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Trade Shows Detroit MI

Don't waste time or dollars in a scramble to exhibit at every trade show that comes along. Choose wisely, then work the room and come home with guaranteed ways to grow your business.

Tri City Trade Center
(313) 841-1500
475 S Schaefer Hwy
Detroit, MI
Arlington Display Industries Inc
(313) 837-1212
19303 W Davison St
Detroit, MI
Michigan Kidney Conslnt Access
(248) 541-7801
10861 W 10 Mile Rd
Oak Park, MI
Tongxin International Ltd
(248) 593-8330
199 Pierce St Ste 202
Birmingham, MI
PolyArk Management Consulting
248.694.4414
330 E. Maple Rd, STE # 141
Birmingham, MI
Display Group LTD
(313) 965-3344
1702 W Fort St
Detroit, MI
Display Garden
(313) 270-1650
14853 Mark Twain St
Detroit, MI
Dillard Partners, LLC
(88) TRY DP-LLC
1090 Farnham Ave.
Lincoln Park, MI
Cornerstone Health Svc
(586) 779-8700
20225 E 9 Mile Rd
Saint Clair Shores, MI
Prymus Consulting
(248) 614-9001
1701 W Big Beaver Rd
Troy, MI
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5 Tips for Making Trade Shows Work for Your Business

There comes a point in every entrepreneur’s life when the idea of exhibiting at a trade show seems like a good one. And it can be, if you put your dollars to careful use before, during and after the show.

A trade show isn’t just about setting up a booth and waving hi to passersby. Most companies consider trade shows a great way to meet potential clients; find new employees; identify dealers, reps and distributors; network; troubleshoot and establish industry positioning, says Leslie Ungar, president of Electric Impulse Communications, Inc., in Akron, Ohio.

What makes trade show time successful? For starters, take the following tested tips:

Tip 1: Spend Serious Time Planning

Spends weeks, even months, preparing and defining your goals in attending, says Ray Silverstein, author of The Best Secrets of Great Small Businesses (Sourcebooks, 2006, $14.95).

Then develop a strategy. Send a pre-show postcard, e-mail or news release to clients and media who’ll be there. Set up appointments and turn meals into networking opportunities, Silverstein says.

Create specialized, eye-catching marketing materials and put a huge, two-word headline on it. The idea is to get attendees to stop. Think of your marketing materials as “bait for fishing in the aisles,” says Paul Endress, president of Maximum Advantage International, in Harrisburg, Pa.

“We line our people up in front of the booth, stick one out and say, ‘Here, you need this,’” he says.

Author: Lynne Meredith Schreiber

Copyright 2009 StartupNation, LLC

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