Thursday, November 18, 2010
Case Study– How Trade Shows Can Influence Executive Perceptions, Positively Influence Financial Markets & Gain Top-Level Visibility for Event Managers
Excerpts from the earnings call demonstrate how key trade show accomplishments (meetings, countries represented, etc.) can become key financial inputs:
Chairman – “During the recent (very large international) show, I had the opportunity to meet with many of our U.S. and international customers -- in fact, we had more customer meetings at this event than ever before, with over 1000 meetings… including 45 delegations from 38 countries. I was encouraged by what I heard about our company -- and the level of interest in what we do."
First Analyst – “I would like to ask about the recent contract cancellation in the UAE.”
Chairman- “The project cancellation was in marked contrast to what I saw at the recent show . . . We saw a number of customers from Turkey, UAE, Israel, Saudi, . . . we saw tremendous opportunity. We showed new digital, three dimensional demonstrations of our new products at the show. A top Japanese group visiting told us they were “very encouraged by what they saw.”
Second Analyst - “I learned about new capabilities for your ‘Hotspot’ project during your press briefing and at your exhibition at the show. Would you tell us more about those?” The chairman described the new capabilities without hesitation, in some detail. This made a very good impression on the analysts and others on the call.
It was clear the customer interaction at the recent trade show provided the chairman and other top executives with up- to-date, personalized market feedback that affected how they dealt with analysts and others. The customer and prospect interactions at the event gave them factual information and perspectives to share with analysts regarding market attitudes and demand. Event managers should consider “Executive Involvement” as one of their event planning criteria.
It was also clear that the event had a strong impact on analysts who visited the company’s marketing venues. Their visits shaped their perceptions of the company, its performance and value. Likewise, event managers should also consider “managing press and analysts relations” as a planning objective. This is also a clear example of why it is critical to be consistent with brand, advertising, PR efforts and exhibit and event related messaging, signage and demos. You never know who is watching!
Ed Jones is president of Constellation Communication Corp., specialists in event and trade show measurement, helping clients obtain positive return on investment in marketing and other types of events. If you have any questions please contact Ed at inquiry@constellationcc.com or call +1.770.391.0015
Sunday, August 8, 2010
Simple is Memorable and Essential
Three clients of ours were finally convinced to de-clutter their exhibits and refine their messages into a simple, customer oriented message hierarchy. The building products client moved from over 50% of their visitors saying they "learning nothing new" to less than 20%. A large manufacturing company improved from almost 30% learning nothing new to less than 9%. Finally, a large aerospace client just had their chairman talk about the clarity of customer dialogue at a large European airshow during their second quarter earnings conference call. That is some real visibility for the exhibit manager!
Our company provides consulting on trade show measurement, research and return on investment (ROI). This data was derived from year over year, random sample exit interviews with visitors conducted by our survey team.
I list poor messaging as one of the three primary factors in low return on investment. Stated another way, effective messaging is a critical success factor in event marketing ROI.
Ed
More case studies on trade show and event ROI to be found at http://constellationcc.com
Tuesday, June 15, 2010
Is Your Staff Shy About Engaging Visitors? - A Few New Stats of Interest
* 68% making new contacts
* 64% inspiration and new ideas
* 62% Networking
These numbers are entirely consistent with our findings over the years.
The top value from attending a trade show was given as "Getting new ideas"
The article cited a general statistic that only 1 in 28 visitors are actively approached at shows. That is believable although I have nothing to verify that, however we do know that 46% of the Confex visitors reported they were displeased with not being approached by exhibitors.
The message here is clear, visitors want to see exhibitors. They want to see what is new and make contact with people who can make things happen. (That is an exact quote from my classes for the last decade.) Your staff need not worry about whether people want to be engaged! Unfortunately exhibitors too often do a poor job of providing them with that opportunity.
Staff training is essential if you want to engage, qualify and properly manage a person's visit to your exhibit for mutual benefit.
(Keith Reznick and I have co-authored some very efficient, low cost, web delivered staff training that can cure these problems. If you have a need, please visit either of our websites at http://constellationcc.com or http://creativetraining.com)
Ed
Friday, May 21, 2010
Get the Personal Credit You Deserve for Managing Events to Deliver Business Profitability
-- Althea, Conventions Manager
A good planning and measurement program is how smart exhibit managers get the results they expect and personal credit they deserve from their events program. Many companies rely on a well structured planning and measurement program to manage their events programs as well as the internal perception of their value.
Events are a business improvement tool. Return on investment is realized when you make or save money through an event. To make or save money, the participants must be persuaded to act in a manner that benefits your company.
Properly planned events produce measurable results. When you plan your activities to result increase in sales, retention of current business, promotion of company brand, products and messages, and cost savings, positive business results are achieved.
What to measure follows this same logic. Payback is a simple index of success. Payback comes from tracking value from four sources:
1) Revenue (Increase in Sales)
2) Customer Relationship Management (Customer and Revenue Retention)
3) Cost Savings (Efficiencies using events as the catalyst)
4) Promotion or Communication Value (Equivalent Value of Advertising Required to Achieve Similar Promotional Impact in the Market, or for Internal Events, the Cost of Alternative Means of Communications)
These values, when added together and divided by the budget for your event, produce a payback ratio such as $2.30/1.
Start your own measurement program by putting these four tabs in a three ringed binder and collecting every bit of data regarding value you produce in each of the four areas.
Finally, productivity measures such as number of visitors, engaged visitors, and leads, combined with “cost per” indexes, such as cost per engaged visitor, provide valuable indicators of the success of each event and your program overall.
A major goal at Constellation is to see event and communications managers get the credit they deserve for managing profitable event programs. Many of our clients use their measurement reports as the basis for their annual performance evaluation. A number of our clients directly attribute a part of their career success to their event planning and measurement programs.
