Mastering the event marketing maze isn't easy. Here are a few case studies and best practices that will help you use the technology you already have to drive attendee engagement, increase exhibitor ROI, and leverage your speakers as valuable marketing assets.
6. The Technical Definition
“Marketing is the activity, set of
institutions, and processes for
creating, communicating,
delivering, and exchanging
offerings that have value for
customers, clients, partners, and
society at large.”
– American Marketing
Association
14. BEST PRACTICE #2
Don’t ‘Sell’ – It
Doesn’t Work
Give attendees useful
information that will inspire
them to take action and you’ll
get better results.
16. BEST PRACTICE #3
Don’t Make It
About You –
Make It About
Them
Instead of listing conference
features, think about how you
can communicate the emotional
benefit of each offering.
21. BEST PRACTICE #2
Make the Expo
Hall Educational
Games are a great way to learn,
but they can also quickly
devolve into gimmickry and
purposelessness.
23. BEST PRACTICE #3
Go Beyond
Banner
Advertising
Give exhibitors prime access to
attendee attention and they’ll
pay a premium rate as a sign of
appreciation.
26. BEST PRACTICE #1
Speakers Are
Your Marketing
Allies
If you can’t beat ‘em, join ‘em.
Give speakers tools to help them
help you promote the
conference (and themselves).
40. Slide 1 of 1
Michael Doane
michael@cadmiumcd.com
(410) 638 9239
Rachel Vrankin
rachelv@cadmiumcd.com
(410) 638 9239
Questions
& Answers
Editor's Notes
Poll the audience. Get answers. Maybe use word cloud.
“Okay great answers. Now let’s go to the experts. Here’s how the American Marketing Association defines it.”
AMA definition.
Lots of dense jargon.
What does this actually mean?
It’s all about ‘Making Something Happen’ or driving people to action.
But it’s not trickery. It’s about getting their buy-in.
It’s about helping those same people – your customers, your members, your attendees – understand your offering so they understand what action they need to take, and it’s about bringing them to a place where they actually want to take that action.
Who knows what this communicates? The customer buying journey!
It illustrates how potential customers move through each stage of the buying cycle as they answer a call to action.
This is the so-called “Marketing Maze.” We want the path to be clear and valuable enough that attendees know exactly what to do and where to go next.
EX: In awareness they may be learning about your conference (macro) or a specific benefit or session at your conference (micro) after they’ve already converted to become an attendee. The CTA here is to consider attending (macro) or taking advantage of some specific benefit (micro) at the conference.
While we’ll be covering both types of marketing, this session will mainly focus on micro transactions. Getting people to do something small like download an app, or attend a session using the event tech you probably already have.
meme?
If marketing is all about getting buy-in and “making something happen,” these are the people you need to get buy-in from and help “make something happen.”
Today we’re going to explore how we can use the tools we already have to market to attendees, for exhibitors, and with speakers. We’re going to see how we can take our marketing to the next level by taking the activities we’re already doing and elevating the value of these activities.
Marketing is all about emotion. Find what attendees care about so you can communicate how specific offerings resonate with their goals.
EX: Instead of luring attendees to the expo hall with food and drinks, highlight the fact that they can get ahead of the curve and gain lots of accolades back at the office by visiting exhibitors who are building cutting-edge technological advancements that are poised to completely change the industry in the next 3-5 years.
Side-by-side: One push notification says, “Lunch in the expo hall. Come dine with friends and colleagues and visit the exhibitors.” People are going to come for lunch, maybe browse casually, and then leave!
Other says, “Get ahead of the curve! Visit Sponsor X at booth #376 to see how Product Y will change the way you do Z forever.” Attendee is likely to be in expo hall for lunch anyway, now you just got them to check out a big sponsor and they’ll thank you because now they have something to bring back to the office and prove the value of the conference.
EX: Instead of sending a blanket email that says ‘download the app,’ explain how downloading the app beforehand will give them the highest value conference experience because they’ll already know where to go, what to do, and who to connect with onsite.
Subject: “CadCon FAQ #24: What should I do while I’m in Baltimore?” Pair the city with the conference name for a winning combination.
Instead of driving people to locations around the city when you really want them to engage with your conference, spell out things to do onsite.
So “1. Attend KEYNOTE’s Session, 2. Meet Your Pen Pal Face-to-Face, 3. Check Out the All-New PRODUCT at Booth #475.” Then end it with, “Download the app to find more things to do, people to meet, and sessions to attend.”
