Showing posts with label Trade Show Metrics. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Trade Show Metrics. Show all posts

Friday, May 31, 2013

Measurement Tip 25

How Forecasting a Marketing Event Influences Perceptions and Results
Forecasting is an essential part of planning, otherwise, there is no way to know what the results should be and therefore how much to spend as an investment. Without a forecast it is difficult to tell what elements of a plan worked and which did not. Also, a good forecast allows the event manager to set realistic expectations with executives and others about what will be accomplished, overcoming perhaps erroneous, but hazardous preconcieved notions about results. And finally a forecast sets realistic quantitative goals for the team to pursue.  
Use the following variables and metrics to develop a  forecast for an upcoming trade show or event:
Estimating Resources

Exhibit size
Budget
Number of Staff Required

Estimating Results
Number of visitors
Number of Engaged Prospects
Number of Committed Leads

Expected Sales Results

Number of Impressions - Promotion Impact(Gross and Targeted)
Advertising Equivalent Value (Media Value)

Cost Savings

Customer Relationship Management Value

Payback Ratio - ROI

It really is worth the time to estimate what an event will produce and what resources are required. For more reading on this and other event and trades how measurement topics go to our website at http://constellationcc.com.


Ed Jones
President, Constellation Communication Corporation
+1.770.391.0015
edjones@constellationcc.com
 

Thursday, May 2, 2013

Measurement Tip 24


Understanding the Value of Conferences

Is your conference an expense or an investment?
Many organizations regard their conference as a necessary expense, one that serves to educate customers to be successful in using products or influences employees to do a better job.  Having evaluated and measured a variety of conferences, we found something different. In this tip, we explore how conferences deliver real, near-term profit improvement beyond the conference.  And, we look at how a great conference can influence other objectives such as organizational growth and customer retention.

The conferences that deliver the most value for the organizer or host have a common characteristic; they successfully provide value to all of the other players in the conference ecosystem.  Simply stated, organizers attract participants through valuable offerings and content.  Sponsors and exhibitors seek valuable access to targeted, high-value participants. Sponsors and exhibitors provide the organizer with valuable funding and support in return for access. The organizer perpetuates and grows the cycle.  All participants seek value in return for their contribution of time and money and smart organizers and hosts ensure that it is provided. 

In addition to profit improvement, the well-planned conference also serves the organizer’s overall mission and goals. For example, many associations seek membership growth, in part, by providing great value to their members through the conference experience.
For those of us with interest in exhibitions at conferences, numerous studies have shown that that exposure to content provided by sponsors and exhibitors is an integral part of conference participant value and satisfaction.  When the organizer and the sponsors and exhibitors are attuned to the strategic needs of the participants, the momentum builds quickly. Intra-event communications using digital and social media make it possible to learn from members as well as serve their needs between events.  

Increased revenue and expense reduction resulting from conference participation – after a successful conference participants may take actions that result in improved business results for the host.  Here are a few of the most likely results:
Increased Sales –

Participants will make upgrades to systems and products and purchase new offerings learned about at the conference.  Designers or integrators may incorporate more of your products into their designs and offerings.  Applicable measures: Conference related sales
Reduced Support Requirements –
  • Participants will have less need for technical or customer support through knowledge gained at the conference.  Applicable measures: Changes and cost associated with levels of customer service access and requirements

Enhanced Loyalty, Customer and Revenue Retention –
  • Retention of the participants’ existing level of business is ensured through enhanced affinity, familiarity with your company and product and reduced perceived risk. Applicable measures: Retention rates among conference participants vs. non-conference participants, Average revenue value of a customer, Cost of a lost account, Cost of a new or replacement customer.
Recurring or Repeat Revenue Growth –
  • Participants experience personal and company success, leading to growth on the existing revenue stream. Many conference providers focus efforts to help their participants grow their own business, thereby increasing the demand for their own products.  Applicable measures:  Financial and growth performance of conference participants.  Associated sales volume.
Other Expense Reduction -
  • Conference activities may produce cost savings in hundreds of ways.  Exploiting the time and place opportunity afforded by attendance at a conference allows a company to accomplish goals that would require additional time and expense to duplicate in the future and in different locales.  For example, teaching 3,000 customers at a conference the nuances of your upgraded product may be much more cost effective than sending field sales teams out to do the job on-site or relying on digital media.  Providing customers and prospects with access to your executives and experts may create an experience and exert influence that would not otherwise be possible or financially feasible. The possibilities are endless. 
Communications, Press and PR Value –
  • Conferences can generate considerable press and PR exposure through conference related promotion, advertising and marketing campaigns.  The value of conference related promotion and earned media can be equivalent to several million dollars of advertising exposure for the host.  Inspiring the press to focus on your strategic initiatives, included in the conference content, is invaluable.
All of the above either impact the revenue or expense side of an organizer or host’s profitability or income. 

How can a conference help an organization to grow?
When participants and sponsors feel they derive great value, organizers may experience an increase in event participation and membership.

In my research I have learned some of what participants seek at conferences, related to their job:
Immediate Impact:
  • The ability to make informed decisions
  • The ability to make effective near-term changes and improvements
  • To make connections with people and resources valuable in achieving improvements and goals
  • To reduce personal and organizational risk (see what works!)
Future Results:
  • To identify and consider influences that affect good planning
These may be regarded as “strategic needs” of the conferee.  Conferences that focus their content on these types of topics excel.  Exhibitors and sponsors who focus their messages and demonstrations for customers on these types of needs will be successful as well.  This provides a great basis for targeting the content of publications, and content delivered through education, digital, and social media on value for all concerned.  

