms – from booking your travel and designing your booth to planning your marketing and sales strategies.

Your palms start to sweat as you wonder if (and how) it will all get done. Fortunately, there are things you can do to help navigate the chaos.

Follow these tips and you'll get everything done – all before your first class.

The early bird gets much more than a worm.

It's important to register as early as possible for a trade show. You’ll not just cut down on stress, you may also cut down on costs.

The sooner you start planning, the more likely you can take advantage of early bird discounts. The money you save here can then be directed into other show expenses.

After you've booked an event, make a note of all the deadlines you need to adhere to and set calendar reminders. Some show organizers will even provide an exhibitor checklist that recommends when different tasks should be completed.

Read every email and do your homework. 

After you register for a show, the emails will start rolling into your inbox. Event organizers often partner with outside vendors to provide free or discounted offers – like special hotel rates, coupons for area restaurants, free promotion opportunities, and more.

Don't necessarily judge these emails by their subject line. Although some may seem like an unrelated sales pitch, they could be of value to your company.  Take a look before moving them to the trash bin and remember to check your spam folder so you don't miss any important deadline reminders.

You can also contact the event organizer to ask whether they are offering any pre-show webinars for exhibitors.

Larger shows with a lot of moving parts will often host informational sessions to ensure exhibitors have everything they need. Look for a webinar schedule and ask your show contact whether an archived recording will be available if you can't attend.

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Know your booth number and use it.

Your booth number is what attendees will use to find you. Make sure that you and they know what it is.

If your exhibitor packet doesn’t include your booth number, take a look at the floor plan on the trade show's website. Find your company name and the booth number listed with it. If you still can't locate your booth, contact the event organizer.

Once you have your booth number, include it in all of your communications. Forgetting to include it is like inviting friends to a party without an address.

Design your booth strategy for conversions.

Event attendees have a lot of booths to visit. Make their lives on the show floor as easy as possible.

A visually appealing and interactive booth design will set a strong foundation for success. However, don't forget your strategy for converting these visitors into qualified sales leads.

Establish a system ahead of time for collecting prospective customers' information and appoint specific people to follow up on any notable conversations you have in the booth.

Waiting until after the event to place these leads into your marketing program could cause you to lose out on the show's momentum.

Don’t forget about pre-event marketing.

Of course, all this prep will go to waste if no one shows up at your booth. While pre-show marketing may not seem very glamorous, it is essential to meeting your event goals.

In her blog post Trade Show Marketing: What to Do Before the Show, Sarah Leung states that 70% of event attendees decide on which brands and booths they're going to visit before even setting foot on the trade show floor. On the other hand, only 10-15% of trade show exhibitors invest in pre-show marketing efforts.

When planning out your marketing strategy, use a multi-channel approach that takes your different audiences’ preferences into consideration.

For instance, if your goal is driving prospective customers to your booth, consider publishing a couple of announcements early on so attendees have time to add you to their agenda. If the goal is earned media attention, send out a media advisory to industry outlets covering the event.

A combination of online press kits, content distribution, email campaigns, social media and other marketing tactics will help ensure you reach all of the audiences in attendance. Download Gain Targeted Audience Attention with PR Newswire for more marketing tips that’ll help you make an impression that lasts.

Author Caterina Lui is a senior customer content specialist for Virtual Press Office, PR Newswire's trade show marketing solutions division. VPO helps global event professionals, exhibitors and trade show marketing managers reach their goals through news distribution and online press kit creation. Follow Caterina at @VPOEventZone, our Twitter channel dedicated to the trade show industry.

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Tuesday, March 29, 2016

[New Post] How to Transform Your Marketing with Real-Time Content

 

Blogs

How to Transform Your Marketing with Real-Time Content

Danielle Ferris

Real Time Marketing Tips

There's no debating content marketing's critical role in driving revenue and ROI. However, to get the most out of your investment, you can't create content for content's sake.

Marketers and PR pros are called on to strategically develop content that resonates with audiences' fluctuating needs.

While evergreen content is useful in establishing a strong foundation, you must balance it with real-time content that's responsive to the trends and topics currently making waves in your industry.

