Exhibition News June 2019 | Page 37

Feature “There’s an unpredictability in what a client wants, but when you get a good idea you obviously run with it” – Tom Treverton able to find the people they need and for the exhibitors to see the people they need as well. For Vitafoods we have segmented it into sections because we need it to be targeted to that people can find their way to the right area.” Rudkins-Stow adds that one way to prevent smaller companies from being lost in the crowd is by focusing on having them within features. If they’re launching a new product or running content, the feature can refer visitors back to their stand. Factors within our control In the lead-up to an event a floorplan can be a fairly flexible thing. The ratio of exhibition stands to elements like features and networking areas can be largely dependent on the amount of stands that have been sold, and there is always that battle between commercial success and visitor experience. “From our point of view, running the consumer shows that we do, there are standard theatres that we have in each show,” says Tom Trevorton, UK portfolio director at F2F Events. “There are certainly standard themes that we know will attract a visitor. Ultimately we’ll build what the client wants, and sometimes you don’t know what that’s going to be until three months out or even two months out. “There’s an unpredictability in what a client wants, but when you get a good idea you obviously run with it, and then it’s just about how it will work in terms of achieving the visitor flow that you want. “That doesn’t necessarily just extend to features, my priority with exhibitors at the moment is engaging content. You know that the audience are sheep and the crowd will follow the crowd so the more exhibitors you have doing something different and doing something engaging the better.” The basic grid format of the standard floorplan is mentioned, with Kimberley Barnes, event manager at Clarion, describing the logistical challenges of operating across several floors of a venue. The event team has brought in a new colleague to redesign the floorplan with the visitor experience in mind. Christine Martin, marketing director at GES, cites an example of a show plan that used organic curves, prioritising the visitor journey above all else. “It was a totally different experience, they didn’t come from a trade show background so they weren’t thinking about yield per sqm, they were saying ‘I want this journey to look great,” she explains. “It’s a mindset flip.” Aleiya Lonsdale, senior marketing manager at Easyfairs, comments: “We’ve done something similar at CCR, there’s networking in a circle in the middle and there are no ‘aisles’, you come to a stand and have to choose to go in one direction or the other.” The topic of exhibitor training and masterclasses crops up, with most of the roundtable attendees providing some form of support for their exhibitors, and with several praising the masterclasses run by the AEO at the NEC and ExCeL. “We invite a lot of our exhibitors to go on those, and we have a great response,” says Simon Burns, MD of ICHF. “And those exhibitors do better at shows because of it.” Lonsdale adds: “We run our exhibitor open day alongside the masterclass, so they get an update about the show.” Trevorton says: “If they’re new to the show they’re more likely to go, if they’ve been with you for a number of years they feel June — 37