You’re directly calling out an action you want them to take (download the app), promoting your conference’s offerings, and making it about your attendee by answering a question they probably have all at the same time.
EX: Most people don’t care about how prestigious your certification program is, what they really care about is that by completing course evaluations and quizzes they can gain credits to keep up that certification which will help them make more money, gain more respect with colleagues, and build a lasting career.
What’s the best way to get session or conference evaluations? Tie it to something attendees need to do: take a quiz or enter a code to get their credits.
Provide a CE Credit or Evaluation button in the app in every session that’s easy to find.
Promote this around the conference on signage, the website, etc. using language specific to attendees’ desires (more money, respect, career).
Your exhibitors are your biggest supporters. Make them feel like they’re part of the community and they’ll return the favor.
EX: Your exhibitors often have domain-experts with lots of knowledge among their employees. Invite them to share that knowledge with attendees in an educational and productive fashion.
APIC Case Study: https://www.cadmiumcd.com/blog/how-apic-increased-exhibitor-value-with-sponsored-symposia/
POLL: Who here hosts medical meetings?
The Problem: While this is a great idea, this can be especially challenging for medical meetings because of various laws that prevent it. There are also issues with some credentialing body restrictions.
The Solution: APIC created two separate Harvesters, one for CME-approved sessions and a second for Sponsored Symposia.
The Outcome: APIC Gained more revenue, attendance increased in Sponsored Symposia which are seen as valuable supplementary educational content, and Exhibitors feel like they’re given the same amount of attention as other parts of the conference.
Ex: Instead of the traditional ‘go to each booth for a stamp’ model, try turning a scavenger hunt into an educational opportunity for attendees to get to know your exhibitors and their products. The information they collect will be more memorable that way.
APIC Case Study: https://www.cadmiumcd.com/blog/trade-show-scavenger-hunt/
AVA Case Study: https://www.cadmiumcd.com/blog/how-ava-improved-their-brand-with-a-scavenger-hunt/
In these instances, questions were sourced from exhibitors. They could be company or product specific, for example, “How are COMPANY X’s products solving PROBLEM Y?” or, “How many products does COMPANY X carry?”
The answers are contained in the brochures and sales people’s heads, so to get an accurate answer, attendees have to actually engage with the booth materials and staff.
This creates an environment that is fun, engaging, and educational for attendees. The leaderboard adds a competitive element. And exhibitors who participate (for a premium fee that benefits your association) are happy because they get good quality conversations out of the deal.
Unless your promotion is a kitten basket…
EX: Lots of good ways to advertise your exhibitors the traditional way (digital banners, printed banners, etc.), but giving them prime space in the app content is a huge value-add. Ask them to submit white papers, checklists, or other resources that are helpful or educational to attendees as part of the app grab bag instead of a standard brochure.
Side-by-side: One grab bag with lots of spaces that are clearly ads like “Win trip to Las Vegas at booth #252!!!” and another with educational content like “Guide to successful bitcoin investing for financial advisers.”
POLL: Which one will attendees spend more time in? Which ones will make the exhibitor more memorable? Which ones will set the exhibitors up as experts in their domain?
It’s about keeping attendee attention longer while providing better quality leads (over quantity) to exhibitors.
Find ways to uplift your speakers’ status and it’ll be a win-win. More content, more exposure, and more engagement for everyone.
Event Manager Blog Article: “Dear Speaker, I Loathe You. Sincerely Your Event Planner” https://www.eventmanagerblog.com/annoying-speakers-conferences/
Building Better Relationships with Speakers: http://www.cadmiumcd.com/blog/speaker-management-101/
Speakers are notoriously difficult to work with. “Like herding cats,” is the common phrase.
But we all have to admit: without speakers, there is no conference. So let’s find ways to leverage their audience and make things easy for them so we all get massive benefits from them.
Let’s tap into what drives them — mainly recognition and notoriety.
Create a speaker ‘resource’ kit to help speakers help you. Include eventScribe profile as something they can share with their mailing list.
Also share every session that will be given at your conference at least once on social media leading up to your conference. You can do this right from eventScribe as well.
Make sure you tag the presenting speakers every time you share a session so it’s easy for them to retweet or share.
This will promote your conference to hashtags and group you’re members are involved in without feeling spammy (content heavy rather than “COME TO THE CONFERENCE!”).
