You hear it every day: trade shows and conferences are dying. No one wants to travel, they are expensive to put on, people buy differently.
Really? Read More...
You hear it every day: trade shows and conferences are dying. No one wants to travel, they are expensive to put on, people buy differently.
Really? Read More...
Why is it that most shows, large or small, are being held in Las Vegas these days?
I’ll be off to Vegas in a couple of weeks for the AWMA–a wholesaler’s show–at the Las Vegas Hilton. Right after that show the next week is GlobalShop and the Exhibitor’s Show. Earlier this year, Home Builder’s (IBS), Surfaces, National Grocers and the huge CES show all opened and called Vegas home for a few days. Some are there every year, others rotate in annually or every two years, but always seem to make it to Sin City. Read More...
Here’s why trade shows are really important: they are newsworthy and a showcase for an industry, a market or a business segment.
Our case in point today is CES, the Consumer Electronics Show. Read More...
A story in today’s Dallas Morning News Business section spells out a few reasons why we chose to market via trade shows.
The story focuses on CES, the Consumer Electronics Show, opening in Las Vegas this week and the 30-plus Dallas-based companies attending. Big or small, these companies see the value in being at a nexus of their business and markets. Read More...
January has always been a big month for trade shows. Going back in my career, we had a number of shows that kicked off the year in a variety of industries. Now that I think about it, several industries anchor their years with January shows.
The National Retail Federation (NRF) is always at Jacob Javits convention center in New York City the first few weeks of January. This show started small (before moving to the big hall, it was held in hotel ballrooms and consisted of tabletops and portables) but has grown as retail has grown and changed. A large number of the anchor exhibitors are technology companies (Fujitsu, IBM, NCR, Motorola-Symbol, Oracle) as retail has become dependent on technology to target and find and define an ever-dwindling customer base. Read More...