How Three Exhibit Companies Changed Their Businesses

Trade Show Blog

Three Exhibit Businesses that Changed

Gutsy Business Decisions

I am fortunate. Nearly every day, I hear stories about trade shows and the exhibition industry. We all know the ones we’ve heard before, ones that vex our industry and that never change, like drayage. Then there are the stories that prove people can make gutsy decisions about their business when force of habit and fear makes it seem impossible. I love those stories. It reminds me that “grit, planning, and vision” are within the grasp of everyone if they choose to see a problem as an opportunity.

Allow me to share three examples. All three are Classic Exhibits Distributors who knew they had to change their business model and did. I’ve heard the same stories from others over the years who knew they needed to change… but sadly chose to head down the same well-worn path.

No names. And admittedly, Classic Exhibits benefited as well as the distributor.

Exhibit Companies Changing their Business ModelBottomline Displays

About six months before COVID, Bottomline Displays was purchased. The new owner had a solid business background, but no experience in the exhibit industry. At the time, Bottomline sold mostly mid-line exhibits from several recognized large manufacturers. That changed when the focus shifted from consultation and service to sales… any sales. When you are fighting to save your new business, selling anything is what matters most.

What was a necessity at the time became a business model, even as the economy improved after the pandemic. The owner and his team pushed to close every sale within 20-30 minutes, which meant selling on price, not on the customer’s trade show marketing requirements. It became a habit, learned year after year.

Moving Upstream

One day, she called me. She said, “I need to move upstream. There’s no long-term future for me or my employees selling $99 banner stands and $1299 10 ft. displays.” Honestly, I bit my tongue. I’d heard it many times before from other distributors, only to see them revert to the sales model they knew and that felt comfortable. I encouraged her to ask her clients about their trade show marketing goals and spend less time on showing them examples. I suggested she rely more on consultation and design, even if the solution ends up being a standard kit. Both meant long sales cycles — sometimes days or even weeks.

The turning point came several months later after losing an island opportunity. She asked for advice on a potential client with a $105,000 20 x 20 budget. We told her to arrange a phone meeting with a Classic Exhibits Designer, the client, and her. Then let the designer do what the designer does best. Ask questions. She sold it, and since then, has sold several more islands along with customized inlines. She still sells $99 banner stands and $1299 inlines, but they are no longer her default sales.

$150,000+ Custom House

There are two variations to this example. One starts with the rule, “Unless the client has $150,000 to spend on a project don’t waste your time on them.” There’s nothing subtle about this. And, nothing wrong with it. The custom exhibit house has decided to focus on projects with a sizeable trade show budget. The other variation requires Account Executives to handle smaller orders, primarily for existing clients but occasionally for those with long-term potential.

Both strategies seem reasonable, until they aren’t.

This custom house tried both approaches, not once or twice, but multiple times depending on the AE or the latest management team. Nothing worked. Customers were told to go elsewhere for smaller properties (and did, sometimes permanently). Or they received uninformed advice from an AE who didn’t know the products or the suppliers. In both cases, they were losing customers to more nimble distributors or providing questionable customer service to clients who needed more expertise.

Painless and Straightforward

The solution was relatively painless and straightforward. They hired an AE/PM to be the in-house expert on portable/modular/rental displays. It wasn’t a stepping stone to become a custom AE. They were given the same respect and responsibility. The only difference was that this AE/PM could earn a higher % on orders they initiated or a lower % percentage on referral orders from custom Account Executives. They were incentivized to focus on smaller or mediium display solutions.

Sales soared. Existing custom clients didn’t have to go elsewhere. They got what they needed along with the expertise they expected. AE’s had an in-house expert to assist them on products they frankly didn’t want to learn about anyway. Potential clients with smaller budgets (and potential) were introduced to the benefits of working with a custom house. Everyone got exactly what they wanted, including the suppliers who benefited from a dedicated contact who learned their products and processes.

Here’s the funny thing. This custom house had tried this once before and it worked amazing well. Then the AE was recruited by another custom house. They didn’t replace the AE, only to have portable/modular sales plummet by $725,000. Four years later, the GM decided to try a “new approach.” She hired someone dedicated to systems sales. Not surprisingly, sales rebounded.

Franchise Exhibits

You’ve heard about this distributor even if you don’t know them personally. Years ago, they hitched their business wagon to one manufacturer. It’s been a good ride and a safe one, despite the restrictions. But as business conditions changed, requiring a more flexible approach, the relationship between the manufacturer and distributor became more of a controlling helicopter parent than a partnership. Even worse, the child became a red-headed step-child to a host of fair-haired newborns.

For many distributors, it made sense to stay in this toxic relationship. The margins were good. The products and processes predictable. Just bite your tongue for another year and tell yourself “Why traumatize clients and employees? They depend on you. Stay the course and maybe something will change.”

Franchise Exhibits eventually came to a different conclusion. The future wasn’t safe or predictable in the current model. To grow and to service their clients, they needed more options and greater flexibility within the trade show market. That meant trauma since everything had to change. New name. New suppliers. New products. New marketing. New processes. And in some cases, new people who weren’t onboard.

Mostly, it meant uncertainty, even with months of planning and preparation.

Three Things

To minimize the impact, they did three things amazingly well. First, they talked to former Franchise distributors who had made the same decision years before. Those distributors told them how it would affect their business, negatively and positively, and how to address the change with employees and clients who may not understand why leaving a franchise model made sense. At the same time, they offered them advice on suppliers and how those suppliers differed from their current one.

Secondly, they planned. They were committed to making the decision on their terms. No knee-jerk decision. No scrambling for partnerships. They took a hard look at their business and decided what they could do, couldn’t do, and what opportunities they wanted to explore in this new model.

Finally, they set expectations and a path for success, not only within their organization but also with vendors.

Has it been successful? To be honest, for some it’s too soon to tell. For others, it’s been a business epiphany. For all of them, the transition has been far less impactful than they expected on both their employees and customers. They’ve discovered that there’s more innovative products on the market than they were told. The biggest change… they are getting treated as a customer by suppliers who care about their success. They still flinch at times and there’s a lingering paranoia, but they will survive and thrive. Freedom tends to spark that in creative and competent business people.

–Mel White
mel@classicexhibits.com
https://www.linkedin.com/in/melmwhite

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Classic Exhibits Inc. designs and manufacturers portable, modular, hybrid, and custom exhibit solutions, including SuperNova LED Lightboxes. Classic Exhibits products are represented by an extensive distributor network in North America and in select International markets. For more information, contact us at 866-652-2100 or www.classicexhibits.com.

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