13 signs that it's time to leave a trade show

garylkoh

WBF Technical Expert (Speakers & Audio Equipment)
Sep 6, 2010
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Here are 13 signs it’s time to stop exhibiting at a trade show and ply your business down different carpeted aisles:

1. The Wrong Attendees: If your buyers are not walking a show, then why exhibit there? The top reason exhibitors back out of a show, or take a smaller booth size, is because they don’t find high quality attendees. The highest quality attendee looks like your best buyers – so figure out what your buyers look like, and then ask show owners to prove that their attendees match your buyers.

2. Low R.O.I: If you have a slate of trade shows that provide a range of R.O.I, then drop the shows at the lower end of the range, unless they achieve other key objectives besides Return On Investment.

3. Decreasing Qualified Attendance: Perhaps your target audience is at that show … just fewer and fewer of them over the years. If there are other shows that keep delivering, then shift more dollars to those.

4. Rapidly Rising Exhibiting Costs: Trade shows provide a great value – they bring to B2B marketers a parade of potential buyers that allow exhibitors to meet more people face-to-face than they can from months of cold calling. But shows that try to squeeze every penny of profit from that advantage risk killing the golden goose. Booth space and drayage costs that increase multiple times faster than inflation? Not good. Not good at all.

5. Not Responding To Industry Changes: Change is inevitable, but a show that lags behind those changes is no longer an attractive destination to hear the latest news. A laggard show will not bring the right speakers, themes, and educational sessions, which eventually will dampen attendance.

6. No Excitement: Is the prospect of attending the show getting you jazzed? It should. You should be excited about the networking, the potential business, the industry buzz. If it’s going to be boring, then it may be time to leave.

7. Lack of Promotion: It’s harder to succeed if the trade show doesn’t go all out to get attendees into the show hall. It’s also a deterrent if the show makes it hard for you to access attendee lists to promote your presence directly.

8. Lack of Social Media Marketing: If a trade show hasn’t learned how to fully integrate social media into their marketing, they are missing out on a sizable portion of their potential audience that ignores traditional media – especially younger attendees that help determine the future of the show.

9. Poor Welcome For Newcomers: The best shows know that new attendees and new exhibitors are what make the show grow, and they treat them with care. If shows ignore newcomers and just take them for granted, vote with your feet.

10. No Exhibitor Advisory Committee: Good shows appoint exhibitors to an advisory committee to get feedback about what changes the show can make to improve their exhibitors’ satisfaction. If the show doesn’t have an Exhibitor Advisory Committee, and won’t start one when you ask, they don’t really care about your business.

11. An Ignored Exhibitor Advisory Committee: Almost as bad is a show that asks for feedback, but then ignores everything exhibitors tell them, nor provides good business reasons for not implementing exhibitor suggestions.

12. Little New Blood: If every attendee is gray haired and already knows each other, then the show is not going to be sustainable in the long run. (See Sign #8, about Social Media)

13. Unbalanced Focus On Attendees: We get it — without attendees, exhibitors would not have a reason to exhibit. So shows tend to focus more on the attendees, thinking that will be enough to satisfy exhibitors. Not anymore. Exhibitors are also important, and need care and feeding, too, or they will take their marketing dollars elsewhere.
 

mbskeam

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Sep 28, 2012
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how many of your trade shows involve Union? making the simplest of tasks hard and costing money to do them.
not a slam, just what we have to go thru for packaging trade shows (Vegas, Chicago) can be very frustrating at times.
 

jap

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Apr 6, 2012
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Gary,

Is this list a result of the low number of visitors you had at CES 2014?
 

MylesBAstor

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Apr 20, 2010
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Gary,

Is this list a result of the low number of visitors you had at CES 2014?

If it is, CES have never given a crap about "specialty audio." Face it. The show is all about the Sony's of the world.

Could be worse. Could have been at The Show where the exhibitors outnumbered attendees 10:1.
 

Bruce B

WBF Founding Member, Pro Audio Production Member
Apr 25, 2010
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If it is, CES have never given a crap about "specialty audio." Face it. The show is all about the Sony's of the world.

Could be worse. Could have been at The Show where the exhibitors outnumbered attendees 10:1.

And it was even moved to during the week as not to interfer with their precious weekend gamblers!
 

MylesBAstor

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And it was even moved to during the week as not to interfer with their precious weekend gamblers!

How could I forget?
 

mep

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Apr 20, 2010
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And it was even moved to during the week as not to interfer with their precious weekend gamblers!

One high-roller could come in and drop more in one night than what they made off the entire CES show.
 

garylkoh

WBF Technical Expert (Speakers & Audio Equipment)
Sep 6, 2010
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Gary,

Is this list a result of the low number of visitors you had at CES 2014?

It's not just the low number of visitors, but the ROI. Our total outlay to do the show is north of $25k. Divided by the number of real customers who visit, it doesn't make much sense.
 

garylkoh

WBF Technical Expert (Speakers & Audio Equipment)
Sep 6, 2010
5,599
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Seattle, WA
www.genesisloudspeakers.com
If it is, CES have never given a crap about "specialty audio." Face it. The show is all about the Sony's of the world.