Case studies and articles on event measurement are available to you in the "Solutions" section of the Constellation Communication Corp. website at http://constellationcc.com
Friday, January 15, 2010
Justification for Sales Incentive Travel Programs
Sales incentive travel is being discussed in various social media groups. I had the chance to respond to a discussion this morning.
. . . yes, Hong Kong is a fabulous city to visit and a great incentive trip destination. It is one of my favorite places to visit. The China Club in the old Bank of China building is a great spot for business entertainment, albeit for smaller groups.
At Constellation we have had the opportunity to deliver in-depth analysis of the actual value and justification for investment in a number of sales incentive trips. We saved the BellSouth program from cancellation and even expanded it. Justification is more important than ever these days. The business value of these types of events can be proven. It requires a solid event plan and measurement strategy, but it really can be done. That also takes you off the hook for criticism of waste and frivolity by others, including the government if your received TARP money for example.
There is a case study on this on the Constellation website called "Canceled, End of Discussion" in the Solutions Center Tab of our website at:
http://www.linkedin.com/redirect?url=http%3A%2F%2Fconstellationcc%2Ecom&urlhash=Fjbn
or follow this link: http://www.linkedin.com/redirect?url=http%3A%2F%2Fconstellationcc%2Ecom%2Fcancelled%2Epdf&urlhash=IgQw
If you would like to discuss this important topic, post here or contact me through the website.
Ed
Tuesday, January 12, 2010
The True Relationship Between Sales and Marketing - Sales is Your Customer!
"Sales are the only ones who can define a qualified lead."
"The sales team are the ultimate arbiters of success of a trade show or customer event."
Etc. etc.
Linda Musgrove, aka "The Trade Show Teacher" posted a great article in Exhibit City News (12/30/09) "Sales and Marketing Department Coorperation, Can't We All Just Get Along" that delves further into this important tenet. I think this is a good read in preparing for your 2010 trade show program.
http://tinyurl.com/yapcsz8
Now is the time to get that appointment with the sales team and jointly define the measure of success for your program this year.
Ed
Friday, January 1, 2010
Automated Approach to Effective, Measurable Events for Time Strapped Event Managers
I have hinted to many of you in the past year that 2010 would be the time when you can get easy and inexpensive automated tools for planning, execution and measurement for trade shows and other events. Over the past couple of years, we developed various automated, web-based, and inexpensive support tools to satisfy exhibitor and event managers' requirements. Now, these tools can be offered as a support suite, allowing you to pick what you need for each of your events:
- Planning Tool (Know what to include, who to ask and how to communicate to the broader team. Ensure you will deliver effective results and profit improvement.)
- Staff Training (Ensure your staff is up to the job of delivering results.)
- Staff and Stakeholder Feedback Survey (Collect and maintain your internal customer feedback for improving all subsequent events.)
- Event Related Press Tracking and Valuation (Press generated during and after an event can generate a lot of justification for your investment.)
- Event Selection and Comparison (Budgeting, forecasting of results and cost.)
Imagine having all of the information you need in a database waiting at your beck and call for future planning or to show management what you have accompished.
If you would like to discuss how to add some structure to your events program, contact me at edjones@constellationcc.com or call 770-391-0015.
Wishing you the best for the new year,
Ed Jones
Wednesday, October 28, 2009
Video on Generating Business Value through Events
This video was shot by Joyce McKee on- site at TS2. This is a good overview of the planning process and how to ensure your event produces value. Planning and measurement orientation.
Ed
Friday, October 16, 2009
Reasons to Exhibit at Trade Shows
I responded in support of his view:
Right you are! Trade Shows and events are exceptionally broad in terms of what can be accomplished for the host company. I teach a planning model related to what you are speaking of.
Trade shows, and customer events in general, produce two main accomplishments for the host company.
1) Business Development
This includes:
*Revenue Generation
- Target Marketing
- Prospect Development
*Revenue Retention
- Customer Relationship Management
- Growth on the Revenue Base
*Channel Management
*Supplier and Partner Management
- Negotiation of more favorable terms or arrangements
*Influencers and Regulators Management
- Influence the conditions under which business is conducted and
products are sold (associations, standards bodies, etc.)
*Cost Savings through expense avoidance activity at an event
2) Marketing Communications
*Press Management
*PR Activity
*Analyst Management
*Marcom Objectives
- Brand Development and Reinforcement
- Program Communications
- Market Positioning
- Product Launch
- Loyalty
- Community Development (social networking)
- Continuous Communications
- Relationship Development
*Community Relations
These elements form the core of a robust planning structure that Skip Cox of Exhibit Surveys and I developed into an automated planning support and measurement tool. Information on that tool may be found on either of our websites.
Keep preaching the word that shows are about a lot more than leads and sales!
Ed Jones
President
Constellation Communication Corp.
ROI on Events, Event Measurement and Evaluation
www.constellationcc.com
Friday, September 4, 2009
It Might Be Wise to Pay Attention Here - Social Networks & Blogs Now 4th Most Popular Online Activity, Ahead of Personal Email, Nielsen Reports
“Social networking has become a fundamental part of the global online experience,” says John Burbank, CEO of Nielsen Online. “While two-thirds of the global online population already accesses member community sites, their vigorous adoption and the migration of time show no signs of slowing. Social networking will continue to alter not just the global online landscape, but the consumer experience at large. This study explains why.”
Forewarned is forearmed!
Ed
Event measurement, evaluation, ROI analysis and research.
Thursday, September 3, 2009
Visitor Management and Visitor Experience at Trade Shows
Having provided evaluation and measurement at hundreds of trade shows and events, please allow me to offer some objective observations.
Many exhibitors do not teach their staff to properly engage and quickly qualify each visitor and focus their time and attention on those who are targeted. The big variable is how many of those who are attracted to your exhibit are targeted. If the percentage is big, then you will have a good show. If the percentage is small you will have a miserable result.
Too often the strategy is to attract a large unqualified crowd with give aways or magicians and such and hope that those people who are the targets will speak up, identify themselves and engage the staff! That is pretty unlikely and a clear recipe for poor results and low ROI.
