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You are here: Home > Business > Presentation > First Impressions Count: How to Design an Eye-Catching Exhibition Stand |
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Added for You - First Impressions Count: How to Design an Eye-Catching Exhibition Stand
How To Get Promoted : 9 Obvious And Often Not Practiced Tips ercials, a documentary about your industry, or an interview with someone in your business? Or hire professional entertainers. Or give live demonstrations. Set up a show at your booth—make it look like something’s happening. You’re sure to attract a crowd.It would be safe to say that you would have probably entertained the question of how to get promoted even before you graduated or left school. In my chats with juniors from my industry, I am often asked this question which I gladly answer. However, I sense they simply want short cuts to the next level. These experiences pushed me to pen these 9 obvious but often not practiced tips on how to get promoted. Start internalizing these tips and make them part of your career plan. Before you know it, you would have moved up to the next lev The right lighting is key. You don’t have to go with the same old fluorescent overhead lights everybody gets. Bring a spotlight to highlight on Marketing for Business Leaders: Three Steps to Increase Marketing Effectiveness If you’re lucky, there’ll be a steady stream of people walking by your booth at your next trade show. But will they stop to take a look at your booth? You might have killer sales literature, a great product, and well-trained salespeople—but your trade show graphics can still make or break your booth’s popularity at a trade show. When that stream of people is walking by, they’ll glance your way and make a split-second, almost unconscious decision—to stop and learn more, or to move on. Your exhibition stand’s design can make a huge impact on which way people decide to go. Here are a few things you can do to design your next exhibition stand for maximum impact.In the quest to increase results from marketing, companies tend to focus on tactics. They worry about creating a better brochure, upgrading the website, or running a new ad campaign. However, often the greatest leaps in marketing effectiveness come from focusing on how it all ties together. Here are three steps for business leaders to improve their marketing effectiveness by fine-tuning their marketing processes.1. Know what you need.Marketing's main job is to feed the sales force with nice, warm leads. Step one Keep colors simple. The usual advice is to use a color scheme that matches your business colors—you’ll look more polished and professional. If you use primarily cooler tones like blues, greens, or whites, however, your colors might not be strong enough to stand out—especially when many people in your business use the same colors, which happens more often than many realize. If this is your case, it may be worth your while to use your logo and design—but in different colors, such as reds, yellows, or oranges. If you go this route, make sure you use the same logos and graphic designs so that you still have a visual connection with your usual business symbols, and your business logo won’t look out of place at your booth—just contrasting. Above all, use a simple but compelling color palate instead of a mess of different colors. Have some moving parts. People will stop to watch TV—so why not set up a screen where you can play your latest commercials, a documentary about your industry, or an interview with someone in your business? Or hire professional entertainers. Or give live demonstrations. Set up a show at your booth—make it look like something’s happening. You’re sure to attract a crowd. The right lighting is key. You don’t have to go with the same old fluorescent overhead lights everybody gets. Bring a spotlight to highlight one A Guide to Successful Exhibition Planning split-second, almost unconscious decision—to stop and learn more, or to move on. Your exhibition stand’s design can make a huge impact on which way people decide to go. Here are a few things you can do to design your next exhibition stand for maximum impact.As with any organised event which involves schedules and deadlines, the planning and execution of an exhibition takes a lot of coordination and dedication in order for it to be successful. There are various steps that need to be completed in order for the exhibition to run smoothly, the majority of which are based around the exhibition planning team and coordinator. Exhibitions are primarily aimed at sharing something with a wider community, be it art, motor vehicles, music technology or lingerie. It is therefore essential that the ai Keep colors simple. The usual advice is to use a color scheme that matches your business colors—you’ll look more polished and professional. If you use primarily cooler tones like blues, greens, or whites, however, your colors might not be strong enough to stand out—especially when many people in your business use the same colors, which happens more often than many realize. If this is your case, it may be worth your while to use your logo and design—but in different colors, such as reds, yellows, or oranges. If you go this route, make sure you use the same logos and graphic designs so that you still have a visual connection with your usual business symbols, and your business logo won’t look out of place at your booth—just contrasting. Above all, use a simple but compelling color palate instead of a mess of different colors. Have some moving parts. People will stop to watch TV—so why not set up a screen where you can play your latest commercials, a documentary about your industry, or an interview with someone in your business? Or hire professional entertainers. Or give live demonstrations. Set up a show at your booth—make it look like something’s