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Things You Learn from 8 Year Olds: Word on the Street — January 26th thru January 30th

February 1st, 2015 COMMENTS
Kevin Carty, VP Classic Exhibits

Kevin Carty, VP Classic Exhibits

8 … What an interesting age. Not quite the age where you start thinking you know everything, and not quite the age when you feel totally dependent on your parents.

Each Friday and Saturday, I am surrounded by 20 of them, including my twins, as their youth basketball coach. This includes one team of 10 boys and another of 10 girls. All 8 or approaching 8. Each week, they are a wealth of insights and lessons.

Lesson 1. It’s OK to celebrate when your opponent or friend scores.

Is it really such a bad thing to acknowledge a great shot in basketball by your opponent? Or to congratulate a business competitor on a win? For example, new product segments created by others can open potential business for your business as well. Just look at all the coffee shops, thanks to Starbucks. Rather than spending time getting angry, celebrate it and use it as fuel for you and your team to make changes to your business.

One of my players approached me at halftime saying, “Hey coach, that screen the guys put on me was awesome! I want to learn how to do that. Did you see what happened? His teammate was able to score so easily.”

Lesson 2. Having your teammate’s best interest at heart ONLY creates victory for the whole team

image9When someone challenges your solution or approach, listen to them and be objective about the information. Too often, we decide to go “our way” without heeding sound advice or help. Or without engaging our clients (who are part of our team) in a solution.

In the end, a win for the team (your business and your client) is all that really matters

One my girls walked up to a teammate and told her that the next time they were on the court she would pass it to her so she could score. Even though the girl who had the ball had no problem creating her own shot opportunities. But she realize that the other girl was a better shooter, which meant a greater likelihood the team would score.

Lesson 3. Details matter Coach!

This comes from my girls. At the end of each practice, they all want to know (more than anything else!) if they are wearing their gold or their blue uniforms for the game. To which I say, “I don’t know. Why does that matter?” The response from one girl was telling. “Details coach…they matter…like wanting to make sure I wear the proper color of ribbon in my hair. It has to match my uniform. Duh?!”

I know we all know this, but the devil truly is in the details in our business lives. The smallest can make the difference between a winning exhibit and a dud. You can create the most outstanding display for a company, but if their experience in setting it up becomes so painful due to poor setups, poor engineering, or just poorly packaging, it won’t matter how good it looks. The negative tone was already set, and it will influence how they perform at the show and how they approach the next one.

There are countless lessons these kiddos teach me every week, some more important than others, but all near and dear when you stop to think of the messengers — just 8 year old kids having fun.

Makes me wish we could all have a “younger” perspective in our daily business lives. It would certainly make it a lot more fun.

Have a great weekend!

–Kevin
http://twitter.com/kevin_carty
http://www.linkedin.com/pub/kevin-carty/3/800/32a

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Where to Eat in Las Vegas | EXHIBITORLIVE 2015

January 29th, 2015 COMMENTS
Lesson #215 | The Only Constant is Change

Lesson #215 | The Only Constant is Change

Tips from a Townie

January is CRAZY in Las Vegas! CES and PPAI just finished. Up next is SHOT Show, International Builder’s Week, and World of Concrete. Blink once and it will be February. Blink again… EXHIBITORLIVE!

Several years ago, I shared my VEGAS LOCALS perspective on places to eat, shows to see, and things to do while at EXHIBITOR. A lot has happened since then, and I wanted to suggest some new places. These are not your standard tourist fare and many are (thankfully) outside the Hacienda Triangle (Mandalay Bay, Luxor, and Excalibur). Part 1 — Dining Options in Las Vegas.

Dining Options

Down Las Vegas Boulevard from Mandalay Bay is Michael’s Gourmet Room at the Southpoint Casino. It’s a longtime locals favorite and a hidden gem. Michael’s is a throwback to the glamour of the Rat Pack era with captains, uniformed staff, velvet banquets, intimate size, and exquisite service. The old school menu features forgotten dishes like saltimbocca, escargot, chateaubriand for two, and a signature intermezzo of sorbet with Dom Perignon champagne. The food, the service, and the setting… It all works here.

On the opposite end of the strip is The Top of the World Restaurant at the Stratosphere. It’s perched 844 feet above the city and revolves in place, rotating a full 360 degrees every 80 minutes for a birds-eye view of Las Vegas. The view attracts tourists, but it’s the menu of re-imagined classics that makes it hard to get a reservation. In addition to a generous helping of ambiance, the menu boasts delectable seafood, prime-cut steaks, and decadent specialties. While there, you can visit the observation deck. The Stratosphere boasts several thrill rides that are not for the faint of heart. My recommendation, make a choice… rides or restaurant and stick to it! The two aren’t very compatible.