As the word spreads of a conference’s value in meeting these needs, attendance will grow.  As it becomes apparent that a company or membership organization delivers a constant stream of strategic information, customers and memberships will grow too!


Ed Jones
President, Constellation Communication

To get started on your event marketing measurement program, contact us today at +1.770.391.0015 or edjones@constellationcc.com

 
 
 

 

Friday, September 23, 2011

Measurement Tip 5

Customer and Prospect Feedback May Be Most Important to Your Marketing Events

Although ROI and efficiency measurements are important, customer feedback on the value and effectiveness of your events may be the most valuable information you can get.

Events are communication and engagement tools with the goal of gaining specific, desirable behavior from participants. This behavior only occurs if participants are persuaded and motivated to act. To know how well your event marketing program accomplishes these goals and how you might change future events to be more effective requires insight through the eyes of your customer.

As a reminder, there are three critical success factors for a marketing event:

1) You must attract enough of the right people to participate in your program, i.e. those who can act in a beneficial manner
2) You must give participants information and an experience that is persuasive and conclusive
3) You must gain their commitment to act in a manner that benefits your company and accomplishes your goals.

Therefore, the following categories of information are essential for understanding how well your program performs on these critical accomplishments:

• Who are they (demographics of your visitor base as compared to the event base)?
• Why did the participants come?
• What did they learn as a result of visiting your exhibit or event (…if anything, and
what was most valuable to their future plans)?
• What do participants plan to do as a result of their visit (specifically will they take the
steps you have specified necessary to achieve results)?

There are several ways to collect this information. There are advantages and disadvantages for each method. In some cases, a mix of research techniques provides the best results.

On-site survey techniques, such as random visitor intercept surveys, allow for participant profiling, immediate feedback on the visitor's experience and prediction of post event behavior, such as purchase intent. On-site research provides actionable information regarding how well your exhibit is organized, how to arrange and manage customer flow and the effectiveness of your message hierarchy. Visitor tracking within your exhibit or event is also possible through a number of technologies.

Post- event survey techniques can provide validation of customer behavior. Did the visitor receive a follow-up or progress through the next steps of your program? What specifically did they do? What did they buy and from whom? Was their exhibit or event visit a factor in their buying decision, etc? Post-event surveys are also good for testing your event's impact on brand awareness and retention of specific product marketing messages.

On a grander scale, you can reach out to your entire leads universe quarterly or annually to validate the effectiveness of follow-up by your company and to create a projection of actual purchasing results including an estimated amount of sales. You can perform statistical analysis on your program data to see which factors most influenced customers who bought or identify those who were satisfied or dissatisfied with their experience with your company.

ROI and efficiency measures are important, however making the right changes in future events is much easier when you have good customer feedback. Decide which survey techniques will work best to validate and improve your results in the business development and communication objectives for associated with your program.

Friday, July 1, 2011

Measurement Tip # 2

Gather and share information that will satisfy your internal customer - Sales.

(This is the second in a series of articles for the MC2 eConnections Newsletter)

The sales team is the internal customer of the marketing function. Marketing is employed to generate sales opportunities and to increase the probability of sales. These same objectives apply to a marketing event. So, what information can you supply that will be valuable for the sales team?

Beginning with the planning phase, define for the sales team who is “addressable” at the upcoming event. The correct strategy, messaging, products and content can be determined by knowing the target audience available at a marketing event. This information is valuable in choosing which products to feature and even which sales team members will participate. You might also identify who among your existing customers are likely to attend. This information is often available from the event organizer and from your own measurement records from the last event cycle.

Second, give the sales team a forecast of how many participants are expected at your booth or event along with their demographics. Suggest that the sales team use this information to determine which demonstrations and other experiences to include. Forecast the number of expected engagements and estimate the number of committed leads that should result. From there the sales team can help you estimate the “sales opportunity” value for the event.

You should not only give information to the sales team, but you should also seek it. Ask the sales team to define the steps that an interested, targeted visitor should be asked to take. This will become your definition of a qualified lead, i.e. someone who is committed to take those steps with your company.

Finally, report the actual attendance at your event in the same way you defined the forecast. Who visited? Define your visitors by the following:

• Industry
• Company type,
• Relationship to your company (such as customer, prospect, supplier, partner, etc.)
• Company size
• Titles
• Level of decision authority individual contact information

This information comes from your scans or leads documentation and may also be supplemented by an exit survey of visitors who have completed their experience.

Of course, the golden ticket for the sales team is complete documentation of well qualified leads. Work with sales to determine how much information is really required to support an effective follow-up. Requiring too much information will clog the process and dissuade prospects from participating in documenting the lead. Too little information makes it less likely that sales will want to follow-up.

You want to confirm the specifics of the follow-up step with the visitor before you pass this information on to sales. Clarify the following:

• “Who”- As in the visitors name and organization
-Remember to get accurate contact information

• “What”-As in the nature of the follow-up expected
• “When”- What is the mutually agreeable time frame for the follow-up

Your lead system should have a place for all of these data points. By keeping this data in a common database, you can analyze and report how well your events have provided the sales team with access to qualified targets over the year.

Your personal influence will increase considerably if you are seen as a manager who can deliver a well-targeted audience at your events. A good measurement program shows you how to improve upon your accomplishments in every category. I hope you tune in each month as we expand on the knowledge and skills to justify and improve your events and elevate your status in the organization.

Please contact me if you have questions or ideas you would like to share at edjones@constellationcc.com, or call 770-391-0015.

Ed