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Sep 24 2012

Talking to the Empty Chairs

Trade show and conference organizers—associations, especially—are very good at delivering information to their attendees and members. It’s a practice that drives business and membership. But, what about creating content for the thousands who have never and will never attend? There are compelling reasons to deliver consistent, unbiased and useful information to non-customers besides getting them to attend the live event.

Educating the community: Knowledge—research, news, case studies, and how-to videos—helps keep a market sector and its community vibrant. No event organizer is interested in building an event around an industry that is depleted, obsolete or shrinking. When organizations charge themselves with the task of keeping a group energized, they are the first to know when the market is on a downward slide.

Thought leadership: It’s critical for event organizers to help shape the conversation rather than just chronicle it. Some attempt to set the tone of the discussion through their blogs and social media outreach, but few really succeed. Instead they use their “bully pulpits” as advertising channels and shy away from controversy that could, in reality, help them stand out from the crowd.

Revenue:  More content equals more opportunities for revenue, especially if the pool of advertisers extends beyond the exhibitors and sponsors of the show. Advertisers eager to reach the entirety of the audience in a market would naturally be interested in every blog, newsletter, white paper, e-book, video, slideshare deck, infographic and cartoon.

Dialogue:  It’s easy to survey past and current attendees. But existing customers have already drunk the Kool-Aid. By talking to people that have never and will never attend, event organizers can understand how they compete with other marketing mediums, why they aren’t attractive to a particular segment and what’s working better for non-customers than trade shows and conferences.

Word of Mouth:  Just because one person is unable or uninterested in attending an event doesn’t mean they won’t tell others about it. In today’s social world, one tweet can land a customer and the full reach of free, frequent and great content passed along social channels is nearly incalculable.

Talking to the empty chairs is a long-tail approach. It doesn’t yield quick results and requires a consistent effort. And, because there is so much good information provided by bloggers, suppliers (that invest in useful, non-commercial content), consultants, independent trade press and marketing agencies, most show organizers—even the ones affiliated with trade publications—have to put out really good content in order to be effective.

The Takeaway: In a world where intermediaries like trade show and conference organizers compete with digital content producers, alternative channels for buying and selling and the economy, it makes sense to speak with and to the whole community or risk finding every chair empty when the music finally stops.

 

 

Written by Michelle · Categorized: Archives, Perspectives · Tagged: Conference, Content, content marketing, Featured, Michelle Bruno, trade shows

Sep 07 2011

No More Whining: Programming and Resources Exclusively for Event Industry Suppliers

Little Girl Kid CryingIn some industries (you know who you are), the suppliers of products and services are treated a little like step children—responsible for most of the heavy (financial) lifting but never invited to the ball. That is about to change with some new Webinar programming and content developed exclusively for suppliers in the face-to-face meetings industry.

Selling to Trade Show Organizers

If you’ve been wondering how to sell to trade show organizers, The Marketing Institute for Trade Show & Event Suppliers is presenting a five-part Webcast series running September 26-30, 2011 titled, “Conversations to Contracts: Stop Talking and Start Closing.” The program covers a wide range of topics for suppliers from how to win contracts with trade show organizers, using content to attract customers, lessons from successful suppliers in the trade show industry, and the cost of chaos. Presenters include a list of event industry and marketing luminaries:

  • Andrea Bahr, Society of Petroleum Engineers
  • Chris Brown, National Association of Broadcasters
  • John Galante, AE Ventures
  • Lew Hoff, Bartizan
  • Jason McGraw, InfoComm International
  • Rick McPartlin, The Revenue Game
  • Joe Pulizzi, Content Marketing Institute
  • Rich Stone, ACT/EXPOCAD

Industry veteran, Joyce McKee of Let’s Talk Trade Shows, developed the Conversations to Contracts “eLearning Experience.”  She will moderate the live discussions and Q & A.

Selling to Senior Meeting Planners

If you have a product or service of interest to senior-level meeting and conference planners and would love to know how to reach them or you are wondering about the most effective ways to market yourself and your company, SPIN may have the answer. During the month of September, the Senior Planners Industry Network will be offering a series of Webinars designed specifically for suppliers:

  • 20 Social Media Tips for Suppliers
  • What’s Keeping Planners Awake at Night?
  • 2012 Trends
  • 7 Ways to Create Winning Proposals

Selling to Meeting and Conference Planners

Fully Committed is a blog penned by Cara Tracy, former hotel group sales manager turned association executive. It gives advice, ideas, dos, and don’ts to hotel sales professionals trying to book business with meeting planners, but anyone selling to planners can learn from her smart advice. From conducting impressive site tours to social media tips, Cara is a hotel salesperson’s new BFF.

The Takeaway: No more whining suppliers. You’ve been wondering how to get into the heads and pockets of your target customers. Now is your chance. There are fees to “attend” the Webcasts and Webinar series, but flying blind will cost you more in the long run. And if you work for a hotel and just want to know that someone feels your pain, read Cara Tracy’s blog. It’s free.

Written by Michelle · Categorized: Archives, Events · Tagged: blog, content marketing, Featured, Webinars

Aug 07 2011

Marketing Trade Shows as Content: The Sequel

My previous post, Marketing Trade Shows as Content, focused on the concept of using exhibitor-produced content to market a show and build a community. Traci Browne featured the topic on #expochat last week and the discussion yielded some excellent ideas on exactly how exhibition organizers can help exhibitors create and promote good content:

Helmet Cams—It started with disposable cameras. Organizers would hand them out to exhibitors and attendees and ask them to capture the most relevant moments of the trade show. With the advent of Flip cameras, participants were able to grab actual video footage of the event (in addition to still photos) and YouTube came alive with everything from cooking demos to flash mobs. But, as far as we can tell, no one has given exhibitors wearable cameras (dubbed helmet cams by the #expochat group) to chronicle the exhibitors’ experiences first-hand.

