Standing out from the competition at a trade show is a big challenge. You work hard to design just the right exhibit, display your products in the best way, and make sure your people are prepared to engage customers at the show.
But are you doing enough to stand out before the show even starts? I mean, long before the show starts -- several weeks or even months.
Have you ever seen a creative person’s desk? Chances are, it was a chaotic mess, with papers covering every surface, empty soda cans and coffee cups pushed to the corners or on top of the papers, notepads filled with incomprehensible scribbling stacked on the floor.
What that person needs is more space. Space to spread out, to work, to collaborate. A bit of organization wouldn’t hurt, either.
For many startups, participating in trade shows and expositions can be a major step in getting their companies off the ground. It can expose them to venture capital, put them in front of potential clients and partners, and help create publicity.
Anyone who’s been to a trade show knows this scene.
There’s always that one booth that’s crowded with people, all gathered around a particular display. You hear gasping, cheering, yelling, laughing, as if they’re watching an exciting craps game. Everyone’s smiling. The company’s booth workers are engaged in conversation with some attendees, while everyone else is gathered around the craps table, or whatever it is.
In one of his most famous speeches, on May 25, 1961, President John F. Kennedy promised America, and the world, that the United States would put a man on the moon before the clock struck midnight on December 31, 1969.
He literally asked for the moon.
Nobody knew for certain it could be done, yet he still made the promise. It was then up to the engineers at NASA to figure out how to do it.
That’s the same approach companies should take when working with an exhibit company like Zig Zibit. Ask for the moon, then let us figure out if and how it can be done.
In other words, never hold back. Don’t temper your expectations, assuming something can’t be done.
The Clean Show is the largest trade show U.N.X. attends and when they moved up to a larger booth space it meant stepping up their booth design as well. The solution was a 20 X 40 custom rental with a distinct high tech feeling. U.N.X. are pioneers in the field of surfectant technology and featuring the legacy of their technology prominently in the booth was important.
CBC is a diverse company that produces a wide range of products including, pharmaceuticals, plastics, and in this division’s case commercial flooring.
CBC America recently relocated their headquarters to Cary, North Carolina from New York and wanted a display to engage visitors and clients, encouraging project discussions across their many product categories.
It feels like we are back where we belong at ExhibitorLIVE 2016!
Our relationship with Ascom started with the construction of their premier exhibit booth that they showcase each year at the HIMSS show, a show that attracts the highest levels of health care technology. Based on the quality of the work we did for the exhibit, we were then challenged to build out a demonstration room in their new facility in Morrisville, NC. This room was created to replicate a hospital setting and demonstrate how their communication technology integrates in a hospital setting. Clients come to their facility to experience this demonstration firsthand and learn about their products.
Jake Merzigian, president of Zig Zibit, a full-service exhibit design agency, has announced that again this year Zig Zibit will be a major sponsor of the High Five Conference. It will also be providing the stage designs for the event. Forbes Magazine has listed High Five as one of the top three marketing conferences to attend in 2016.