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Atricle Dump - Trade Show Marketing Misery - 10 Deadly Mistakes That Spell Disaster!
Preparing Your Cleaning Business for a Disaster ach prospects.Bad things can happen to your business -- fires, floods, tornadoes and hurricanes, are just a few of the many disasters that can wipe out your cleaning business in just a matter of minutes. You have spent years building up a successful cleaning business; don't let failure to plan for the worst ruin it. Although no one wants to think about it, planning ahead c 6) Arrive just in time for the show because you want to avoid extra lodging costs. Carry and move all your booth supplies and avoid the expense and hassle of shipping and handling. 7) Consider everyone in the show a prospect. Try to coral everyone that’s walking by. Tell everyone what’s better about your trips and why everyone else’s stinks. 8 Secrets of Successful Yellow Pages Advertising If you want to guarantee disaster, huge expense and seriously
challenge your health in your trade show marketing, follow this
simple formula. Although these top 10 tips are somewhat humorous,
they are unfortunately based on real-life observations I have made in
many trade shows.Year after year the yellow pages are full of ineffective ads. Follow these sure-fire tips to better your response and get more for your advertising investment.1. The size of your ad depends on 3 factors: your budget, your competition and your current staffing situation. If other advertisers under your heading all have simple listings or small ads, consid 1) Think you know everything, even if you’ve never attended a travel trade show. You’re convinced travel trade show marketing is for you because everyone else seems to do it. Plus you’re not sure what other tourism marketing to do. 2) Don’t do any pre-show promotions to regional customers and prospects. You don’t want to spend any more money because your cheap or max’d out your credit card. You figure it’s the trade show management’s job to get people to the show. 3) Never talk to show management and don't read the manual before the show. You believe that all they want to do is try to sell you more space or inform you about an additional union cost they forgot to tell you about. 4) Design and build the booth yourself in your spare time. Proudly place your company name across the middle of your display in large 4” type; “Joe’s Fun Trips”. Load up the booth and table with dozen’s of small photos your 7-year old niece took with “Brownie camera. 5) Don’t talk with your staff or create show goals. Put your old Uncle Albert in the booth since he knows your region and trips better then anyone, even though he’s hard of hearing and shy. Don’t have or practice a strategy on how to approach prospects. 6) Arrive just in time for the show because you want to avoid extra lodging costs. Carry and move all your booth supplies and avoid the expense and hassle of shipping and handling. 7) Consider everyone in the show a prospect. Try to coral everyone that’s walking by. Tell everyone what’s better about your trips and why everyone else’s stinks. 8) Settling In At A New Job convinced travel trade show marketing is for you
because everyone else seems to do it. Plus you’re not sure what other
tourism marketing to do.Getting a new job can be extremely difficult. With the economy not being as strong as it once was, you may find yourself competing against hundreds of other possible applicants for the same position. You may feel like getting the job is the hardest part, but many people underestimate a different aspect of getting a new job: settling in amongst new coworkers and 2) Don’t do any pre-show promotions to regional customers and prospects. You don’t want to spend any more money because your cheap or max’d out your credit card. You figure it’s the trade show management’s job to get people to the show. 3) Never talk to show management and don't read the manual before the show. You believe that all they want to do is try to sell you more space or inform you about an additional union cost they forgot to tell you about. 4) Design and build the booth yourself in your spare time. Proudly place your company name across the middle of your display in large 4” type; “Joe’s Fun Trips”. Load up the booth and table with dozen’s of small photos your 7-year old niece took with “Brownie camera. 5) Don’t talk with your staff or create show goals. Put your old Uncle Albert in the booth since he knows your region and trips better then anyone, even though he’s hard of hearing and shy. Don’t have or practice a strategy on how to approach prospects. 6) Arrive just in time for the show because you want to avoid extra lodging costs. Carry and move all your booth supplies and avoid the expense and hassle of shipping and handling. 7) Consider everyone in the show a prospect. Try to coral everyone that’s walking by. Tell everyone what’s better about your trips and why everyone else’s stinks. 8 Beware---Characteristics of an Office Gossip! the show.Every office setting or work environment has at least one. I call them the Office Gossip. Sometimes it’s difficult to recognize the person because they are very likeable. They are good at pretending to be your friend or pretending to be interested in helping a situation or a person. This person can be sneaky about their gossiping to the extent that you may 3) Never talk to show management and don't read the manual before the show. You believe that all they want to do is try to sell you more space or inform you about an additional union cost they forgot to tell you about. 4) Design and build the booth yourself in your spare time. Proudly place your company name across the middle of your display in large 4” type; “Joe’s Fun Trips”. Load up the booth and table with dozen’s of small photos your 7-year old niece took with “Brownie camera. 5) Don’t talk with your staff or create show goals. Put your old Uncle Albert in the booth since he knows your region and trips better then anyone, even though he’s hard of hearing and shy. Don’t have or practice a strategy on how to approach prospects. 6) Arrive just in time for the show because you want to avoid extra lodging costs. Carry and move all your booth supplies and avoid the expense and hassle of shipping and handling. 7) Consider everyone in the show a prospect. Try to coral everyone that’s walking by. Tell everyone what’s better about your trips and why everyone else’s stinks. 8 Accountability type;
“Joe’s Fun Trips”. Load up the booth and table with dozen’s of small
photos your 7-year old niece took with “Brownie camera.Why is this happening to me? When is somebody going to train me? When am I going to find good people? I am sure you have all heard questions similar to these.You may have even asked these questions yourself. But what ever happened to personal responsibility? People are too quick to point a finger and fail to realize that three fingers point back at them. 5) Don’t talk with your staff or create show goals. Put your old Uncle Albert in the booth since he knows your region and trips better then anyone, even though he’s hard of hearing and shy. Don’t have or practice a strategy on how to approach prospects. 6) Arrive just in time for the show because you want to avoid extra lodging costs. Carry and move all your booth supplies and avoid the expense and hassle of shipping and handling. 7) Consider everyone in the show a prospect. Try to coral everyone that’s walking by. Tell everyone what’s better about your trips and why everyone else’s stinks. 8 Understanding Accounting Vocabulary ach prospects.The following article is an excerpt from the free online course "Using Finance & Accounting in Your Small Business".When you learn something new like accounting concepts and terms, it helps to create links between what you know and what you are trying to learn. In some ways, it is like learning a second language and decoding the new word is part of the 6) Arrive just in time for the show because you want to avoid extra lodging costs. Carry and move all your booth supplies and avoid the expense and hassle of shipping and handling. 7) Consider everyone in the show a prospect. Try to coral everyone that’s walking by. Tell everyone what’s better about your trips and why everyone else’s stinks. 8) Give everyone several of your expensive new 4-color brochures. You invested the majority of your tourism promotional money into the new brochures and you want to make sure everyone has one. 9) You and old Uncle Albert will work the weeklong booth yourselves. Don’t drink water. Eat tradeshow concessionaire fast food exclusively. Attends late night hospitality suites, drink all the free beer you can and party with associates every night. Forget your breath mints. 10) Jump into operations when your get back to the office. Wait for all the calls and new clients from your travel trade show marketing to come pouring in. If you want the top tips for how-to exhibit successfully, read my other articles on travel trade show exhibiting on my website or here at EzineArticles.com. It doesn’t matter what industry you are in. Successful trade show exhibiting is something you can learn and prosper from - unless you are old Uncle Albert.
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