Vegas EatsAt the center of the strip, there’s the new LINQ area. I’ll get to the High Roller (the fancy ferris wheel you’ve heard so much about) in Part 2. This time around (no pun intended), we’ll focus on the eateries. Guy Fieri, of Food Network fame (graduated from UNLV don’t ya know) opened his first Las Vegas Restaurant, appropriately named Vegas Kitchen & Bar. Yardhouse has an installation here too, as well as Brooklyn Bowl, Tilted Kilt, and Sprinkles Cupcake ATM. Yep, you can now get your cupcake fix 24/7 in Vegas! Chayo Mexican Kitchen and Tequila Bar, Haute Doggery, Flour & Barley, and F.A.M.E round out the line-up of eateries in this lively new section of the strip.

Finally, there’s the buffet. The Bacchanal Buffet at Caesar’s Palace is the “sex, drugs, and rock-and-roll” of Vegas buffets. Bacchanal Buffet is what happens when you throw $100 million budget at a buffet renovation. The Bacchanal Buffet is not only a feast for your tummy but also for your eyes. The dining room is broken into air, water, or wood-themed sections. And then you have the more than 500 daily offerings many of which are prepared in front of you. The menu changes daily depending on products, season, and chef’s whims. Must tries include fried chicken and waffles, red velvet pancakes, mini Wagyu sliders, Japanese curry, and a made-to-order dessert crepe.

Bacchanal

I’m not going to lie, it’s a little spendy as buffets go ($52+ for dinner) but Groupon has a deal going right now that will get you breakfast buffet and mimosas for 2 plus VIP line passes for $65 total. The catch is that it is only valid Monday- Friday but might be a good option for Thursday if you have an afternoon flight.

Depending on your culinary mood, you might want to give these Off-The-Strip Delights a try:

Okay, I’ve done my best to get you going in the right direction. Let me know what you think and please add your own suggestions.

In the meantime, don’t forget registration for EXHIBITORLIVE 2015 is OPEN! Click Here to access registration and receive an Exhibits Only pass courtesy of Classic Exhibits.

In case you missed it, here’s my What To Do in Las Vegas during EXHIBITORLIVE blog post.

Jen LaBruzza
Western Regional Manager (and Vegas Local)
jen@classicexhibits.com

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Based in Portland, Oregon, Classic Exhibits Inc. designs and manufacturers portable, modular, and custom-hybrid exhibit solutions. 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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Everything I Know About Business, I Learned From “THE Batman”

January 27th, 2015 2 COMMENTS
Ryan C. McKay, Guest Post

Ryan C. McKay, Guest Post

Not Batman. THE Batman!

Like most children born during the waning years of the 70’s and the early 80’s, Superman was always my first choice. My friend Jeff and I would put on our Superman pj’s and capes, and run around the neighborhood – arms outstretched, and making that “schwuuuuusssshhhhhh” sound– day after day. What you DIDN’T see was a lot of Batman. We knew about Batman, of course. He and his side kick Robin were members of the Super-Friends but were usually stuck in the corner with Aquaman, or just driving around in the Batmobile. Batman was boring. He had no powers, and he had no “bite” to make up for it. On the cartoons, he wasn’t exceptionally smart, he wasn’t powerful, and he wasn’t intimidating! He was just a nice guy with a few convenient tools, a mask and cape, and an inexplicable teenage friend.

That all changed in 1989 when Tim Burton’s Batman hit the big screen. Gone were the “Super-Friends”, the powder blue tuxedo’s, the goofy good-natured do-gooder and Robin. In their place was a confident, take charge, self-made arse-kicker who seemed to have all the answers. This wasn’t Bat-Man, this was “THE Batman.” Batmania swept the country, and I was swept up with it. Already a budding comic book fan, I picked up a few issues of “Batman,” and quickly realized something — Batman isn’t about cool gadgets, martial arts, or even the cool looking suit. Batman is Batman because he is a master at manipulating the world around him to create the best set of circumstances to be successful in whatever challenge that has been presented. To me, that was FAR cooler than any superpower could be.

After more than 20 years of collecting, I have an old comic collection to rival nearly anyone else, and the cornerstone of the collection is — of course — Batman. To me, the best issues have never been about crime fighting or adventure, but instead are the issues that focus on a forcefully driven man forcing the world to play by his rules, against all odds.

THIS is the Batman that has focused so much of my adult life and that has — believe it or not — helped shape the way I approach my professional life. You see, everything I know about business I learned from Batman.

Batman Taught Me to Adopt then Adapt


Batman-Begins_revised2005′s Batman Begins took a hint from the comic books and showed audiences just how Batman has the time to put together the tools he needs… especially when they don’t already exist. Instead of going through the time and resource-consuming process of inventing everything from scratch, he uses the tech that his company has built for OTHER applications, and modifies them to serve his personal needs. Need a Batmobile? No problem. Find out what existing tech comes closest to your needs, and then adapt it to make it work for you. Want to search the entire city to find one person quickly? No worries. Adapt the technology that already exists in each person’s cell phone to broadcast images of what’s around them via sonar, while you use an existing receiver to search the resulting images.

