Creating tradeshow displays is one of the toughest challenges that creative firms face. But if done right, they can be showstoppers. Here's why they are so tough—and what you can do to make them work.

Tradeshows are mazes. People come in, get lost, spin around and (with a little luck) find what they are looking for (mostly, cool free stuff!).

A bird's-eye view of a tradeshow looks a lot like a grocery store, except instead of shelves and cereal boxes there are aisles and tradeshow displays. Your goal is to get the right people to stop and look at your "cereal box."

Think about the last show you attended. How many of the displays stick in your mind? How many stopped you, or at least slowed you down? Not many? OK, follow these rules and make it happen.

Rule #1: Tradeshow Displays Don't Sell Stuff

A common misconception is that tradeshow displays sell stuff. They don't. The job of the display is to make people stop so that you can sell stuff. If you're counting on the display to do your job, you're asking it to do the wrong thing.

No big explanation here. Just remember that the only job of the display is to be a stop sign, or at least a speed bump.

Rule #2: Sucker Punches Work

If you really want their attention, hit 'em when, where and how they least expect. That means that as people are strolling down the aisle you have to show them something so unique, so compelling and so to-the-point that they will have no choice but to slow down or stop.

That means you have to do more than think "outside the box." (I hate that phrase.) You have to throw the box away and ask a simple question: "What's going to make them stop as ask you to tell them about your company?"

Now, the question is, Do you have the guts to do it? If you do, you're going to blow everyone else out of the water because, quite simply, most of your competition will be just like the rest of the competition.

Tradeshow sucker punches don't have to be offensive or goofy. They just need to make people stop. Big. Bold. Unexpected. Powerful. Relevant. Compelling.

Rule #3: Tradeshow Displays Are Not Brochures

Brochures have lots of words. People get them and read them when they want, where they want, for as long as they want. Tradeshow displays are just the opposite. People can't take them home. They only see them where they are. And they will not spend time with them.

Think of tradeshow displays as cereal boxes. All lined up on the shelves (aisles) and all looking much the same. The relative viewing size of a tradeshow display viewed from 15 feet away is about the same as a cereal box viewed two feet away.

Imagine that the fronts of cereal boxes were just a listing of the ingredients. Now that would be just plain boring and nobody would ever, ever read them.

When I get orders for tradeshow displays, they are usually accompanied by a list of bullet points that would choke a horse. I got one list that had over 800 words. Trust me on this one: no matter how impressed you might be with your "ingredients," people won't see them, let alone read them.

The single toughest challenge in creating great tradeshow display is eliminating 97% of the words.

Anybody can ramble on forever. The trick is delivering a compelling five-word message. Tougher yet: a one-word message. Accomplish this, and you're way ahead of the competition.

You have about two seconds to make your impression and stop traffic.

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ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Jared McCarthy is the proprietor of McCarthy Creative. For more information, visit www.jcm-creative.com.