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Below is the
Interview by Colin Green of Best of Show www.bestofshow.com.au
Colin Green is a Trade
show marketing professional who can achieve great results
through his training seminars and DVD products, I urge you
to visit the site and sign up for a Pre show meeting
which I believe is HUGELY under priced for the quality you
receive. Also be sure to check out Other interviews with
Australia’s leading trade show products, services and
solutions
Colin Green:
This month’s interview
is with David Welzman. David is a Trade Show Infotainer,
author, and sales & marketing consultant. He’s based
in Sydney, Australia and he contracts his crowd-brewing
services to exhibitor clients at trade and consumer shows
throughout Australia and New Zealand.
Some of the testimonials
he’s received from delighted clients really are to die
for, such as: “As a direct result of using Welzman’s
Services, we generated over 500% more qualified leads than
the other exhibitors.” And another: “I’m happy to
recommend them to my most valued clients and have full
confidence in both his ability and professionalism.”
His client list reads
like a Who’s Who of corporate Australia, influential
associations and highly successful SME’s (small and
medium enterprises.)
In addition to
contracting clients at trade and consumer shows he also
does conferences, after dinner entertainment and road
shows.
As an author, David has
written two books. Creating Customers for Life is
available now and Body Language Magic has just finished
and is not published as yet.
He’s got other expo
tools too, including a report entitled “Creating Trade
Show Success” and also a tool for exhibitors entitled
“Trade Show Return on Investment Calculator.” His web
page is www.TradeShowCrowdBuilder.com.au. David, thanks
for sharing your story today.
David Welzman:
Hi, Colin. Thank you
very much for having me. I really appreciate this
opportunity. I really love the Exhibition industry –
that’s both trade shows AND consumer shows. It’s very
rare to find people that are passionate or indeed know
anything about it. So for me this is a special treat.
Hopefully your readers will gain insight and ideas that
will help them make a killing at their next show.
Colin Green:
David, thanks for that.
I have to say, I’ve always been very cautious of
entertainers at trade and consumer shows. We see these
people drawing crowds by entertaining with sleight-of-hand
tricks that leave everyone wondering just how they do it.
They often involve the audience and they’re certainly
clever and interesting. But do they actually positively
impact the exhibitors’ objectives?
I shared this
perspective when we first spoke and you corrected me when
called you a magician, preferring to be referred to as an
“infotainer.” You claimed that you really could
deliver solid results to your clients. Would you like to
share your thoughts on this, please? And incidentally,
what exactly is an infotainer?
David Welzman:
That’s one of the
main, core reasons I put “trade show crowd builder” on
my website, is because people just don’t know what an
infotainer is. I’m going to get to that in just a bit,
but I’ve got to be honest with you, you’re 100%
correct—entertainers serve no purpose on Expo floors.
One thing I’ll correct
you on, sorry, is that most entertainers don’t actually
draw a lot of people. They draw maybe six people and
that’s because they don’t really know why they’re
booked, and they don’t really know how to draw a crowd
on the show floor.
When you book an
entertainer, he’s doing at your show stand what he’d
be doing if he got a gig at the pub down the road and this
is a problem. It serves no purpose. Even if they build the
crowd size that I do, it still serves no purpose unless
they do what I do. So the question is: What do I do?
Because I’m not doing a show!
I do a systematic
approach to increasing leads. An infotainer, which is
“information entertainer” is just that. The core and
focus of my presentation is presenting information and I
use entertainment as the sugar that makes the medicine go
down easier. Entertainment makes the information sessions
more enjoyable and more receptive.
My system is exactly the
same as designing a magazine ad, the core difference being
that I do it live. With a magazine ad, you have a header,
or an attention-grabbing device which stops readers. Then
you have the body, which conveys the message, and at the
end you have a call to action. “Call now for your…”
I do the same. I stop
traffic at the trade show en masse, not one on one and to
be honest, no one creates the crowd that I do. I convey
the message, I enrich the presentation with entertainment,
interactivity and comedy.
The focus of my
presentation is the message and sometimes I’ll spend up
to three months developing a unique sales presentation for
that individual exhibit which will motivate their desired
customers. I use the entertainment to help make the
presentation an experience to remember.
Finally there’s a call
to action where I get customers literally lining up to
fill out your enquiry forms.
This is not a sales plug
for me, but in my belief and in my personalized training
(which is something for your readers to think about when
it comes to their show).