Put yourself to the test and see how many of these success factors you have in place, or observe as a visitor: (Check the ones you practice or observe regularly)
___ 1) Define the targets addressable at the event by product set
___ 2) Attract them with targeted promotion
___ 3) Train the staff to engage visitors and separate the targets from the non- targets
___ 4) Have a plan to manage the visit of the targets
___ 5) Convey specific, consistent, benefits oriented, high priority information that is relevant to each target set
___ 6) Have a pre- determined set of target visitor commitment goals (specific steps and activities).
___ 7) Ensure the commitment goals are steps that sales agrees is are steps in the sales cycle
___ 8) Have a system in place to record the commitments
___ 9) Provide motivation and support to the committed visitor to follow-through on the follow-up step through at and post- event communications.
___ 10) Set as many pre-scheduled meetings as possible with customers, prospects, suppliers, partners and others who can improve your profitability in some way.
This does work! It takes focus, planning, training and execution, but it will deliver results and make for happier more productive staff members and visitors.
Ed Jones
(if you have a question or would like to discuss email me at edjones@constellationcc.com)
Tuesday, June 30, 2009
CRM Provides Greater Value than Customer Acquisition
In support of my observation, I saw this today in a "Business Management Daily" post:
"Although it’s difficult to measure ROI with the level of accuracy achievable in some other areas of running a business, researchers continue to explore the impact of customer service training on customer loyalty, as measured by customer retention, and a company’s customer service standards. Customer satisfaction research by Richardson, Texas–based KnowledgeBase Marketing Inc. concluded that investments in customer retention (such as money spent on customer service training) provide a far greater return than investments in customer acquisition. The research also showed that, compared with other customers, long-term loyal customers:
- Buy more per year
- Buy higher-priced options
- Buy more often
- Are less price-sensitive
- Are less costly to serve
- Have a higher lifetime value"
If you have not yet considered this element as an important part of your 2009 event strategy you should. An example is giving your customers access to executives, and introducing special programs for mutual benefit.
Keeping a tight grip on existing customers may prove essential to your company's well- being.
Ed
Monday, June 29, 2009
Honored Awards and Nominations
First, our Trade Show Planning and Measurment Tool won the Innovation Award from "Trade Show Executive Magazine."
See the full article here:
http://www.tradeshowexecutive.com/data/pdf/June08InnovationAwards.pdf
and
We were nominated for an Exhibitors Choice Award from TSEA!
Voting is still open - please consider voting for us!
100 + LEADING TRADE SHOW INDUSTRY SUPPLIERS NOMINATED FOR
TSEA’S NEW RED DIAMOND AWARDS
Chicago, IL –June 22, 2009 – The nominations are in, and 100+ leading trade show industry suppliers have been nominated for the new Trade Show Exhibitor’s Association “Exhibitor’s Choice” Red Diamond Awards. Voting is now open for the Trade Show Exhibitors Association (TSEA) Exhibitors’ Choice Awards at http://www.tsea.org/Foundation/ExhibitorsChoiceAwards/tabid/281/Default.aspx. The awards will be presented at the TSEA Foundation Gala on the evening of July 22, 2009 (during TS2.) The nominees include:
. . .
- Favorite Best of the Rest – APCO; Constellation Communications Corp.; Creative Training Solutions; Exhibit Surveys; ExpoCall; Kaon Interactive, Inc; ListenNational Corporation; NMR Staging and Events; Siskind Training International; Spearhead Creative; Trade Show Teacher; United Service Companies
Voting will continue until July 8, 2009. Tickets to the Gala, at Chicago Illuminating Company, http://www.chicagoilluminatingcompany.com are available for $20 at www.tsea.org or can be purchased during TS2 at TSEA’s booth during show hours. The event is sponsored by several leading industry companies and Chicago restaurants.
http://www.tsea.org/Foundation/ExhibitorsChoiceAwards/tabid/281/Default.aspx
Thanks to those who nominated us.
Ed
Friday, May 22, 2009
Suite of On- Line Tools Now Available to the Exhibit Managers
- On- Line Planning and Measurement Tool - (Simple and Full ROI. Joint venture with Exhibit Surveys, The Trade Show Planning and Measurement Tool)
- On- Line Pre- Event Staff Orientation and Training - (Simple and Comprehensive versions, annual license and per user fee, low cost for small shows)
- On- Line Post Event Staff and Stakeholder Survey - (Turn key, providing internal customer feedback, database of results analysis over the event year, by product group or division, 24/7 access to results and analysis)
Call me if you would like to know more about automated support for your program.
Fear of Negative PR Not the Only Reason for Budget Cuts
Her response raises the question again, why cut marketing when things are down?
Profit often comes from serving the existing customer base. New revenue is often expensive to obtain and expensive to support, partially answering the question "why do companies cut sales and marketing budgets during an economic downturn?" Leaning out the organization as Karen has indicated and keeping the revenue streams you already have is a common approach.
Many companies are shifting weight to Customer Relationship Management at events in which they continue to participate, aka "putting their arms around their existing customers." Keeping the business you have safe from price attacks by starving competitors, offering solutions to existing customers that help you both mutually deal with the economy, and making sure that you get any additional business that is to be had from your current accounts are productive goals for events in the near term. Scheduled meetings with top accounts, where you offer real support and solutions for weathering the storm are a wise investment of time and resources.
So, if you are still counting leads as a major part of your event measurement, count meetings with high value accounts at least equally in your measure of success.
Friday, May 15, 2009
What if You Could Have Your Event Certified for Business Improvement?
However, wouldn't it be nice if your event had a stamp of approval that said "This event planned in accordance with business best practices, Certified Business Improvement?"
A few weeks ago I came to the realization that any company who follows the planning discipline we put forth for clients on events is able to prove the business orientation and value of said event. We are planning to formalize that process with a Certification designation for events that qualify. So when a reporter asks, "Why are you wasting all of the stockholders and taxpayers money on a lavish meeting?" You can reply, "because these customer executives spend $3.3 billiion dollars with us each year and have pending proposals for $382 million more in the next three months. Our event strategy and plan was planned in accordance with business best practices and will deliver a profit for the company."
