Trade shows are an inefficient channel for finding new leads. If you are discovering your target accounts for the first time at an industry event, your account-based strategy has already failed. Trade shows should instead be used to meet with and accelerate deals you are already targeting.

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The goal of networking shouldn't be to find your next customer. Instead, strategically identify and connect with potential referral partners. One such partner can become a center of influence, introducing you to hundreds of ideal customers, far outweighing the value of a single transaction.

Treating Account-Based Marketing (ABM) as a standalone strategy is a mistake. It must be integrated with broader brand awareness and lead nurturing for the 90% of the market not currently buying. Without top-of-funnel activities, even targeted sales efforts will fall short.

You don't need a badge to benefit from a major conference. Simply being present in the surrounding environment—hotel bars, cafes—puts you in close proximity to target prospects. This creates serendipitous opportunities for connection without the cost and structure of official attendance.

Blings spent $20-30k on an event and generated 70 leads, but it yielded no ROI. They lacked a system to score, prioritize, and systematically follow up, causing the leads to go cold. A successful event strategy depends on the operational plan for after the event, not just attending.

A simple but effective hack for trade shows is to secure a booth immediately to the right of the main entrance. About 70% of people naturally turn right upon entering a space. Since organizers often price booths by size, not location, this tactic can significantly increase foot traffic and lead generation for no extra cost.

The ROI of attending an event extends beyond lead generation. A key, often overlooked, metric is client retention. Simply showing up at an industry event can prevent existing customers from churning to a competitor who is present, making defensive retention a primary pillar of event strategy.

Blings found that having a small booth at many events was ineffective. They shifted strategy to consolidate their annual event budget into three major events where they could afford to speak and give masterclasses. This elevated their brand and dramatically improved lead quality.

Most sponsors waste their investment by not engaging attendees before the event. A targeted pre-show email campaign is highly effective because attendees are actively planning their schedules and are more receptive to relevant outreach, making them more likely to visit your booth.

Instead of cold outreach, identify where employees of your target companies gather—like triathlons or industry events. Set up a booth and let them experience your product firsthand. This creates organic buzz and personal testimonials that travel back inside the organization, generating warmer leads than a direct sales approach.

Companies over-invest in booth aesthetics and under-invest in preparing their go-to-market teams. True event ROI is driven by setting clear pre-event outreach goals, on-site engagement metrics, and rapid, personalized post-event follow-up, not by the physical booth itself.