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  • Casual Articles - Closing the Sale through Calculated Trade Show Exhibit Follow-Up

    The Top Ten Reasons Why Size Matters When You're Considering Your Career
    1. Work/life Balance. This is something both companies and employees are striving for. Employees want a life and companies want to avoid costly burnout that affects productivity and quality. Fortune’s 2005 “100 Best Companies to Work For” showcased how culture is key. Using criteria that included benefit programs, health care and paid time off, the 100 bes
    uld get a higher score and more intense follow-up attention than someone picking up your literature who represents a business that is auxiliary to your product offering.

    When making follow-up contact, include a special offer specific offer to encourage your prospects to take action. This may include special pricing or value-added offers that are meaningful to helping prospective customers be more successful.

    In all follow-up activities, timing is critical. Don’t let a hot prospect become a cold lead because too much time has passed befor

    Lanyards - The Perfect Sidekick
    I love lanyards, they are such a neat little invention that can be used for a ton of different circumstances. Some common ways to use a lanyard is to assemble them into badge holders. There are various layouts you can apply to badges as well such as different size customizations including the landscape size setting.In addition to sizes, there are a m
    Trade show exhibit success requires immediate follow-up on leads and activities generated from the tradeshow floor. Giving booth visitors your company literature, collecting contact information about leads, and engaging in meaningful conversation with prospects about your products represent only a portion of the tradeshow exhibit sales process.

    Immediate and continual follow-up by mail, email, phone and personal visits is essential to maximizing your revenue potential.

    Determining how you will collect lead information and the materials you will use in your follow-up activities needs to occur during your trade show exhibit planning process.

    Include different information and literature for your marketing before, during and after the event. For example, rather than sending the same company promotional brochure that you mailed ahead of time to registrants or had available in your exhibit booth, plan ahead to send a new piece with additional information and selling points that appeal to the needs of your prospects.

    In your follow-up communication, be sure to address specific interests or needs the customer shared while visiting your booth. Any way you can personalize your written or verbal communication will yield greater marketing impact and put you closer to securing a new client.

    If you are making a follow-up phone call, which always makes an impact, refer to the conversation you had with the prospect when he or she was visiting your booth. Or, send specific information the potential customer requested and include a personalized handwritten note.

    Mailing articles, fact sheets, and other detailed product information that directly address customer needs will send a message of service and commitment that will help you solidify the sale.

    The style and form of follow-up in which you engage should be determined by the sales potential of the lead. Before the event, you should develop a “scoring” system for leads generated from your tradeshow exhibit booth and segment prospects for different types of follow-up based on potential to buy.

    So a prospect you met at your tradeshow exhibit booth who has decision-making authority and a large budget would get a higher score and more intense follow-up attention than someone picking up your literature who represents a business that is auxiliary to your product offering.

    When making follow-up contact, include a special offer specific offer to encourage your prospects to take action. This may include special pricing or value-added offers that are meaningful to helping prospective customers be more successful.

    In all follow-up activities, timing is critical. Don’t let a hot prospect become a cold lead because too much time has passed befor

    The New Feudal Society: How to Prosper in the Coming Age of Poverty and Privilege
    There is an old saying that goes something like this--- what goes around comes around. This saying is plausible, but not entirely correct. What goes around does come around, but in a different shape and form. To more fully appreciate this new “feudal society” we will be entering, we must first examine where we have been and the consequences flowing from
    ou will use in your follow-up activities needs to occur during your trade show exhibit planning process.

    Include different information and literature for your marketing before, during and after the event. For example, rather than sending the same company promotional brochure that you mailed ahead of time to registrants or had available in your exhibit booth, plan ahead to send a new piece with additional information and selling points that appeal to the needs of your prospects.

    In your follow-up communication, be sure to address specific interests or needs the customer shared while visiting your booth. Any way you can personalize your written or verbal communication will yield greater marketing impact and put you closer to securing a new client.

    If you are making a follow-up phone call, which always makes an impact, refer to the conversation you had with the prospect when he or she was visiting your booth. Or, send specific information the potential customer requested and include a personalized handwritten note.