For more detail on how you can insulate your events from a "drive by evaluation", read the case study on our website "The ComCo Classic Winner's Circle Pro-Am" found at http://constellationcc.com/case_studies.htm
Have a great weekend.
Ed
Monday, March 16, 2009
“How to Rescue a Worthwhile Event” - CASE STUDY
A factor in these reactionary decisions is events may not be clearly understood in terms of their direct influence on near-term business improvement. Stated another way, there may be little fear that negative business impact will result from event reduction or cancellation. These perceptions may be affecting you right now. So, what can you do about it? To help you formulate a plan, I have revived and revised a post from last spring dealing with justifying valuable events.
Protecting or rescuing an event depends upon identifying its’ payback in terms of business improvement goals. The number of valuable outcomes and amount of payback may surprise both you and the boss. When a productive event is in jeopardy, it is time to identify the payback streams and make a rational case to continue or discontinue it based upon the impact on the bottom line.
The case study, “Cancelled, End of Discussion,” is about a multi- million dollar sales incentive travel program that was cancelled by the chairman of a Fortune 50 sized company. His cancellation decree came mid- year, for exactly the same reasons cited, the need to cut cost and because the program was highly visible. As the current program neared its’ final conclusion, a comprehensive measurement program was initiated to determine the true value of the program for the company. The same study also identified the potential negative impact on the company if it were to be discontinued. The chairman, not known for changing his decisions, not only reinstated the program, but increased its’ scope once the value and potential loss was clearly understood.
This case study may be found in the
So, what can you do if you have a good event that is in jeopardy? Mount a campaign to save it. Any event can be analyzed on a forecast basis (before the next occurrence), a post-mortem basis (after the last occurrence) on an actual (current) basis to determine its business improvement value. This type of analysis also provides prescriptive steps to increase the value of an upcoming event to the bottom line. This process results in development of a presentation to senior management that clearly delineates the business results associated with the event and the results that flow from it. Once the magnitude of the results is determined, the decision becomes an economic one, not an emotional one.
If you are a corporate event manager or director, consider mounting a campaign to save a productive event. If you are an event organizer or provider, such as an event production agency or exhibit house, consider supporting your client in need with event measurement and ROI support. The result will be not only the potential salvation of a productive event, but a change in the way events are viewed internally by the company.
Call +1.770.391.0015 or email me edjones@constellationcc.com with questions or to explore a rescue mission for an event you know is worth saving.
Related Services from Constellation Communication Corp.
Event “Business Best Practices” Certification
Constellation Communication Corp. is offering clients an independent certification for face-to-face internal and market facing events that meet Business Best Practices Standards (as defined by Constellation.) This certificate attests, to any interested party, that the named event was planned and measured for specific business improvement results. It further certifies that the expected business results are achievable and reasonable relative to the event cost.
Constellation will assist a company to produce event objectives and plans that will produce tangible business improvement results. Constellation will also provide event evaluation services to prove business improvement value.
Post- Mortem Trade Show Justification and ROI Analysis
A service of value to corporate exhibitors, event services providers and show organizers is the post-mortem trade show marketing analysis. This analysis identifies and summarizes tangible value from a recently completed event. The analysis is conducted through collaboration between key corporate event team members and senior level consultants from Constellation Communication Corp.
The analysis is run using the Constellation Return on Investment in Events Model. This model provides a complete picture of the business value obtained from the last event. The analysis also examines and makes recommendations regarding resources in a process referred to as “Right-sizing.” The analysis will identify how much space, how many staff and how much budget should be allocated to a particular event. The analysis looks at all sources of profit improvement delivered through event participation to the company, and makes conclusions regarding the benefits relative to cost.
The analysis is also useful in that it will generally expand the number of objectives and associated results that may be reported as business improvement. The types of objectives considered are:
- Executive Participation
- Thought Leadership
- PR Impact and Media Equivalence
- Business Development Goals
- Return on Stated Objectives
- Technology, Product or Service Show Casing
- Cost/Expense Reduction
- Return on Investment
Show organizers or events services providers experiencing attrition in exhibition and sponsorship levels or budgets for client projects may want to consider offering a post- mortem business value analysis to key clients who may be cutting- back. There is generally more business improvement value to be reported than the typical exhibitor may recognize and report. The result is a logical, fact based report of the estimated value of continued participation in an event or for an overall event program.
The cost for a post- mortem (or forecast) analysis and ROI valuation is approx. $2,500. Additional research may be required for complex events. A post- mortem or forecast analysis takes between seven and ten days to complete. The deliverables are:
- Return on Investment Event Summary
- Right-Sizing recommendations regarding budget and resource levels
- Recommendations regarding event performance improvement, strategies and tactics
- Power- point presentation for internal, executive level presentation to senior management
- Focus on investment justification
Please call +1.770.391.0015 or email edjones@constellationcc.com with questions or to explore a rescue mission for an event you know is worth saving.
Wednesday, March 4, 2009
Kerry wants Feds to Ban Certain Events - Are We Partially to Blame? ...and What Should We Do?
Are we partially to blame? I think we share some responsibility. We have produced many glitzy, high profile events without discernible, measurable business objectives in place to justify their cost. Now, a couple of very visible events have made the news, with little in the way of defense. In too many cases, we have ignored the need and opportunity to report value.
What can we do about it? First, contact John Kerry and let him know that tens of thousands of jobs will be affected by his ill-conceived reaction. http://kerry.senate.gov/contact/email.cfm . Here is the message I sent him this morning:
Mr. Kerry,
Even though the sentiment for anti-event legislation may seem worthy, it will hurt tens of thousands of meeting and event producers, hotel and food service employees, transportation workers and countless others. Many of those employees are union workers. This most assuredly would not stimulate the economy.
