2. Who Am I?
• Christopher Justice
–CEO, Sparksight, Inc.
–Event Design and Technology
–Background in corporate marketing but degree in computer
science.
–Started the company to serve a violently spoken need for the
events industry.
Friday, September 27, 13
3. Agenda
• Attendee and Industry Snapshot
• Engagement Challenges and Strategies
• Segmentation and Interaction
• Technographic Exhibit Planning
• Technology and Futures
• Designing Digital Media
• Summary and Questions
Friday, September 27, 13
5. Changing Attendee Behavior
• An enhanced communicator with unlimited power to
influence.
• High expectations of user experience and customer
service.
• Accessible and visible with an online persona.
• Attendees are spending fewer days at the show.
Friday, September 27, 13
6. Event Marketing Objectives
• Different Tactics Depending on the Exhibit and Attendee
–Exhibition
–Corporate
–Industry Association
• Marketing Focus Points
–Pre-Event Marketing
–Concurrent Marketing
–Post-Event Marketing
Friday, September 27, 13
7. Shocking Attendee Behavior
• The average attendee crosses the carpet of 5-10% of
the total exhibits.
• Half of the stops to an exhibit are preplanned.
• Most attendees visiting your exhibit expect something
for free.
• Most paper collateral is discarded as collected.
Friday, September 27, 13
8. What is working?
• Content-based tactics
• Free
• Experiential
• Entertainment
• Advocacy
• Relationship and dialog
Friday, September 27, 13
9. New Approaches to Engagement
• Motivate Attendees
– Target a specific audience and target attendee.
• Focused Content
– Filter content so visitors are not bombarded with information overload.
• Immersion
– Engage visitors within a “story”.
• Modularity
– Present smaller themes instead of one larger complex topic.
• Skimmability
– Information should be easy to take in because visitors are often standing and/or
have different levels of education.
Friday, September 27, 13
10. New Approaches to Engagement (cont.)
• Patterns
– Incorporate traffic patterns and exhibit sequence patterns.
• Capture Curiosity
– Use storytelling techniques to engage visitors.
• Interaction
– Give visitors a “fun” experience and encouraging them to touch your event/exhibit/
conference.
• Integrate Technology
– Technology should enhance visitor’s experience, not detract from it.
• Layer Content
– Present information in a hierarchical manner.
Friday, September 27, 13
11. Exhibit Attendee Strategy
• Biographical
• Demographic
• Psychographic
• Lifestyle
• Technographic
–based on their ownership, use patterns, and attitudes toward
information, communication and entertainment technologies.
Friday, September 27, 13
12. Event Technographics
• Consumers
– Seeking information and validation and deep education.
• Buyers
– Refining brand decision and purchase plan.
• Sales and Biz Development
– Promoting and connecting opportunities.
• Media/Press/Critics/Amplifiers
– Reporting and delivering information.
• Spectators
– No intentions but influential in brand reputation.
• Seekers
– Need focused – jobs opportunities, connections, industry education.
• Inactives
Friday, September 27, 13
13. Applying Technographics to
• The intersection between exhibit marketing and digital
marketing has happened.
–Traditional techniques are still used but have decreased in
reach and increased in cost.
–The event organizer will not provide digital tactics for the
exhibitors. We must lead them.
–The exhibit house and decorator do not yet understand the
integration of digital and environment exhibit elements.
Friday, September 27, 13
14. Digital Event Media Taxonomy
• Email marketing
• Websites
• Micro-sites
• Touch screen kiosks
• Social media
• Online video
• Webcasts
• Mobile Applications
–iPhone/BB/Android
• Blogs
• Online advertising
• Virtual events
• Live broadcasts
• SMS/MMS/Text
• Online games
• RSS and Syndication
• Virtual Worlds
• RFID
Friday, September 27, 13
15. Online
video
is
increasing.
Social
media
has
a
place
but
requires
planning
to
achieve
results.
Mobile
applica9ons
will
have
segmented
appeal.
Source:
CEIR
Digital
+
Exhibi9ng
Marke9ng
Insights
2010
Tac9cs
by
U9liza9on
Friday, September 27, 13
18. Redefining the Event Plan
• Designing for results and experience
–What event elements are for existing customers?
–What experience for the brand ignorant attendees?
–How do you provide continuity from the event to the desktop –
to the device?
–When does the interaction begin?
–How and when do leads get processed?
–Timeliness means getting more real-time.
Friday, September 27, 13
19. Impact of Digital Marketing
• Exhibits are redesigned with technographics in mind.
• Exhibitors will ask more from exhibit houses and
decorators to provide digital media strategies.
• Exhibitors should demand more of event registration
and lead management products.
–Pre-event, during and post event access.
Friday, September 27, 13
20. The Key to Better Exhibits and ROI
• Integrating the exhibit experience with the registration
and lead capture.
• Bar codes, magnetic stripe and other legacy systems
should be retired.
• RFID
–Reduces cost and increase quantifiable metrics from the
event.
–Allows for the integration of attendee information into the
exhibit.
Friday, September 27, 13
21. Digital Exhibit Design Plan
• Educate
• Validate
• Entertain
• Environmental
–Noise
–Light
–Movement
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29. Touchscreen Technologies
• Resistive
–Cost effective, plastic over glass
• Surface Acoustic/Bending Wave
–Cost effective, well established
• Optical
–Cost effective for large sizes, light sensitivity
• Capacitive
–High cost for large sizes, multi-touch capable
Friday, September 27, 13
31. Integrating the Exhibit with Digital Media
• Registration Systems
• Paper and Manual Lead Capture
• Customer Relationship Management
• RFID
• Integration of interactive displays and attendee data.
• Personalization of exhibit experience to each
attendee.
Friday, September 27, 13
33. Setting Event Success Metrics
• Specific and quantifiable:
– Total number of visitors to your booth
– Booth visitors by target audience (by accounts, by industry, by title, etc.)
– One-on-one meetings with key accounts
– Number of qualified leads z Lead quality mix (percent of A, B, C leads, etc.)
– Lead mix by technographic /Lead mix by the day and hour of the show
– Amount of media coverage received
• Every event is a reason to launch….something.
– Percentage increase in your company and/or product awareness
– Numbers of attendees exposed to your demo or live presentation
– Number of questionnaires completed by target audience
– Number and quality of strategic alliances confirmed with other exhibiting companies
Friday, September 27, 13