Exhibitors need three
things in order to be successful at their exhibit and if
they fail at any one of these, then their experience at
the show is not going to be very good.
It’s the three C’s.
The first is Capture attention. You can achieve this
pre-show, with direct-mail, magazine ads or phoning up
serious potential/existing clients. Or you can capture
their attention at the stand, which is what I do.
Once you’ve got their
attention, the second C is Conveying the message.
Customers have to find out what you are doing, what your
business stands for and it’s got to make business sense
and be memorable.
Finally there’s
Collecting leads. It’s all for naught if you capture
attention, convey the message, but collect no leads!
If an exhibitor fails at
any one of those, Capturing attention, Conveying the
message, or Collecting the leads, the whole system fails
and they are going to have a really unsuccessful show.
Most exhibitors fail at
one and three—they fail at Capturing attention and
Collecting leads. They’ve got all of the plasma screens
and banners to tell people what their product does and
they spend a fortune on brochures. But they failed to
capture people’s attention in the first place. They fail
to actually generate leads.
Most people just collect
a bunch of business cards yet don’t follow up, often
because they don’t have enough information to follow up.
They have got to have a system set up for each.
Think about that instead
of just turning up, setting out your stand, and hoping
people come up. You’re not going to motivate people with
candy at your booth.
Colin Green:
How do you filter out
the exhibitor’s target market so that your client
predominantly connects with them and not simply people
interested in your performance?
David Welzman:
When I first started
doing shows, I was also doing cocktail parties and
after-dinner shows—and I was changing that content for
exhibitions. But the truth of the matter is that the
entertainment was overpowering the message.
People were really
interested and I would attract everyone – and that was a
problem! You don’t want to attract everyone; you want to
attract customers! So now my focus is to do a presentation
on the product, on the services the client offers. And I
add window dressing, which is the entertainment.
First, to keep people
around and secondly to change the moment. People are
usually walking around like zombies. They may have been in
a boring seminar and they’re sitting down, slumped over,
and you want to wake them up. People are more receptive
when they’re energized and that’s what I do.
Colin Green:
It’s very interesting,
David, because one of the things we discuss at Best of
Show training is what we call “exhibition glaze,” and
I think this is the “zombification” you’re talking
about. People do have exhibition glaze by virtue of the
fact that there’s a lot of background noise, a lot of
messages coming at them, many of which they simply don’t
want to accept. So they tune out and get tired. Is this
what you’re talking about?
David Welzman:
Yes. Humans are
bombarded with messages and develop personal systems to
filter out information. So you need something, whether
it’s me or something else, to cut through that clutter
and shake them out of apathy.
Often, once they’ve
visited the stands that they pre-selected you’ve got to
wake up the dead, really, and a lot of exhibitors rely on
a banner or a plasma screen.
It takes people – even
a zombie – three seconds to walk past your expo stand,
yet people are forking out thousands of dollars for a
30-second video demo. Unless they’re walking past that
demo at the right moment, that’s a complete waste of
money.
Colin Green:
It’s quite interesting
that you say people visit the stands they want to visit
and they move on from there. In fact, studies from the
Center for Exhibition Industry Research in Chicago say
that 76% or thereabouts, of buyers have must-see lists. So
if you’re not on the list, this is a beautiful way to
ensure that you do interrupt their thinking, wake them up
and get the message over. I find what you say interesting.
David Welzman:
You asked the question
“how do I filter out the exhibitor’s target market”.
At the end of the presentation, I’ve got a crowd. And I
do this two to three times per hour, depending on the show
and the traffic flow and of course depending on the
client’s needs.
Through the
presentation, I qualify people. For example, if I’ve got
30 people outside the stand, I’ll say, “Hands up if
you’re after the XYZ solution,” or something more
qualifying. If 15 hands go up, then I’ll get those
people to come close to me as I’m doing the
presentation. Why? So they don’t get away, because I
know that these are more inclined to be potential
customers.
At the end of the
presentation, I split the crowd in two, moving the people
most interested in the services to come and speak to the
professional sales team and the other half – the people
who are not immediate customers – to come in to drop
their business card into the competition bowl, which is
located on the opposite side of where the sales people
are.
For the people who do
put their business card into the bowl – who don’t want
to talk to the sales people right now – I have follow-up
strategies to connect with them after the event.
Colin Green:
How do you know that
people are not popping their card into the bowl are the
target market? Sure, you’ve split the crowd, but then
how do you induce them to comply?