Events produce valid, reportable business results. Visit http://constellationcc.com if you want to understand meeting and event measurement and the impact of meetings and events on business results and profit.
Ed Jones
Next, investigate and join any one of several movements at work to counter this legislative trend. The NBTA Action Alert can be found here: http://capwiz.com/nbta/issues/alert/?alertid=12773376, also the Keep America Meeting initiative has good momentum. You can visit this organization at: http://www.keepamericameeting.org/ (You may want to be cautious about joining the mailing list for the host organization that provides the web hosting for this movement.)
In addition, we must begin now tying our event planning and measurement squarely to business improvement objectives. The results of these events must be presented in “Business Speak.” There can be no doubt that event cost is aligned with event outcomes in terms of business profitability.
As I have said in the past, identifying what to measure is perhaps the most difficult hurdle in event measurement. Once crossed you are well on your way to justifying an event expenditure. You may have 1,000 customers and prospects visit your exhibit or conference, but none of those visitors have an identifiable value until you can link them to an element in the simplified profit equation. Revenue – Expense = Profit.
To be successful you must think of event activities in terms of their value to the company. The event activity must accomplish two main goals. Business Improvement and Communications.
Under the goal of business improvement, interactions with people should include meetings with customers for the purpose of existing revenue retention and growth on the customer base, prospects for the purpose of expanding market share and the customer base, suppliers for the purpose of reducing cost and increasing availability or improving process, partners to make better solutions from your offerings, and regulators and legislators to keep market conditions conducive to success. For employees, meetings must result in changes in job behavior that improve profitability. Cost reductions through speed, accuracy, improved process, better teamwork, and superior decision making can be demonstrated and valued.
In a recent blog post I detailed a simple way of tying event accomplishments to business value. Consider the simple relationships between typical event activities, business processes and the simplified profit equation:
• Seeing and documenting new prospects (sometimes referred to as developing leads) is really customer acquisition.
• Seeing existing customers and thanking them for the business, providing executive access and introducing them to preferential programs is really customer retention.
• Briefing customers at a conference on how to use, manage and troubleshoot a system or product is really customer support.
• Asking customers and prospects questions at an event is really product or market research.
• Spreading and reinforcing the brand and priority messages is really advertising.
So, tying event accomplishments to business improvement and value might be fairly straightforward. In any case, it is quickly becoming a requirement. Linking event activity to these types of business accomplishments puts events squarely in the context of business improvement and will help us insulate them from knee-jerk reactions of ill-informed politicians.
Ed
Tuesday, March 3, 2009
A Brilliant Piece of Peer to Peer Marcom by a Non- Marketing Grad Student
is produced by Adam Winn, a graduate student at the Center for Information and Communications Sciences program (CICS) at Ball State University (I am an advisory board member of this program.) The purpose of the video is to promote the CICS program to potential students through YouTube and other outlets. He is a graduate student in the computer and networking sciences field, and not a marketing major. He was a telecommunications undergrad.
There are many lessons here. 1) It doesn’t take a creative genius or experienced marcom practitioner to create great communications. This phenomenon, of which this piece is one of thousands of examples, is the result of ubiquitous, social, digital media exposing that many types of people, of varying personality types, interests and disciplines can be great communicators. 2) The resonance of “peer to peer marketing” is extremely powerful and may equal or exceed that available through traditional marcom output.
3) User produced media is reshaping how we communicate, are entertained and most definitely, how we are influenced.
Comments are welcomed.
Friday, January 23, 2009
Why Do Companies Cut Sales and Marketing Budgets in an Economic Downturn?
A common rhetorical question heard among sales and marketing colleagues these days is, “Why do companies cut sales and marketing budgets during an economic downturn, when they need to sell more?” The truth is, it may be essential and in some cases, pushing for more new business could contribute to the problem.
"New revenue" from new customers often comes at a high cost. For many companies, existing customers are the greatest source of actual profit because they are the easiest to maintain and to sell. So, when things are tight, smart companies hold even more tightly to their existing business. CFO’s in survival mode know that expensive sales and marketing campaigns to attract business that might not be profitable for a while, may not be practical. Keeping existing business is essential.
Also, net new business volume requires investments in resources and people to produce and deliver products and service to new customers. Servicing new customers can be expensive, because they don’t yet know how to use the products and they are not part of the ordering and service systems. Increasing the size of the workforce may not be an option, and a survival strategy may be to handle the existing business volume with fewer people until the crisis passes.
How Events Can Provide Solutions –
Events provide a way to reach large numbers of people at once, at a relatively low cost. Remember, the purpose of an event is to motivate people to act in a way that benefits the host. Here are a few ideas to consider:
- You should strongly consider aiming events at existing customers to protect and grow their business. User and customer conferences actually result in near term sales and reduce service costs for companies that know how to plan and run them correctly. (See the Case study "What is Your Conference Worth to Your Company - http://constellationcc.com/case_studies.htm).
- Executive level customer conferences can create a platform where the top executives from your best accounts come together with your executives to collaborate on mutually beneficial solutions for dealing with an economic downturn. Executive to executive interaction is the most effective way to cementing business relationships.
- Few companies want to totally stop their pursuit of new business and new market share. When economics dictate a reduction in sales force or sales expense, your events can provide a cost alternative for reaching large numbers of potential buyers.
- Public events may suffer from lower attendance during an economic downturn. In some cases, the absences may be among lower level, less important participants who are not required to be there. As a result the remaining audience may be richer in targets and less expensive to reach.
- Private events, those you host yourself, can be staged in locations close to targeted accounts, and may be perceived as an opportunity for companies to find solutions for dealing with their own problems.
How you approach these events should be different compared to how your company normally conducts business at trade shows:
- It is essential to identify, by company and title, if not name, everyone at an upcoming event who can improve your results.
- Next, contact and arrange pre-scheduled, face- to- face meetings with these targeted individuals to discuss mutually beneficial approaches to dealing with a slow economy.
