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| Your Organisation’s Exhibition Folder
This is your Bible - the most useful piece of material before, during and after the show.
DO NOT SEND THIS WITH THE EXHIBIT OR ANY OTHER FREIGHTED MATERIAL.
It should contain everything that might possibly need to be checked concerning the exhibition, with particular attention paid to things that might go wrong or missing during the exhibition. The following is a list of sections to include:
- Key contacts and telephone / mobile / emergency numbers:
- Freight forwarders
- Exhibition organisers
- Stand staff
- Shipping agents
- Organisation phone numbers
- Contracts, special arrangements and service order forms.
- Exhibition space map.
- Inventory of the contents of each box or crate.
- A duplicate set of set-up drawings.
- Photographs of last year’s exhibit to serve as visual aids for the set-up crew.
- Checklist of everything to be done and its latest completion date. Mark each item with the initials of the person responsible, and circulate an updated copy on a regular basis, asking for feedback as things are completed.
- Checklist of items to be sent to the show that won’t come from the warehouse or from the design organisation.
- Copy of the organiser’s Exhibition Technical Manual
- Hotel / travel / maps etc.
- Copies of any press releases / press coverage.
- If it is a large stand, get the design team to create a stand map.
- Exhibition schedule, including open and close times. Include seminar and special event information.
- Staffing schedule.
- Contents of the exhibition tool kit
- Contents of the stationery kit
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| Exhibition Tool Kit
Ideally, this should be stored in the same place back at the office (when out of use) with consumables added as they run out.
Suggested contents:
- Medicine kit - should contain plasters, moleskin (for blisters), antiseptic cream, painkillers and antacid tablets.
- Clothes kit - stain remover for clothes, needle and thread (black and white),
- Fix it kit - sellotape, scissors, hammer, screwdriver (plain and Philips), scraper, Stanley knife, double-sided carpet tape, double sided Velcro, packing tape and tape guns, Blu-tak, drawing pins, safety pins, glue, fishing line (really useful for securing things invisibly) and Spray-mount for peeling graphics
- Notice board for staff area
- Cleaning materials - spray polish, glass cleaner, dusters, hand wipes etc.
- Food kit - corkscrew, plastic glasses (when the cafes and restaurants are closed), kitchen paper roll etc.
- Electric kit - electric extension leads and surge protection leads for computers. Get extension leads with longer leads if possible, but remember extension leads must be no more than 2 metres long. If you are exhibiting abroad, continental adapters
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| Stationery Kit
Make sure that sufficient organisation stationery is all in one place - a portable file system with sections is ideal for this. If you do this early enough it can be sent with the rest of the stand materials - but then take a few of each thing with you in case of emergency non-arrival of the stand.
Think about including:
- Sales territory maps with addresses and phone numbers of all dealer / distributor / sales offices.
- Annual and / or quarterly corporate financial reports (just one or two in case anyone asks).
- Letterheads, compliment slips (useful for jotting down extra details and stapling to your literature) and a dozen A4 envelopes.
- Product literatures, order forms, price lists, photos and spec sheets.
- Lead forms.
- A4 note pads.
- Fax rolls or plain paper and ink cartridges or ribbons, if you have a fax on stand.
- Ruler, staplers and spare staples, hole punch, empty folders to file lead forms, post it notes and black marker pens for packages.
- Pens! Loads and loads of pens…
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During the Show
- When you first arrive, check the stand and ensure everything is in the right place.
- Check that the technical equipment is working correctly.
- If this is your first time at the venue check where the following places are:
- Nearest toilets, cafes, rest rooms, meeting rooms, business office, exhibition organiser’s office, CIPD exhibitor lounge, seminar area.
- Check to see the likely direction that the ‘people traffic’ will come from.
- Check out the competitors.
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Photographs
- You might think you will remember where things were, and what worked or didn’t but you won’t.
- Take photos of your exhibit at the beginning of the exhibition when the stand is looking its best. If you need some other photographs with more ‘atmosphere’ then take some when you are good and busy.
- Put the photos straight into your organisation’s exhibition folder with a note of what needs to be remedied.
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Keep mum!
- Be aware that you are surrounded by the competition at an exhibition making sure that organisation information is kept as quiet as possible.
- Don’t talk about organisation business on a mobile phone in the middle of the aisle.
- If your laptop contains sensitive files, reset your passwords and don’t let it out of your sight.
- Leave any sensitive organisation materials at home, or tuck them away out of sight in a cupboard.
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At the End of the Show
- If you have your own stand, give it a thorough inspection before leaving the exhibition. Go through it with the lead member of the dismantling crew, or preferably your contact at the stand builders. If you make a list of the needed repairs before your display goes back into the crates, you’ll not only save on inspection charges but time checking the stand before the next exhibition.
- Make sure you have arranged for the collection of all your stand items. If you leave too much rubbish you may be charged for removal.
- Before you leave the show, make sure everything you rented for the stand is returned otherwise, you’ll be charged a penalty. Don’t rely on your stand construction team to know which items are rentals and which are not.
- Don’t leave your leads behind. It is not unknown for stand builders to find a box of contact business cards forgotten in a corner of the stand after the stand team has left.
- Don’t leave items unattended for collection at the end of the show - you may never see them again.
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After the Show
- If you are going to improve on your performance, you need to measure it first. Once you are back in the office, schedule a meeting quickly while everyone’s memory is still fresh.
- Keep notes of anything that needs attention adding these to your organisation’s exhibition folder so that you will remember next time.
- Was the budget allocated correct for that exhibition, or do you need to allocate more resources?
- Start your follow-ups as soon as possible after the exhibition. See page 38.
- If you have the resources, think about re-qualifying your leads. Even if your leads are all qualified in order of interest, your visitors may not have been telling the whole story. People are not always as honest at an exhibition stand for a number of reasons, they might not want to hurt your feelings, and they might be scouting for the opposition. Or they may be wary of hard selling but are really interested in your products or services. A phone call can save you time and money and give you a more accurate view of their real intentions.
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