During our recent video livestream Marketing Transformation: A Real-Time Adventure, Ken Wincko, SVP of Marketing at PR Newswire, hosted Deirdre Bigley, CMO of Bloomberg LP, to discuss how they've built real-time marketing programs that are connecting audiences with the content they crave in the moment.

From how they organize their teams and strategies to the way they use reporting to prove success and inform future content, here are tips you can use for your own brand's marketing transformation.

Build a Content-Centric Team

To more effectively leverage their industry's expertise, progressive marketing departments are developing teams of content contributors, both internal (across their company's various departments) and external (third-party influencers and customer advocates).

The diverse perspectives and areas of expertise these contributors bring to a company's marketing can be immensely valuable.

However, there's also a downside.

When trying to create and promote relevant content, a multi-layer approval process across many different teams can turn your once-relevant content into old news.

Both Ken and Deirdre expressed the need for an efficient workflow that enables teams to collaborate and carry out their content strategies without delay. Creating real-time content without the right processes, people, and tools in place will result in only one thing: frustration.

When discussing Bloomberg's early attempts at collaborating on real-time content, Deirdre said, "We had multiple departments working on projects separately. When we had something real-time to respond to, it was very hectic. Our company decided to join these teams together so they can strategize and communicate quickly and effectively."

If you find your company in a similar situation, Ken recommends creating a clear vision for what your core messages are trying to achieve, and then building and enabling your team of contributors around that vision.

There needs to be an overarching brand narrative and team leaders in place in order to effectively create and promote content that is in line with your overall strategy.

Ken explained, "A good analogy is that your marketing team is the point guard calling the plays — in this case identifying the key messages — for the organization. Our marketing team creates the core set of topics we want to build content around for specific audiences based on monitoring and analytics. Then, we help coordinate how and when our contributors develop and promote content across channels.”

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Build a Real-Time Content Strategy

Real-time content can help your audience connect with your brand, but only if it's tied to your overall marketing strategy.

Just publishing a one-off article responding to your industry's latest trend isn't going to have the same influence on your audience as real-time content whose themes intentionally connect back to the evergreen, cornerstone content that's helped establish you as a trusted source of information.

Consider how a piece of real-time content promoted across multiple channels can encourage audiences to interact further with your evergreen content.

"Throw some breadcrumbs of content out there," said Deirdre, "so it sparks their interest and they come back for more."

A primary goal of your strategy should be to not only capture audience attention, but also create an ongoing relationship.

Ken added, "In order for us to establish long-term relationships with our clients, we created a customer lifecycle approach that defines the informational needs of our prospects and customers based on their role, organization and what stage of the journey they are in so we can provide content that is valuable and relevant to them — and ultimately helps them enhance their programs."

Measure and Optimize in Real-Time

Ken and Deirdre both urged gathering a core set of metrics that prove the success of your marketing strategy.

As with any content you publish and promote for your brand, you need to constantly keep an eye on which pieces of real-time content worked and which didn't.

Many topics wax and wane in popularity. You don't want to be caught creating content about a trend your audience has moved on from.

"Through our analytics we know what is working best, which topics our audiences seem to be most attracted to and where most of our hits come from," Deirdre explained.

Ken stressed the importance of what he calls “impact metrics” – how content directly contributes to pipeline and revenue — as the most informative measurement versus activity metrics such as downloads and visits.

"Through impact metrics we know what type of content ultimately leads to purchases. These insights help us to prioritize our investments and demonstrate tangible outcomes from our content,” he said.

These metrics will not only help you prove the success of your marketing program, they will also make it easier for you to develop and optimize content that creates a long-standing relationship with your audience and guides them to a purchasing decision.

Because PR Newswire has focused on impact metrics, Ken explained, "We can tell which topics are working for specific audiences in which channel at any given time, and from this we are able to optimize our program strategy on a weekly basis."

Introducing a real-time content initiative into your marketing strategy may seem like no easy feat. But with a team built on collaboration, a well-thought out strategy, and metrics to help optimize your plan, you can enrich the interaction you have with your audiences.

Ken Wincko and Deirdre Bigley are two examples of marketing leaders who set out with a vision to revamp marketing organizations in well-established companies. To hear more of their expert advice, check out the on-demand recording of their conversation.

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Author Danielle Ferris is happiest on the beach, an avid spinner, and marketing coordinator at PR Newswire.

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