Trade Show TalesBlog

Archive for March, 2021

Practical Elegance by Seth Godin

March 11th, 2021 COMMENTS
Symphony Portable Display Elegance

Two Words

Seth Godin

Throughout the design and engineering process for the Symphony Portable System, we focused on several guiding principles: relevance, ease-of-use, adaptability, and beauty. In short, practicality and elegance. Those can be challenging concepts to communicate… but not for Seth Godin.

Every morning, I receive an email with Seth Godin wisdom. Today, he perfectly explained “practical elegance.” Thank you Seth! You are the master! The blog post is below and on his website.

Practical Elegance | March 11, 2021

The 16-foot canvas Prospector canoe made by the Chestnut Canoe Company is not the fastest or the lightest or the cheapest canoe but it is an elegant canoe.

Practical elegance is something that is available to all of us. If we choose, it can become the cornerstone of our work.

Some of us make a thing and many of us make a system. What makes something practically elegant is that it’s better, smoother, cleaner, more understandable, kinder, more efficient, friendlier or more approachable than it needs to be.

Microsoft Windows was never particularly elegant, as you could see the nuts and bolts underneath it. It was clunky, but it got the job done.

On the other hand, the Macintosh-for at least 20 years-was surprisingly elegant. When it broke, it broke in an elegant way. It knew things before it asked us to type them in, it had a smile on its face–it seemed to have a sense of humor.

When we create something with practical elegance, we are investing time and energy in a user experience that satisfies the user more than it helps the bottom line of the company that made it. Ironically, in the long run, satisfying the user is the single best way to help the bottom line of a company that doesn’t have monopoly power.

When a designer combines functionality with delight, we’re drawn to whatever she’s produced. That’s the elegance we’re searching for in our built world.

An enemy of practical elegance is persistent complexity, often caused by competing demands, network effects and the status quo. The latest operating system of the Mac is without elegance. When it crashes, and mine has been every few hours for the last week, it crashes poorly. The kernel panic reports are unreadable, by me and by their support folks. The dialogue boxes aren’t consistent, the information flow is uneven and nothing about the experience shows any commitment to polish, to delight or to the user.

Practical elegance doesn’t mean that the canoe will never capsize. It means that the thing we built was worth building, and it left the user feeling better, not worse, about their choice.

Too often, “customer service” has come to mean “answer the phone and give a refund.” But customer service begins long before something breaks. It’s about a commitment to the experience. Creating delight before it’s expected. Building empathy and insight into the interactions that people will choose to have with you.

Of course this takes effort. So do all the other things that go into a product or service. Apparently, though, this effort is perceived as optional by some.

As soon as a product or system creator starts acting like the user has no choice, elegance begins to disappear.

Our Post-COVID Business Strategy

March 8th, 2021 COMMENTS

Look for Opportunities. Work as a Team.

Affordable Cubicle Height Extenders for Offices and Retail Stores

March 8th, 2021 COMMENTS

Business offices with cubicles in a post-COVID world present challenges to employers, employees, and their customers. As employees return to their desks, they will expect additional personal safety. Most cubicles are only 4-5 ft. high and don’t offer enough personal protection. At a minimum, cubicle partitions should be at least 6 ft. high.

Cubicle Height Extenders install in minutes and raise the overall height of cubicle partitions with acrylic or printed Sintra inserts. There are two adjustable sizes and three standard color options: white, black, and silver. They fit any size cubicle without drilling, disassembling, or modifying the existing frame. For more information including prices, click on this link.

Sizes

Office Cubicle Height Extender in two sizes and three colors

Installation Instructions

Office Cubicle Height Extender in two sizes and three colors

Clip Spacing and Acrylic Sizes

Office Cubicle Height Extender in two sizes and three colors

February 2021 Fashion Events at the Orlando County Convention Center (Video)

March 4th, 2021 COMMENTS

MAGIC Pop Up, WWIN Showcase, and OFFPRICE co-located at the Orlando County Convention Center for the February 9-11 show dates. This video shows the steps that were taken to ensure that it was safe and reactions from attendees and exhibitors to these successful events.

In an exceptional display of collaboration, this groundbreaking expo set a precedent for holding business events safely once again.

Designing a Safer Office | Article in EXHIBITOR Online

March 4th, 2021 COMMENTS

This week, EXHIBITOR Magazine published an article about an open-office redesign by Consolidated Displays, a Classic Exhibits Distributor in Pittsburgh.

The Burns Scalo Office Building

Burns Scalo recognized that their tenant’s open-office layout didn’t conform to current CDC recommendations for social distancing and divided workspaces.  Derek Librecht, VP at Consolidated Displays, meet with the company and completed a walkthrough of the office space, taking measurements and noting the layout and obstacles. The final solution included over 30 dividers, all powder-coated to match existing cubical furniture. In addition, cubicle height extenders were added to the office walls to raise the height to 6 ft.

Classic Exhibits was delighted to assist with this project, including renderings, design, and materials. We expect these environmental safety projects will increase significantly over the next 6 months as companies reopen and employees return to their offices.

CLICK HERE to read the article (Just scroll past the silly and unnecessary “Registration Required” form).