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Cracking the Connection Code

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2012 ReInvent Yourself
Jan 11, 2012
Did you resolve to get in shape?
Maybe stay in shape?
Join us as
Delfina Bonilla-Cassel
teaches us a few workouts anyone can do
at home or in the office!

Come and see the new BARRE BEE FIT Studio

500 Washington Suite (lower level)
Ann Arbor 48104

5:30 - 7:30
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Tips for Expos E-mail

Exhibit to make a difference in your bottom line!

You never get a second chance to make a first impression. It's a saying so true that it has become cliché - a phrase used by suit salesmen and purveyors of shampoo - but it's a saying that should serve as a motto for your trade show booth staff.

A trade show is a non-stop series of beginnings. Every moment - from the second the doors open until they blink the lights signaling the end of the day - is a moment where you could be meeting customers for the very first time.

If all goes well, these crucial first moments will launch a mutually profitable relationship that will last for years. On the other hand, if the impression you create is not so positive, you've kissed a lifetime's worth of business goodbye.

Beginning well means you're half done. Once you've established a rapport with the client, once that positive foundation has been laid, the hard work of negotiating a deal and closing a sale becomes so much easier. Here's what you need to know to create a favorable first impression time and time again.

What's for sale here?
Your company might make computers or luxury automobiles. You might sell scrub brushes. You could retail the finest gems found on the Indian sub-continent. It doesn't really matter. When you're at a trade show, what you're selling is you.  Today's buyers are nervous. They've been through the dot-com bubble. They've seen Enron blow up and corporate scandal follow corporate scandal. Yet they still have to do business. How do they know who they can trust?

There will always be a due-diligence component to business, but a surprising amount of decisions are made by people "trusting their guts". During those crucial first minutes where you're checking out the attendee, they're checking you out. They are, perhaps unconsciously, assessing what they perceive as your intentions and motivations. Few people believe that they can get a good deal from someone they do not believe to be a good person.

Trade Show Secret: People have to 'buy' you before they can buy your products.