- Attract and "detail" targeted individuals who visit your stand. If you are able to accomplish the equivalent of an important sales call with targeted individuals in your booth, you will reduce your cost of sale.
- You must have a specific outcome (step in the sales funnel) in mind for these targets, and you must get them to commit to participate.
- Broaden your idea of a "target" to include suppliers and alliances. Interactions with these targets reduce the cost of materials or logistics contribute directly to the survival of the business.
That approach fills the sales funnel with prospects committed to a step in the sales process, ones that may not be coming from a reduced sales force and may help to lower the cost of doing business.
Saving the Company Money –
Finally, events can save your company money when it is most needed. The face- to- face meetings I referenced reduce the cost of field sales because the prospects and customers have paid their own way to meet with you.
Providing access to your executives for customers and prospects is a sure fire way to protect business and cement deals for new business. The savings from putting fifty to one- hundred or more customers and prospects in front of your executives, in just a few days, could reach hundreds of thousands of dollars in savings per event.
What to Do Right Now –
Talk to your sales executives about how carefully chosen events could help your company deal with the instability and change associated with the current economic climate.
Your importance to the company is about to rise rapidly.
Ed
Tuesday, December 9, 2008
What Do Other Companies Spend at Tradeshows?
Comparing Total Spending at Trade Shows
Using a Cross Industry Benchmark of Cost per Square Foot
It is easy to find references on “spending per square foot” as a comparative index. However, the numbers we see significantly under estimate total spending. Many of the references we found indicate a cross industry average cost of approximately $60 per square foot, including space rental. The most often cited number for a "new build" is ~$150/ sq. ft. Many exhibit managers are shaking their heads wondering how this can be true!? The most likely answer is that these indices do not reflect total show budget but a subset of spending directly related to the exhibit.
To address this need, Constellation ran the average “cost per square foot” data on the actual results from several hundred events in our database. These trade show programs were managed by companies in several different market segments.
Total Trade Show Spend per Square Foot
(Cross Industry View)
Type of Customer | Cost/ Sq. Ft. | Exhibit Program Size and Scope |
Manufacturing (Fortune 100) | $127 | Large Domestic |
Transportation (Fortune 100) | $137 | Medium Domestic |
Consumer Package Goods (Fortune 100) | $144 | Large Domestic |
Medical and Household Goods (Fortune 1000) | $172 | Medium Domestic |
Exhibit House Clients (Mix of Sizes) | $186 | Mixed Domestic |
Engineering/Manufacturing (Fortune 100) | $187 | Large Domestic and International |
Banking (Fortune 100) | $239 | Large Domestic |
Computer Technology (Fortune 500) | $388 | Large Domestic and International |
We estimate the average Cost/Sq. Ft. benchmark, on a cross- industry basis, to be $150 - $190/ sq. ft.
This index includes all things that are generally found in an actual event budget, including off-floor activities and expenses such as a customer dinner or event, sponsorships, media, etc. The index excludes staff expenses (time, travel, food and lodging) that are not part of the show budget. Those costs are usually covered by non- trade show budgets based elsewhere in the organization. (Some clients prefer to look at the complete picture and include staff travel cost. This can be estimated by multiplying the domestic traveling staff by $1,000 and the international traveling staff by $10,000. This article deals only with budgets that do not account for staff cost.)
These numbers are presented as a guideline. They reflect actual results against hundreds of shows. "The index of “cost per square foot” is a useful way to forecast how much money you might need to allocate to do a good job at an upcoming event or to evaluate how well you are managing cost compared to the spending of others."
Using indexes such as Cost per Square Foot is another example of how a good event measurement program can help you manage your company's resources for maximum efficiency and effectiveness.
If you have questions about your specific spending, please contact me and I will be happy to answer them.
+1.770-391-0015, http://constellationcc.com/
Tuesday, November 11, 2008
ROI: Beyond the Buzzword
November Issue
Author: Sandi Cain
ROI: Beyond the Buzzword
You may want to give this a read, especially for the meetings side of the event measurement and evaluation world. I was interviewed and provided content for the piece.
Ed
Thursday, October 23, 2008
The Importance of Forecasting a Marketing Event
The following variables can be forecast for an upcoming trade show for example:
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 tradeshow measurement topics go to our website at http://constellationcc.com.
Ed
Saturday, October 11, 2008
Small Samples, and the Margin of Error - A useful Read
Updates on my research and expository papers, discussion of open problems, and other maths-related topics. By Terence Tao
It is pretty complex in some places, but skip the equations and read the text, which is quite digestible.
As Constellation conducts random sample research in an event marketing measurement context, these are things we worry about and try to point out. Sometimes we see a client take results and run with them that may have significant weaknesses. For example, very high level executives are not nearly as likely to respond to a poll because they are very busy or they have an assistant screen their correspondence, so they are under-represented in the result.
Also relevant, people tend to believe what is reported on TV or in the press. The myriad of polls reported daily have many of the issues explained in this post. I believe that is why networks famously called states incorrectly on election day. I would suggest we are usually looking at close to 10% possible (not probable) error on most of the better political polls reported on TV.
Thanks to Terrence for a very thoughtful article. If he could dumb it down a bit, it should be required reporting on every television network and print media outlet.
Ed Jones
Read the Post - Small samples, and the margin of error
10 October, 2008 in expository, math.ST, non-technical | by Terence Tao
Monday, October 6, 2008
Slogans - Do They Work? and Does Anybody Care?
Asked by Mariéme JAMME- MBA
Ed’s answer:
Marieme, "Delta is Ready When You Are!"
A slogan is only as good as it is customer focused.
An example I use frequently is from Delta Airlines, a great company. Their best known slogan was "Delta is Ready When You Are!" an entirely customer focused message. Later it changed to "We Love to Fly and It Shows," an entirely myopic, self-centered slogan that happened to be timed with a significant downturn in customer service and what was perceived to be a bad attitude at the airline. You might also remember the "Ya da Ya da" unintelligible music they played as you boarded or exited the airplane. Sometimes even good companies seem to lose their minds.