The funny thing is, growing up in Singapore, the dream was always to own a Swiss watch, drink French wines, drive a German car, and own American hifi. The first three are still true. The last is rapidly declining. CES SHOULD care about "specialty audio" - and we should all care about it as well.
 

Steve Williams

Site Founder, Site Owner, Administrator
It's not just the low number of visitors, but the ROI. Our total outlay to do the show is north of $25k. Divided by the number of real customers who visit, it doesn't make much sense.

That's an enormous amount of money Gary. Then multiply that by the number of shows world wide each year. Ouch

You can't stop though Gary as your music is always amongst the best of any heard. You know how to pick them
 

rbbert

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Dec 12, 2010
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It seems to me that people complain about decreasing attendance at almost all the shows that have been around for awhile (RAMF, CES/THE, even the CAS Dagogo puts on). It's the shows that are relatively new that may have increasing attendance. So I suspect that as more "regional" shows appear, attendance at more established shows may continue to drop as they are no longer the only game in town, and potential attendees look for something closer to home. If the total number of shows ever stabilizes someone might get an idea which offer the best ROI, but in the meantime I suspect it's a bit of a crapshoot for exhibitors; a relatively new show that appears on the way up one year may crash and burn the next.
 

puroagave

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Sep 29, 2011
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It's not just the low number of visitors, but the ROI. Our total outlay to do the show is north of $25k. Divided by the number of real customers who visit, it doesn't make much sense.

which is why the direct to consumer shows are thriving (I think) and the mfr can share the cost with their local dealer, why do CES any longer? I recall the days when the Riviera hotel was still the place for high-end at CES and the rooms were always packed, so much so there seemed to be less music playing and more deal making.
 

MylesBAstor

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Apr 20, 2010
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The funny thing is, growing up in Singapore, the dream was always to own a Swiss watch, drink French wines, drive a German car, and own American hifi. The first three are still true. The last is rapidly declining. CES SHOULD care about "specialty audio" - and we should all care about it as well.

Money talks....
 

MylesBAstor

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Apr 20, 2010
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That's an enormous amount of money Gary. Then multiply that by the number of shows world wide each year. Ouch

You can't stop though Gary as your music is always amongst the best of any heard. You know how to pick them

I remember when Dan went all out at one the Summer CES Shows years ago with the Martin-Logan Statement system and it cost him around 100k. It's not just the expense of the room, shipping and exhibiting but airfare, hotel, meals multiplied by the number of people. Multiply that today by an insane number of shows worldwide. And truth be told, the US is hardly the hot market any more. Asia, Russia, Middle East and China are THE markets. Who would have thought that Avalon would debut their new statement speaker in Vietnam?
 

MylesBAstor

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Apr 20, 2010
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It seems to me that people complain about decreasing attendance at almost all the shows that have been around for awhile (RAMF, CES/THE, even the CAS Dagogo puts on). It's the shows that are relatively new that may have increasing attendance. So I suspect that as more "regional" shows appear, attendance at more established shows may continue to drop as they are no longer the only game in town, and potential attendees look for something closer to home. If the total number of shows ever stabilizes someone might get an idea which offer the best ROI, but in the meantime I suspect it's a bit of a crapshoot for exhibitors; a relatively new show that appears on the way up one year may crash and burn the next.

Yes but you're talking apples and oranges here Rob. CES is a trade show, the others consumer. Truth be told, more and more manufacturers are meeting their distributors and doing their business at the Munich Show. Lot less hassles including Visas for foreigners.
 

rbbert

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Yes but you're talking apples and oranges here Rob. CES is a trade show, the others consumer. Truth be told, more and more manufacturers are meeting their distributors and doing their business at the Munich Show. Lot less hassles including Visas for foreigners.
But that is partly my point. None of the US shows really work as a trade show for high-end audio. It seems to me that (as mentioned above) successful US audio shows are going to be a hybrid of consumer show and trade show, with the shrinking number of dealers working with manufacturers to exhibit gear and attract customers. There could be some "cross-pollenization" of dealers also, as some hear stuff they don't carry but may decide they would like to.
 

Peter Breuninger

[Industry Expert] Member Sponsor
Jul 20, 2010
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If it is, CES have never given a crap about "specialty audio." Face it. The show is all about the Sony's of the world.

Could be worse. Could have been at The Show where the exhibitors outnumbered attendees 10:1.

Not so in Mark Levinson's room. It was packed each time I was there.
 

MylesBAstor

Well-Known Member
Apr 20, 2010
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But that is partly my point. None of the US shows really work as a trade show for high-end audio. It seems to me that (as mentioned above) successful US audio shows are going to be a hybrid of consumer show and trade show, with the shrinking number of dealers working with manufacturers to exhibit gear and attract customers. There could be some "cross-pollenization" of dealers also, as some hear stuff they don't carry but may decide they would like to.

Yes that true but unfortunately the ROI for regional shows has never been high even in the heydey of Stereophile's shows. Consumers don't seem to go to shows to buy, only to look.

And yes, basically one of the big reason for regional shows was to help manufacturers get distribution in areas where they have no representation or to a lesser extent, help current dealers in the area.

But doing both together is a big task given a limited time span eg. say 21/2 days for RMAF. You really couldn't do them both together so you'd have to have a day for dealers/distributors etc and the other days for consumers.
 

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