Content Marketing Tool Kit—Not everyone understands the difference between shareable content and a sales pitch. Perhaps exhibitors would benefit from training and materials on how to convert press releases, show demos, and YouTube videos into shareable content. The kit would also include advice for exhibitors on how to roll the costs for ebooks, case studies, and research into their trade show budgets.

Exhibitor Concierge—The concierge idea shouldn’t be limited to theater tickets and restaurant reservations. An exhibitor concierge can help match exhibitors with opportunities—made available by the organization—before, during, and after the show to share their content.

Exhibitor Innovation Support—Show organizers from TS2 2010 (co-located with the IAEE Mid-Year Meeting) helped The Expo Group promote their in-booth broadcast studio called the In Zone, “an interactive communications pavilion,” by publishing the In Zone schedule on their website. The live-streamed coverage from the In Zone gained visibility for The Expo Group and attracted attention for the event.

Trade Show TV—Not every exhibitor has the resources to build its own in-booth studio, however, organizers can provide space and/or equipment and resources for a TV station to capture content on site. In 2011, The International Housewares Show organized in-booth interviews with a roving reporter like this one:  Another option is third-party platforms such as the Pulse Network, or TMCnet.

Digital Content Carousel—an updated version of the brochure carousel might be coming to a trade show near you. This example of kiosks in Mexico City that allow citizens to download music, ringtones, audio books, and videos street side is a prime example of the types of support that organizers could offer to exhibitors in the future. Live attendees could obtain digital content—white papers, videos, ebooks—by connecting an external storage device to the kiosk on site and remote participants could access this “one-stop-shop” via the Internet.

Takeaways: Once trade show organizers begin to think about exhibitor offerings as valuable assets, the innovation process can begin. As part of the new rules of marketing, event producers can and should take an active role in supporting the creation and dissemination of exhibitor content.

Written by Michelle · Categorized: Archives, Strategy · Tagged: content marketing, Featured, Michelle Bruno, trade shows

Jul 26 2011

Marketing Trade Shows as Content

Two recent posts from Midcourse Corrections on leveraging content marketing and face-to-face events as part of a content marketing strategy, helped me visualize trade shows as content. As such, trade show organizers can begin to think about new ways to market their events and build their communities by becoming content curators, viewing their exhibitors as content producers, and positioning the live event as the “product” being offered for sale.

To adopt this line of thinking, exhibition producers must take one very big leap of faith by believing that the distribution of exhibitor content outside the framework of the live trade show will NOT diminish the value of the face-to-face event (the old “why buy the cow if you can get the milk for free” adage) and will, in fact, drive attendance and exhibitor participation at the live event.

In the “tradeshows as content” strategy, exhibitors are reservoirs of content, filled to the brim with product brochures, white papers, product demos, press kits, video tutorials, and sales presentations. Organizers curate, and re-purpose these sales pitches into a continuous flow of solution-generating, idea-sparking, and valuable content that sells registrations.

The concept of exhibition organizers as content curators isn’t new.  A decade ago, trade publications, owned by or in partnership with the exhibition producers, filled the role of curators by pushing exhibitors and attendees to the live event with ads, case studies, and editorial.

Today, event organizers have transcended print magazines (in many cases) and moved to other more profitable or far-reaching platforms for exhibitor content distribution: virtual trade shows, Webinars, online publications, blogs, and mobile apps. This move has solidified their positions as curators.

Here are some specific ways that exhibition organizers can tap into the vast content resources at their disposal to drive business:

  • Create an online (accessible, searchable) resource library of exhibitor white papers, ebooks, case studies, how-to articles, and video tutorials.
  • Appoint a content marketing officer to sift through exhibitor content and re-shape the resources to meet the needs of the audience.
  • Make all of the content shareable on social media channels.
  • Stop selling the event and start sharing the information.
  • Create a steady (daily) flow of content accessible through one portal—the organization’s blog.
  • Offer excellent content.
  • Ask exhibitors to guest blog.
  • Develop an editorial calendar that covers content from all of the market segments the show covers.
  • Send frequent emails of curated exhibitor content (links back to the show blog) to an opt-in list of recipients.
  • Highlight and promote content that exhibitors have created and posted on their own websites through the show blog.
  • Take the content marketing to the trade show floor, as Jeff Hurt suggests, by asking exhibitors to demonstrate how they are innovators and providing more informal education on site.

With all content marketing initiatives, there are benefits when the program is executed well. Content lives on after the live event concludes. Good content brings good SEO to the organizer’s website. Using exhibitors as resources helps create a pipeline of content that organizers won’t have to develop from scratch. Exhibitors receive additional exposure and niche content positions the event organizer as a central resource for information on a market segment—the Holy Grail for associations and independents. Oh, and it sells more product, i.e., registrations.

The Takeaway: Not all exhibitors and sponsors will have gotten the “share, don’t sell” memo about content. Organizers will have to provide guidance and work with them to convert their traditional sales pitches into desirable content for potential attendees; however, this extra effort can be monetized. That said, organizers have two choices: they can charge exhibitors for the curation service as part of a promotional package and realize some short-term benefit, OR they can go for the long tail (by not charging) and consider it an investment toward consolidating their communities of stakeholders and positioning their organizations at the center of the conversation year round.

Written by Michelle · Categorized: Archives, Strategy · Tagged: content marketing, Featured, Michelle Bruno, trade shows

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