David Welzman:
I’ve passionately
motivated them, I’ve entertained them, I’ve given them
free gifts during the presentation. I’ve given them
something they’ve never experienced before and they do
as I ask. It’s my specialty and I’m good at that!
You’ll see people lining up after each presentation.
In the video on my
website, you’ll see the whole crowd move as one unit.
Once you’ve got a crowd, they tend to move as a unit, so
it’s very important that I split them up into two
crowds. Predominantly, I use the business card promotion
as a way of filtering people.
I want customers in the
booth, talking to our sales staff, so I want to have the
business card people on the far end of the booth, no
matter how big the booth is. So people that are not
interested in doing business go into the business card
draw and those people who are potential customers walk
into the booth.
Colin Green:
I mentioned in my
preamble that one client said you delivered 500% more
leads than other exhibitors. In fact, he stressed that
these were qualified leads. Others have made similar
comments. How did they measure this?
David Welzman:
Obviously if they’ve
exhibited before, it’s very easy to find out how well
they did last year and compare the results. But I go
beyond that too.
I have two pre-show
training seminars with the client where I train these guys
on how to generate leads and how to qualify quickly.
Remember that I get a lot more people in the booth than
they normally would.
I tell my clients the
quickest way of getting rid of an unqualified non-customer
is to tell them where to go. So if you know other products
or services around—the other exhibitors—and an
attendee is not after your product, you can say, “Go to
this booth right here. They’ll be able to help you.”
You look like a nice guy
because you’re helping both the attendee and the other
exhibitor – and you’re getting the attendee you
can’t work with out of the booth. What happens is that
the other exhibitor returns the favor and you develop
relationships with these people.
That’s where you can
start to find out how successful they were.
There are always dead
parts of the show and I ask my clients to walk around to
the other exhibitions to find out how they’re going and
network.
Using these methods I do
have a guarantee, which is I’m going to increase leads
by 55% or the client doesn’t pay. As of yet, I’ve
never failed. If you’re marketing, you’ve got to be
confident in what you’re doing.
This is a systematic
approach that’s been proven over time. I learned it from
Joel Bauer in the United States. Joe’s a great trade
show infotainer.
He hand-picked me and
trained me up. He’s retired now. He used to work Vegas
and he’d have 200 to 300 people outside the Client’s
stand.
Colin Green:
My training was also
done in Las Vegas at some very large shows. One was
Comdex, which was at the time, the largest IT trade show
in the United States, so I know exactly what you’re
saying. Who exactly have you worked with? Would you like
to give some examples?
David Welzman:
On my website,
people will see that I’ve worked for Accor Hotels
predominantly their gift card, but also individual hotels.
They use me several times a year at the Gaming Expo for
example.
A small business is
Pattens – an accounting firm. There are only three
people that work in their office so they’re obviously a
very small business, but they’ve already re-booked me
for the Import-Export show.
I will say that Pattens
is fantastic, and that’s not because they’re my
client. Their job is to ascertain if there’s a
government grant for your business and if so they will
find it and obtain it for you.
Colin Green:
I’ve got them in mind
for a project I’ve got coming up on my www.buyaussie.com
website.
David Welzman:
They promise that
they don’t get paid unless you get paid. I like that
because they’re sort of the same as me. If I don’t
generate results, I don’t get paid. If they don’t
generate results, they don’t get paid.
Colin Green:
Who else have you worked
for?
David Welzman:
IBM, Hahn Healthcare
Recruitment – many companies. Many require that I sign
confidentiality agreements, so I can’t disclose their
names or their marketing strategies. That’s getting more
common now.
I’m happy to sign
anything with the client, that’s fine but you do want to
shout to the heavens, “I’m working for this big
company!” but you can’t!
Colin Green:
Fair enough. They say
that the proof of the pudding is in the eating, so what
sort of proportion of these companies get you back on a
repeat basis?
David Welzman:
To be honest,
they’re all re-booking me, even the small ones that were
very skeptical about my craft. I’m not the cheapest guy
in the world, but also I’m not the most expensive when
it comes to my services at shows.
Due to the financial
crisis I’ve also included some small business prices on
my website so I’m more acceptable for small businesses.
People who were
thinking, “Gee, he’s expensive,” the first time
around are jumping at booking me the second time around
which is very gratifying!
