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f all the industries affected by the economic downturn in 2008 and the recession in 2009, the construction industry was perhaps hobbled the worst, experiencing what economists now call an all-out crash from which the industry has just begun to dust itself off. For builders and remodelers, a staggering $100 billion drop in construction spending for new residential buildings and improvements between 2008 and 2009, along with a $62 billion decline in nonresidential construction over the same time period, sent construction companies into a tailspin. The unwitting backseat passengers in that industry crash were suppliers who provide materials to the building and remodeling industry - suppliers whose sales fell at the same precipitous rates as those of construction companies. A greatly reduced construction market meant the need for items such as windows, flooring, and fixtures was reduced by the same margin, leaving suppliers to figure out how to stay alive while the industry righted itself. At Moen Inc., a supplier of kitchen and bath fixtures, executives were tightening the company belt because of the economic downturn, and the company's exhibit-marketing program was the low-hanging fruit. "We had to be smarter with every dollar we spent, and trade shows were a very easy target," says Laura Garland, who was a senior marketing communications specialist at Moen at the time. "It's difficult to measure the impact of exhibiting, and return on investment is hard to explain, but that's what you need in order to prove yourself to someone sitting in a corner office." As the person overseeing Moen's exhibits, Garland believed that exhibiting was critical to the company's success, especially during hard economic times. But without any measurement tools to prove that, she powerlessly watched as the show budget was slashed. The 2008 International Builders' Show (IBS) was the first to go. Other shows were being eyeballed for elimination as well, and people with a seat at the C-level table were ruminating about exhibit-related spending as a whole and wondering what tangible benefit it had for Moen.
Knowing a good vibe wasn't nearly the collateral she needed to keep her shows off management's chopping block, Garland set out to turn that good feeling into real numbers. Common Denominators Garland knew she had to devise a way to measure the potential value of the shows that remained on Moen's calendar after budget cuts or they too would be in jeopardy. Her thoughts turned to a direct-mail project she had worked on a year earlier. "With direct mail there is a lot of analysis on the return," Garland says. "I started asking myself how we could assign a value to a lead from a trade show the same way direct mail does." Garland believed a new, better survey was the answer - something that was brief but incredibly efficient. "We wanted to know how many projects and what types of projects attendees had," she says. "If we could understand how much business they were doing a year, we could rank them as A, B, or C leads." Ranking leads was a new concept for Moen, but Garland believed it would help her understand the caliber of leads coming from various shows. It would also better prioritize salespeople's time by allowing them to follow up with the best prospects first. But there were many questions Garland had to answer before names on paper could be ranked by potential value. She needed to know which segments of the market had the highest profitability for the company, which job titles were the most likely buyers, and what the close ratio was of leads collected at past shows.
First, to analyze the potential return from a lead, Garland had to understand the company's detailed sales history. She collaborated with a third party and others within the organization to create an ROI analysis that identified the projected revenue for each fixture sold in the nonresidential and wholesale-residential markets, breaking them down into detailed marketing segments. Once Garland understood the profitability for each market segment, she needed to prioritize Moen's target audience, identifying who would be considered an A lead, who would rank a B, and which attendees would be considered a C. Garland looked at the factors that made one lead more financially promising than another, such as in which market segment the person worked (and hence the profitability of sales), how many projects he or she did per year on average, and whether the person was likely to be a decision maker based on his or her job title. Having identified the most and least profitable target prospects, Garland used that criteria to create profiles for her A, B, and C rankings. Garland and Schwabenlander then developed a branching-logic survey that, in five questions or fewer, would collect the core pieces of info needed to establish rank. The criteria used to separate lead prospects was then embedded into an algorithm that would automatically assign an attendee a rank based on his or her answers to the questionnaire. But ranking leads based on their hypothetical value post show wasn't enough. Garland wanted to know what past leads had yielded for the company in terms of close ratio and project value. For example, how often did leads close from contractors who built multiple apartment buildings each year, and what was the average project value from those leads? What about the self-employed plumber? The sales department helped her scour the results of past leads, using whatever information was available to sort them according to how they matched criteria for A, B, and C rankings. Tracing the end result of each lead, Garland calculated the average close ratio and project value for A, B, and C leads, and a valuation formula was born: The number of A, B, or C leads collected multiplied by the average close ratio for that type of lead, times the average project value per closed lead equaled the estimated per-show revenue. Integral Methods In addition to projecting the value of each individual show, Garland sought a way to calculate the value of press exposure and the benefit to the company in terms of client meetings, sponsorships, and promotions at shows - things that had never been scrutinized before.