We don’t have time to reinvent the wheel over and over. I love innovation as much as anyone, but the idea that everything has to be brand new is counterproductive. Steve Jobs didn’t invent the computer. He took an existing concept and existing technology, and found a way to alter and adapt it to create a stronger and better product than what had already existed. Google didn’t invent the search engine. Instead it took an already existing concept and adapted it to what users really wanted- simple, clean, elegant usability. That’s how it works with adopting/adapting – sometimes you create the better tool by adding to it, and sometimes you have to take pieces of it away. In the end though, it often makes more sense to alter what’s there than it does to just start over.

Batman Taught Me that Information is Power

One of the biggest things I missed from the recent Batman flicks is the “BatComputer” that the comics have featured for several years. This isn’t your average suped-up computer. This is the High Rama Lama of computers. A screen the size of a Hummer (surrounded by several smaller satellite screens), a HUGE mainframe with an array of virtual terminals, and access to pretty much any scrap of information that you could ever possibly catalog. Making his information network even more powerful? He has a slew of paid and unpaid agents constantly funneling more information to him, and if there was any info he didn’t already have, he’d get access to it. The Batman was the one who knew all the secret identities, knew all the hideouts, knew all the weaknesses, and knew how to get the job done. Batman was “The World’s Most Dangerous Man” in a universe where people could shatter mountains, juggle planets, and create nuclear weapons out of thin air- and the root of it came to this: Batman always knew more than anyone else.

Batman-of-the-OfficeIn business, there are no super powers. Some people are better at certain things than others are, but in general, most of us have access to roughly the same arsenal of abilities. The way that we differentiate ourselves from the competition usually comes down to three things: Drive, Creativity, and Knowledge. The amazing thing is that learning tends to fuel all three of these. People who make it a point to acquire new information have the leg up on the competition. That doesn’t mean you have to read everything that you can get your hands on (in fact, there is a lot of evidence that you probably shouldn’t, ‘less you overload your poor brain), but you should always make sure that you have access to the information you need to make informed decisions, and to fuel the kind of innovative thinking necessary to compete with the bigger guys of your industry.

Rely on Your On “Super” Powers

Batman taught me to have strategic allies, but in the end, you still have to rely on yourself: There are two versions of Batman that most people know- the campy 1950′s-mid 1980′s Batman that hung around with Robin, visited library grand openings, and taught young inner city ruffians the importance of flossing, and then there was the dark, brooding Batman that never spoke more than 2 growling words to anyone, would spend 13 hours a day reliving his driving motivation in his head, and would make sure that those inner city ruffians would THE Batmannever have a use for dental floss. The comic fans know that Batman is plenty dark, plenty brooding, and very self reliant, but they also know that it’s all by design, and that he still accepts the value of having strategic allies. The Batman has a large network of allies- from Robin and Nightwing, to Commissioner Gordon and Alfred- each with their own set of skills and specialties, but Batman still understands that his number one ally always has to be himself.

That’s how it is for most successful entrepreneurs. You CAN’T do it all yourself. There just isn’t enough of you to go around, so you need a trusted network of your own whom you can trust to back you up when the going gets tough. Still, in the end, you still have to trust your gut and rely on yourself to make sure everything goes according to your plans. True friends will be there when the going is good OR bad, but even the best of friends can’t endure your sleepless nights for you if you make the wrong call.

The funny thing about being a Batman fan is that you get a sense of ownership on the character that doesn’t come along with Superman, Mickey Mouse, or even Harry Potter. Batman fans take the character seriously- as more than just a superhero or character, but instead as an icon for what we can all aspire to be. Sure, most of us would shy away from a cape and cowl, but instead we embrace the method behind the man: Ingenuity, integrity, self discipline and just enough of the hard-ass “I will make it happen my way, damned be the world if it tries to stop me” attitude that spawned the majority of humanities greatest moments.

Ryan C. McKay
Trade Show Supply
rmckay@tradeshowsupply.com

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A Wish and A Prayer — Trade Show Marketing

January 22nd, 2015 2 COMMENTS

This cartoon, designed by our friends at American Image (www.american-image.com), speaks to the “wish and a prayer” marketing approach of most exhibitors. It’s a cautionary tale we can’t repeat enough to our customers. Our thanks to Charles Dugan and Jacob Norris for permission to reprint it.  cartoon-draft

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

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Based in Portland, Oregon, Classic Exhibits Inc. designs and manufacturers portable, modular, and custom-hybrid exhibit solutions. 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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NETGEAR Showroom Tour at CES 2015

January 22nd, 2015 COMMENTS

This video, produced by NETGEAR, shows their 2015 CES Exhibit. Except for the tables in the hallway in the beginning, it’s entirely a Classic Rental Solutions exhibit. Thanks to Steve Riches at Laguna Displays for sharing and for the order. A pat on the back the the CRS Team. This is a terrific example of how they create customized solutions for Classic Distributors every single day.

For more information about Classic Rental Solutions, contact Jim Shelman (jshelman@classicexhibits.com).

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