    Mailing articles, fact sheets, and other detailed product information that directly address customer needs will send a message of service and commitment that will help you solidify the sale.

    The style and form of follow-up in which you engage should be determined by the sales potential of the lead. Before the event, you should develop a “scoring” system for leads generated from your tradeshow exhibit booth and segment prospects for different types of follow-up based on potential to buy.

    So a prospect you met at your tradeshow exhibit booth who has decision-making authority and a large budget would get a higher score and more intense follow-up attention than someone picking up your literature who represents a business that is auxiliary to your product offering.

    When making follow-up contact, include a special offer specific offer to encourage your prospects to take action. This may include special pricing or value-added offers that are meaningful to helping prospective customers be more successful.

    In all follow-up activities, timing is critical. Don’t let a hot prospect become a cold lead because too much time has passed befor

    Five Reasons You Were Rejected for the Job You Thought You Had
    You thought you had the job nailed. The interview went well--the interviewer seemed to like you and your skills were a perfect fit. They even seemed to be on the verge of offering you the job on the spot. But your agency tells you the next day you didn’t get the job or contract. What happened? It came as a big shock, didn’t it?Losing a job or contrac
    interests or needs the customer shared while visiting your booth. Any way you can personalize your written or verbal communication will yield greater marketing impact and put you closer to securing a new client.

    If you are making a follow-up phone call, which always makes an impact, refer to the conversation you had with the prospect when he or she was visiting your booth. Or, send specific information the potential customer requested and include a personalized handwritten note.

    Mailing articles, fact sheets, and other detailed product information that directly address customer needs will send a message of service and commitment that will help you solidify the sale.

    The style and form of follow-up in which you engage should be determined by the sales potential of the lead. Before the event, you should develop a “scoring” system for leads generated from your tradeshow exhibit booth and segment prospects for different types of follow-up based on potential to buy.

    So a prospect you met at your tradeshow exhibit booth who has decision-making authority and a large budget would get a higher score and more intense follow-up attention than someone picking up your literature who represents a business that is auxiliary to your product offering.

    When making follow-up contact, include a special offer specific offer to encourage your prospects to take action. This may include special pricing or value-added offers that are meaningful to helping prospective customers be more successful.

    In all follow-up activities, timing is critical. Don’t let a hot prospect become a cold lead because too much time has passed befor

    Customer Rewards Program
    Department stores had the right idea when they started using in store credit cards as their customer reward program.. They built a database. Without knowing about their customers lives they wouldn’t know how to get that customer into the store. This is one of the places where the credit card perfect. In order to get a store credit card the customer m
    information that directly address customer needs will send a message of service and commitment that will help you solidify the sale.

    The style and form of follow-up in which you engage should be determined by the sales potential of the lead. Before the event, you should develop a “scoring” system for leads generated from your tradeshow exhibit booth and segment prospects for different types of follow-up based on potential to buy.

    So a prospect you met at your tradeshow exhibit booth who has decision-making authority and a large budget would get a higher score and more intense follow-up attention than someone picking up your literature who represents a business that is auxiliary to your product offering.

    When making follow-up contact, include a special offer specific offer to encourage your prospects to take action. This may include special pricing or value-added offers that are meaningful to helping prospective customers be more successful.

    In all follow-up activities, timing is critical. Don’t let a hot prospect become a cold lead because too much time has passed befor

    A Certain Uncertainty
    I recently read about a 66-year-old Romanian woman who gave birth to a baby girl. Sixty-six! She is the world’s oldest mother ever recorded, and it reminded me, as many things do, of the incredible uncertainties we face in life. (I’m uncertain whether the mother or daughter will need the most naps ... or diapers.)We hear stuff like this in the
    uld get a higher score and more intense follow-up attention than someone picking up your literature who represents a business that is auxiliary to your product offering.

    When making follow-up contact, include a special offer specific offer to encourage your prospects to take action. This may include special pricing or value-added offers that are meaningful to helping prospective customers be more successful.

    In all follow-up activities, timing is critical. Don’t let a hot prospect become a cold lead because too much time has passed before you’ve made contact. Leads from tradeshows should first be contacted within a week of the show.

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