Next, to understand the value of press exposure received when exhibiting, Garland collected information about what was being printed in the media during or after an event. At large shows, Moen's public-relations staff tracked the number and type of press mentions received, and for smaller shows, Garland estimated that 5 percent of the press meetings would result in some sort of mention. She then turned to established American Marketing Association standards for guidance on calculating the value of press placement resulting from a show. In part, those standards measure what each published press mention would cost as purchased advertising, establishing what the value was for each mention. Also, Garland calculated how much the company was spending on travel to meet with press it would have otherwise seen at the shows cut from its calendar. Those figures together gave her the value of press meetings at trade shows. Finally, to calculate what each sponsorship and promotion was worth, Derse worked with Garland to develop a formula specific to Moen that established the dollar value of targeted impressions at $0.18 each based on a full-scale company analysis of items such as sales cycle, brand equity, and average number of touchpoints a customer encountered throughout the year. Using the $0.18-per-impression stat, Garland assigned a value to each time a current or potential client viewed Moen's name via sponsorships and promotions, and adding up the total number of attendees at an event, for example, gave her a quantifiable figure to share with upper management. Armed with a new, comprehensive formula to assess the actual value of any trade show, Garland put the entire metrics machine into motion, curious about what it would indicate regarding exhibiting going forward. Rational Expression
Based on the validation she was receiving from management, executives agreed to return to IBS in 2011. Results from the show demonstrated, once again, that it was the right choice, with ample payback and savings on sales travel that otherwise would have been required to meet with clients in the field. Garland's ability to demonstrate measurable success from exhibiting was transformative to Moen's exhibit-marketing mentality. Management made no further reductions to the show schedule in 2010 or 2011, and, in fact, funds from under-performing marketing efforts were reallocated to make the company's trade show presence stronger. In addition, Garland's metrics convinced management to agree to invest in a large, new custom exhibit as well as several smaller structures for regional shows. While the measurement tool is credited with strengthening Moen's trade show presence, it also provides the ultimate litmus test for how the actual results compare to the show "vibe" reported by sales reps. It turns out that the two are fairly closely related. "When we were presenting the numbers, the results matched the energy of the show as reported by salespeople," Garland says. "But it was cool because for the first time we could actually prove it." Cool indeed, and All-Star Award judges agreed. "This is an incredible argument for how cost effective shows can be," one judge said. "I can't imagine that any exhibit manager would ever see a budget reduction with this kind of financial proof of success." But the real measure of success lies with Garland, who kept her department in tact - thanks to a host of metrics that added up to accolades and an All-Star Award. E |
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Cynthya Porter, staff writer; [email protected] |
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Magazine Topics
Marketplace
- Audiovisual Equipment
- Convention Centers
- Event Design and Production
- Exhibit Fabrication
- Exhibit Producers
- Exhibit Rental
- Experiential Agency
- Flooring
- Graphics
- International Exhibit Producers
- Kiosks
- Lead Retrieval
- Modular Exhibit Systems
- Portable Display Systems
- Shipping and Transportation
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3011R How to Grow Your Brand: Incorporating Brand Marketing into Your Exhibit Program
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4101R Boost Up: Promote Yourself from Service Provider to Strategic Business Partner
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Laura Garland,
f all the industries affected by the economic downturn in 2008 and the recession in 2009, the construction industry was perhaps hobbled the worst, experiencing what economists now call an all-out crash from which the industry has just begun to dust itself off. For builders and remodelers, a staggering $100 billion drop in construction spending for new residential buildings and improvements between 2008 and 2009, along with a $62 billion decline in nonresidential construction over the same time period, sent construction companies into a tailspin. 