happening. You’re sure to attract a crowd. The right lighting is key. You don’t have to go with the same old fluorescent overhead lights everybody gets. Bring a spotlight to highlight on So, What Do You Do For Work? If you use primarily cooler tones like blues, greens, or whites, however, your colors might not be strong enough to stand out—especially when many people in your business use the same colors, which happens more often than many realize. If this is your case, it may be worth your while to use your logo and design—but in different colors, such as reds, yellows, or oranges. If you go this route, make sure you use the same logos and graphic designs so that you still have a visual connection with your usual business symbols, and your business logo won’t look out of place at your booth—just contrasting. Above all, use a simple but compelling color palate instead of a mess of different colors.I remember being asked this question a lot when I was dissatisfied with my career. My usual strategy would be to give a pat answer and immediately turn the question back on the person who asked it.My avoidance of the question wasn’t so much that I was considered unsuccessful or that my work was embarrassing, it was more about the fact that I didn’t feel personally successful doing what I was doing.I longed to be excited not evasive when asked this question. I wanted to be able to speak for more than 2 seconds before I Have some moving parts. People will stop to watch TV—so why not set up a screen where you can play your latest commercials, a documentary about your industry, or an interview with someone in your business? Or hire professional entertainers. Or give live demonstrations. Set up a show at your booth—make it look like something’s happening. You’re sure to attract a crowd. The right lighting is key. You don’t have to go with the same old fluorescent overhead lights everybody gets. Bring a spotlight to highlight on Event Registration - The 6 Biggest Problems Event Planners Have and How to Overcome Them All use the same logos and graphic designs so that you still have a visual connection with your usual business symbols, and your business logo won’t look out of place at your booth—just contrasting. Above all, use a simple but compelling color palate instead of a mess of different colors.Let's face it, setting up and operating the registration process for events and conferences is one of the least favorite things on most event planner's list of things to do. There is a lot of repetitive and mechanical stuff to do to make sure that everyone gets notified and signed up on time. The Biggest Problems with Manual Systems: Mail, Fax, Phone, Email1. Illegible handwriting on registration forms2. Mistakes in transferring information from registration forms to your database.3. Have some moving parts. People will stop to watch TV—so why not set up a screen where you can play your latest commercials, a documentary about your industry, or an interview with someone in your business? Or hire professional entertainers. Or give live demonstrations. Set up a show at your booth—make it look like something’s happening. You’re sure to attract a crowd. The right lighting is key. You don’t have to go with the same old fluorescent overhead lights everybody gets. Bring a spotlight to highlight on Making It Great! ercials, a documentary about your industry, or an interview with someone in your business? Or hire professional entertainers. Or give live demonstrations. Set up a show at your booth—make it look like something’s happening. You’re sure to attract a crowd.Today I am joined by Phil Gerbyshak of Make It Great!, one of the web’s premier personal development bloggers.Benjamin: How did you get started in the field of Self Improvement?Phil: About 5 years ago, I decided I wasn’t happy with the path I was on, so I decided to pick up a few good books to try to get motivated and change my life. I was reading about 20 books a year, and over the past 5 years, I’ve turned it up to read 40-50 a year on self-improvement, motivation, business, and the like.B: Were you always this The right lighting is key. You don’t have to go with the same old fluorescent overhead lights everybody gets. Bring a spotlight to highlight one of your products. Bring a few downlights to add drama to your display. Create a warm, inviting atmosphere at your booth with soft general lighting, and then create interest with specialty downlights and uplights. It’ll make your booth look much more polished and creative than its competitors. Bigger is better. The smaller your Exhibition show stand, the less it will stand out. The bigger your stand, the better position you’re in to catch some of that valuable attention from trade-show attendees. Even if they’ve never heard of your company before, if you’ve got the biggest, best-designed stand at the show, people will check you out. Easy on the text. No trade-show prospect is going to stop and read a big block of text incorporated into your graphic design—so save customer education and big sales pitches for your brochures. However, catchy slogans and funny jokes are good—even if people don’t stop right away, if you can give them a chuckle as they walk past your booth, they’ll remember you—and may come back for more later. If you go for humor, the best route to take is to hire someone to write it—what we think is funny may not strike everyone the same way, and taste is of the utmost importance. It can also be good to give them a reason to stop with copy that advertises something free or something they’ll learn for visiting your booth—keep it short and to-the-point, however. Use levels to create interest. Don’t just display your items flat on the table. Set up levels to create an interesting display. Restaurants and caterers do this easily and quickly by using different-size Tupperwa
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