Your slogan should communicate value to the buyer. If so, a slogan will be important and will likely be a factor in buyer preference. I hope this is helpful.
Ed Jones President Constellation Communication Corp., Event Measurement, Justification and Continuous Improvement
Wednesday, September 17, 2008
TSEA Master's 2008 - A Great Success! Reviews
The conference was deemed a great success by a group of participants that are considered seasoned veterans in the industry and many of whom attended Master's conferences in the past.
The 2008 Master’s provided a basis for expanding the internal corporate conversation vertically and laterally. Trade shows and marketing events are clearly a profitable opportunity.
Ed Jones,
Constellation Communication Corp., Instructor
The following are the endorsements for TSEA’s Master’s from those who participated.
Excellent program. I learned a lot and really enjoyed the exchanges. Small but very active and high-energy group, anxious to learn and share.
John Zeitlin,
American Express
The conference was a great learning experience. Enjoyed learning about going green.
Kristin Towler
Constellation Communications
Even after three years’ attendance, the Master’s continues to provide education unavailable anywhere else. It is a ‘must attend’ and should not ever be missed. Keith, Ed and Tom did an outstanding job. Not only was the content more appropriate to a Master’s level, their methodology of teaching, reinforcing, and confirming each attendee got it before we left was great.
Michael Seymour
3D Exhibits
The Master’s conference continues to be the place for advance education for the exhibits professional. No matter how many years you have in the industry, I was challenged and inspired the program is innovative and truly advances exhibit marketing to the strategic and management level of the companies where we work. The opportunity to network with other experience professionals is excellent.
Cyndi Erp
KCI
The information received from the instructors was fantastic and is definitely info that can be put to use immediately. This is the most valuable time I ever spent at trade show seminars. Thank you!
Dan Peck
Boeing
The TSEA Master's program, Providing Strategic Guidance at the Executive Level, has taught me fundamental steps to provide our management team and event stakeholders with key strategic insights into our event programs including revenue impact, relationship management, cost savings and promotion value.
Elizabeth Brannen, CMP
TANDBERG Television, part of the Ericsson Group
Go to the TSEA website for more information about TSEA and the services and benefits they provide.
Tuesday, September 9, 2008
When Sales People Won't Stick to Your Exhibit Staffing Plan
Article: What can I do about an aspiring "David Copperfield"?
My star salesperson always signs up for booth duty, but never comes to the pre-show training and cuts out as soon as the first hot prospect appears on the horizon. I need her on the show floor. How can I keep her focused? Or should I admit defeat and find someone to take her place?
-- Bethany, Exhibits Manager
Read the full article here!
Wednesday, August 27, 2008
Simplifying Event Marketing Plans by Simplifying Objectives - Event 2.0 (two objectives and extended target involvement)
I. Business Development/Improvement (Revenue and Cost)
II. Marketing Communications
Events may be aimed at one, the other, or both. The focus for a particular event may vary from year to year, based on the product cycles and your company. When we perform event measurement, the key determinant of event value is consistently the number of addressable, high value contacts reached through that event.
Revenue Related Business Development accomplishments include:
• Customer acquisition (adding new prospects to the database and sales to new
customers)
• Growth of the existing customer/ revenue base (sales to existing customers)
• Customer retention
• Acceleration of the sales cycle
Targeted audiences for revenue related Business Development activities are:
• Prospects
• Customers (direct)
• Channels
• Integrators and Aggregators who buy from you
Cost Related Business Development accomplishments impact on the cost side of the profit equation. You can impact cost, quality and availability or resources and affect mutually beneficial partnerships for joint offerings and accomplishments.
Targeted audiences for cost related Business Development activities are:
• Suppliers (improve price, quality or availability)
• Partners
• Strategic Alliances
• Others who can lower costs or improve resources, processes or market positioning
Marketing Communications accomplishments include:
• Brand development/ reinforcement
• Market positioning
• Product positioning
• Product and program introduction/ launches
• Company news
• Community affairs
• Communications with standards bodies and other market forces that reduce cost and or improve probability of sale
• PR Impact (influencing positive coverage of your company and products in trade or general press.
Targeted audiences for Marcom impact include:
• Press
• Analysts
• Pundits
• The market at large
• In some cases the public at large
• Regulators and politicians, bureaucrats, etc.
• Standards bodies, industry alliances, etc.
• In some cases financial analysts and investors
Getting the Job Done –
Business Development and Marketing Communications objectives are usually best accomplished by establishing appointments for face- to- face meetings with high value contacts, held during an event. At a consumer event, the interaction needs to be personal as possible. This has proven time and again to be the greatest source of value at most marketing events.
Effectiveness of getting things done is dependent upon a sound communication strategy and execution. Prospects, customers, suppliers, influencers and press have to know what value you offer and what you want them to do. What you show and tell should be completely tailored for the benefit of the various targeted audiences (outlined above) addressable at each event.
To create a simple strategic brief for an upcoming event, simply follow this format and provide a description of how and what you intend to accomplish in each area, and describe the specific individuals you must meet in order to reach those goals.
And remember it is usually what happens after the event that delivers payback. So your post event plan is usually more important than the event plan. Keeping all of these targets continuously engaged in a communal relationship with your company is an essential element in Event 2.0. (with apologies to Web 2.0 :) )
Ed
Monday, August 25, 2008
Poll - Interest in Simplified, Web- based Planning Tool for Tradeshows and Events
Small events and decentralized events - I am thinking about a tool to help those people who run small and or remote events. Those people are the ones who do not get the planning and care normally provided for the larger "corporate" events. They need to know what to consider to produce an effective event and need some coaching regarding how to communicate effectively and stay on brand and message.
Larger events - Perhaps, you need a tool that provides a consistent databased approach that would help you communicate with, focus and unify the extended team for the largest events.