Colin Green:
Do you have a preference
as to the type of client you work with—large, small,
commercial, non-profit, government, anything?
David Welzman:
It’s not the
size of the company. It’s the people you’re working
for—people who are excited, passionate and really want
to generate results. These are the people I wish to work
for. Unfortunately, not all people really care about
generating results.
I built crowds at a
tradeshow and conveyed the message, only to have the call
to action fall to a sales team that went out for a lunch
break. I don’t work for that company anymore.
Colin Green:
Where do you work? I
understand that you travel outside of Sydney, where
you’re based, but how far will you go?
David Welzman:
All over Australia and
New Zealand. The bulk of my work at the moment is in
Melbourne, simply because they’ve won most of the
full-on exhibitions shows. At one point I was considering
permanently moving down there, but all my family is in
Sydney, so for now I’m staying in Sydney.
I’ve worked in
Brisbane a lot too.
Colin Green:
Earlier on, I mentioned
that you do more than trade and consumer show crowd
building. What are the other things you’re doing?
David Welzman:
I do are conferences and
sales meetings. I get hired by companies who don’t know
how to present a product effectively and they’ll book me
to do a sales meeting.
I do road shows too,
which are exhibitions on wheels. I go around the different
states doing presentations for people’s clients. Also,
there are certain events associated with exhibition like
client-appreciation cocktail parties and after-dinner
shows and whilst I can do what is known as infotainment
with that, I usually just do plain entertainment which is
lots of fun!
Many clients don’t
want me to be too sales-y—they just want their guests
and customers to have a good time so then I provide
entertainment services.
Colin Green:
David, I know that
you’ve written books and reports on some pretty serious
marketing subjects; one was entitled Creating Customers
for Life. You’ve also got your report, “Creating Trade
Show Success.” Would you care to briefly outline these?
David Welzman:
Yes. “Creating Trade
Show Success” is a two-page PDF report just to give you
a different perspective on your trade show exhibiting.
It’s an interesting read, easy and quick to read.
Creating Customers for
Life is the big one. The book is 270 pages and essentially
it’s about turning one-off customers into long-term
customers, communicating with your customers and I’ve
got to stress this, ethically exploiting customers’
maximum financial potential. Not cheating them out of
money, but ethically getting the most out of them,
especially in this day and age with the financial crisis.
Colin Green:
What’s it cost?
David Welzman:
Right now I’m selling
it as a PDF document. I’m not going to go through the
process of publishing them again any time soon. I normally
sell them for $20, but your readers can get a free
PDF version. There’s a form on the first page
of my website and they can get it free.
Colin Green:
Why wouldn’t you
charge anything for it?
David Welzman:
When I’m teaching how
to sell, I like to give samples. I teach my clients to
give samples if they can. Granted, it’s a book, but
it’s a sample of my knowledge. Giving gifts secures
attention.
Colin Green:
When will Body Language
Magic be available?
David Welzman:
I wrote it predominantly
because I do a lot of body language in my presentations
and many clients wondered, “How do you do that?” So I
thought, ‘Some of these clients that book me over and
over again, I’m going to write something for them.’
That will be out very shortly.
Colin Green:
That will be up on your
website also?
David Welzman:
Yes, I’ll put it up on
the website. It’s really targeted for existing clients
who want to know about, for example, body language in
sales meetings. How to pick up if someone is actually
interested in your product or not.
Colin Green:
How many pages is that?
David Welzman:
About 25.
Colin Green:
Okay. The final thing
you’ve got is your “Trade Show Return on Investment
Calculator.” How does that work?
David Welzman:
It’s an Excel
spreadsheet and you punch numbers into it and it will give
you an approximate return on investment for your Show. It
goes into a is customer worth to you one-off and
extrapolates what that customer is worth long term.
Colin Green:
Where can people find
these products?
David Welzman:
At www.TradeShowCrowdBuilder.com.au
I’ll set up a form on my website to get Creating
Customers for Life. If your readers fill out that form,
they also get the free report and the Return On Investment
calculator.
Colin Green:
If people want to
contact you to discuss your services and rates, how do
they contact you?
David Welzman:
The best way is to
fill out the form on the website. This gives me
information so that I can start working on your enquiry
before I get back to you. I’ll ask for the Exhibition
website you’ll be working at so I can investigate and
get myself in that mode as opposed to winging it on the
phone call.
Colin Green:
David, this has
been extremely interesting and I really thank you for your
time.
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