Trade Show Ideas & Inspiration

What You Should Know about Event and Trade Show Etiquette

You have worked hard to design the perfect exhibit and the most effective marketing materials, but your performance in the booth—how your staff greets and assists attendees—will determine whether your show is a success. Booth etiquette refers to the conduct, presentation, and performance of your booth staff. The following are commonsense booth etiquette tips.

Booth Etiquette Tips

Make no mistake about it, trade show attendees and your competition are monitoring your behavior. Your exhibit is a public stage, and you are the host. As such, you and your staff must behave with the warmth and graciousness expected of a host. These include: 

Your staff is nice but are they knowledgeable, personable, and presentable? As company representatives, your staff should also demonstrate the following professional characteristics:

 Before and After the Show

Traveling to shows can be fun. Sure it’s work, but you’re out of the office, and the show is usually in a town with great nightlife. Everyone is planning to go out the first night and hit the town. This is a very real and unavoidable part of managing your exhibit marketing. Handled correctly, you’ll either maximize the Return on Investment of the show or minimize the show’s effectiveness.  

So, don’t fight it. Make it work for your company. If you work for a small company where the executives are the booth staff, you will rarely have a problem. Senior executives know all too well the cost of exhibiting and are usually motivated to seize every business opportunity. However, if your company is larger, then consider setting measurable goals for the booth staff so they support each other and work toward a successful show. Regardless, it is important to make your expectations known and to reinforce those expectations throughout the show.  

Here are some suggestions:

Lastly, appropriate staff behavior applies during show hours, before the show opens, before and after show hours, and after the show is over. Too often, the person sitting next to you on the plane is headed to the same show (likewise for the person in front of you in line, and/or at the next table in the restaurant). Key contacts are often made in these chance meetings (or company secrets revealed). Trade shows are an open microphone. Know when to turn it on and when to turn it off.

–Mel White

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