The reason I ask is that Constellation and another expert industry resource are considering developing this tool. We we would like to have input on what it needs to include from a capabilities perspective.
The basic model would be a sound planning structure that includes seven or eight main reasons for doing marketing events. The respondent will pick applicable objectives among those offered and choose one or two measurable outcomes for each as event goals. The tool would email the manager a "strategic brief" that can be used internally with executives and managers who must participate to make the event work, and externally with the exhibit house or production agency, etc. Completed plans will reside in a database.
Results tracking - The tool would include support for the event manager to report on the success of the event against the selected goals. The tool would email the manager an event summary based upon their input that can be shared with the team and communicated "upstairs." The results among all events would keep the accumulating in a database throughout the year for quarterly and annual analysis.
What do you think? How in your organization would need and use such a tool? Please comment on this post or email me. edjones at constellationcc.com
Wednesday, August 20, 2008
TSEA 3rd Annual Master's 2008: Providing Strategic Guidance at the Executive Level: Aligning Actions and Values
Jones to Speak and Present Case Study -
I will speak at the conference and conduct a case study on the topic of aligning trade show activity and business objectives including how to communicate with executives and those in other departments, on September 12th:
9:45 AM - 11:00 AM
Strategic Communications Part One: Business Improvement
If you frame your event program in terms of business improvement, you can use this framework to communicate more effectively with internal customers, external suppliers, members of your team, C level managers and your company’s decision makers. Presented by Ed Jones
11:15 AM - 11:45 AM Case Study Exercise 1: Business Improvement
Presented by Ed Jones
11:45 AM - 12:15 PM Group Debrief Case Study Exercise 1
Presented by Ed Jones
Please consider attending if you live within easy travel distance or are interested to make the trip. The conference runs from a opening reception on Sept. 11, 6:30 PM through Sunday September 14 around noon.
The full agenda is as follows: AGENDA
Invitation, conference details and registration may be found at: Conference Invitation
The conference overview is:
Trade Show Exhibitor Association’s 3rd Annual Master's 2008
This is a real eye-opener! Sharpen your mind, strengthen your career and ramp up your CEU credits toward your CME with this unique power-packed boost of an educational banquet. Learn from among the industry's most knowledgeable presenters in an intensive and interactive environment designed to facilitate open dialogue and discussions of best practices.
Presentations, exercises and case studies will enable you to build upon your knowledge and experience while enhancing your communication skills and ability to increase the value that you, your team and your show/event program provide. CEU credits earned through TSEA have double value.
Topics include:
• Executive Speak – The language of decision makers
• Develop Insight – Identify each decision maker’s:
o Vision and challenges, opportunities and needs
o Criteria for comparing and contrasting marketing mix elements
o Process for decision making and budget allocation
• Planning Your Program Strategically
• Going Green: Exhibit Design – Think and Design Strategically
• What does ‘going green’ really mean in practical terms.
You’ll leave Master's 2008 re-energized and re-committed with new ideas and fine-tuned skills, well on your way to completing your CME and motivated to provide strategic guidance to your company’s C Level managers and other internal customers.
Please feel free to call me with questions. +1.770.391.0015
Ed
Friday, August 8, 2008
Leveraging Every Aspect of a Trade Show - The Value of Meetings - Pod Cast
Leveraging Every Aspect of a Trade Show
Wednesday, August 6, 2008
Tying Events to Business Improvement and ROI “Business Speak”
Today I read a great post by David Carter on ROI and social media. It provided a simple structure for linking marketing activity to business improvement. As you know, I am all about simple structures for things that are perceived to be difficult. I suggest you read it. The structure he presents is entirely consistent with what we teach about event ROI. I was encouraged to make the same case for events, so with appropriate acknowledgment to Mr. Carter, and borrowing from the structure and questions he presented, here is the event version for tying activity to ROI.
Identifying something to measure is perhaps the most difficult hurdle in event measurement. Once crossed you are well on your way to justifying an event expenditure. You may have 1,000 customers and prospects visit your exhibit or conference, but none of those visitors have an identifiable value until you can link them to an element in the simplified profit equation. Revenue – Expense = Profit.
To be successful you must think of event activities in terms of value to the company. Consider the simple relationships between typical event activities, business processes and the simplified profit equation:
• Seeing and documenting new prospects (sometimes referred to as developing leads) is really customer acquisition.
• Seeing existing customers and thanking them for the business, providing executive access and introducing them to preferential programs is really customer retention.
• Briefing customers at a conference on how to use, manage and troubleshoot a system or product is really customer support.
• Asking customers and prospects questions at an event is really product or market research.
• Spreading and reinforcing the brand and priority messages is really advertising.
So, tying event accomplishments to value might be more straightforward than previously thought. Ask the people who manage these functions within your company for the following values:
• What is the cost of acquiring a customer? How much are you willing to spend to get a customer?
• What is the annual value of a customer? Do you sell a one time service or product, or do you have a recurring stream of revenue?
• What does it cost to support the customer? For example, what is the average cost of a call to the support center?
• What do you spend on product or market research? Be sure to include focus groups, attitude and awareness, perception, brand research and testing?
• What is the cost of our advertising on a gross and targeted impression basis?
Most event interaction goals can be tied to the numbers above. Then you can speak about event accomplishments in business terms. Report accomplishments as either an influence on revenue or cost. Those are the two ingredients of profit.
As Mr. Carter points out, the difference between the cost to acquire a customer, and the average value of an existing customer is the value of retaining a customer. Customer retention should be a primary event marketing goal. Mention customer retention and you will get any executive's attention.
How many customers were briefed on a new product at your last show? What would be the cost to do that in the field? How many technical questions were fielded at your conference or at a show? How many calls to the call center were avoided? Those are direct influences on cost reduction/ expense avoidance, one of the four key values from event marketing. What was the impact on customer satisfaction and the associated impact on customer retention?
Linking event activity to these types of business accomplishments puts events in the context of business improvement.
Ed