Speakers will also tap into their audience to increase your organization’s brand reach and your conference’s attendance.
Many attendees are there to learn and may be at an early stage in their career, but there are also plenty of industry heavyweights, experts, and veterans.
Find ways to tap into their knowledge and crowdsource education.
Offering Live Polling is a great way for you to help speakers keep the audience engaged in the content and gather data that can later be used for research.
It’s also a great way to help attendees feel they’re being included in the education and increase retention.
AUA Case Study: https://www.cadmiumcd.com/blog/aua-tracks-learner-retention-live-polling/
Audience Response Should Be More Social: https://www.cadmiumcd.com/blog/social-audience-response/
Giving attendees the chance to ask and upvote questions can create a dialogue between the speaker and a large audience.
Having a comment section allows attendees to share their own knowledge and communicate with each other on their own best practices and findings.
An activity feed can do the same thing, with the added benefit of being a social/sharing activity that will create FOMO in your digital audience and non-attendees.
Offering Live Polling is a great way for you to help speakers keep the audience engaged in the content and gather data that can later be used for research.
It’s also a great way to help attendees feel they’re being included in the education and increase retention.
AUA Case Study: https://www.cadmiumcd.com/blog/aua-tracks-learner-retention-live-polling/
Audience Response Should Be More Social: https://www.cadmiumcd.com/blog/social-audience-response/
Giving attendees the chance to ask and upvote questions can create a dialogue between the speaker and a large audience.
Having a comment section allows attendees to share their own knowledge and communicate with each other on their own best practices and findings.
An activity feed can do the same thing, with the added benefit of being a social/sharing activity that will create FOMO in your digital audience and non-attendees.
Content rot is a real problem. You spend time and resources creating or curating content, an audience of maybe 150 people see it at your conference, then what?
You want to use the content created for your event on as many channels and in as many ways as possible.
4 Ways Savvy Event Planners Share Conference Content: https://www.cadmiumcd.com/blog/share-conference-content/
Our CadCon presentation from last year was repurposed as a downloadable worksheet and article on our website. We built an entire campaign around this.
You can create a campaign around some of your most popular topics, interviewing speakers before the conference and including the interview on your YouTube channel, podcast, or blog.
Promote your conference proceedings by writing a brief overview of the sessions and including in your newsletter, with a CTA at the end to purchase or access the conference proceedings.
Think of unique ways to package your conference’s most popular content: take videos and audio and turn them into downloadable PDFs, infographics, blog posts, social cards, and more. Take the full session and break it into smaller pieces of content that you can use to promote the full thing over a sustained period of time.
4 Ways Savvy Event Planners Share Conference Content: https://www.cadmiumcd.com/blog/share-conference-content/
Our CadCon presentation from last year was repurposed as a downloadable worksheet and article on our website. We built an entire campaign around this.
You can create a campaign around some of your most popular topics, interviewing speakers before the conference and including the interview on your YouTube channel, podcast, or blog.
Promote your conference proceedings by writing a brief overview of the sessions and including in your newsletter, with a CTA at the end to purchase or access the conference proceedings.
Think of unique ways to package your conference’s most popular content: take videos and audio and turn them into downloadable PDFs, infographics, blog posts, social cards, and more. Take the full session and break it into smaller pieces of content that you can use to promote the full thing over a sustained period of time.
Let’s recap what we’ve learned…
We learned specific examples and best practices for how to market to attendees, for exhibitors, and with speakers.
Communicating benefits vs. features to attendees.
Setting up exhibitors as domain experts, not just companies within the industry.
Making it easy for speakers to help you market to attendees.
We learned that we have to think of marketing in both macro and micro terms.
The big picture is getting attendees to register for the conference, but once they register we still have to work to get them to engage with smaller, specific activities.
We learned what the marketing funnel represents and the necessity to understand our customers’ journey through the “Marketing Maze.”
Selling registration to your conference is a very different task than getting attendees to download the app.
We learned that successful marketing means ‘making something happen’ not waiting around for something to happen to us or for our stakeholders.
We also mentioned lots of case studies and resources, all of which can be reviewed on your handout.
Handout attendees can use to:
(a) Identify a “Micro Activity” they want to market to attendees,
(b) Define a best practice that can be used for this specific instance complete with a “benefit phrase” that they will use to market it, and
(c) Determine which tools and channels (up to three) could be best used to communicate this benefit to their attendees.
Also include the links to articles we mention in the examples above.