Case Study -- Ibertech Gets 300
Qualified Leads in Two Days
by Paul DiModica
Some years ago, I was walking the floor of
the National Restaurant Association Show (NRA)
in Chicago on one of the lower floors of the
convention. I was looking for a technology
company to buy in the hospitality market space.
As I walked through rows and rows of vendors,
I came upon a company called Ibertech-Aloha
Systems who was sharing a booth with a hardware
manufacture. In the booth were two engineers
from a military airplane manufacturer who had
developed the first restaurant computer system
that was a Windows-based touch screen point of
sale system. Over the next couple of months I
tried to buy them but they were not interested.
Instead, they hired me to develop their
strategy, marketing and sales and their national
expansion plans. Ultimately they offered me 5%
equity in their firm and made me their VP of
Sales to implement my recommendations.
Having a great technical product and one
customer (like they did) will only take you so
far. So, at the next big industry tradeshow, we
decided to launch bigger than we really were.
So, we rented a 20 X 20 foot both in the middle
of our global 1000 competitors like NCR, Micros
and IBM and brought in family and friends to
fill the booth with "employees".
To
increase our tradeshow success, we deployed
Value Forward strategies and techniques that
included handing out sales objection white
papers to every booth attendee, and stress balls
that said "DOS IS DEAD" with a ghost buster
symbol over it and our company name on it (at
that time our competitors were only selling
Microsoft DOS-based systems). We left the
message stress balls in the show break rooms,
snack bars, restaurants and in our competitor’s
booths and ended up handing out thousands at the
show.
Using our sales objection white papers as
talking points along with other prospecting
techniques, we created a stampede of traffic
between our booth and our competitors across the
ten foot aisle as prospects were forced to see
our value three dimensionally through our
marketing methods. Our methods challenged our
larger more established and better funded
revenue stealers to be perplexed and undecided
on how to respond because all they wanted to do
was tell their booth prospects about their brand
name and current market share penetration.
As the trade show continued on, we started to
create lots of PR because of our marketing
methods and walked out of the show with over
300 leads from C level executives of
restaurants chains U.S. wide.
After that tradeshow, Ibertech-Aloha grew
year over year in revenue until they were sold
to a public company called Radiant Systems for
$30 million.
So why did this tradeshow approach
work?
Most IT companies just go to tradeshows year
after year with no pre-show planning, specific
messaging, competitive positioning, or marketing
strategies other than just having sales reps
stand in the booth and hopefully look refreshed.
- Don’t go to tradeshows because you went
last year.
- Don’t go to tradeshows because you have
no other lead generation methods that work.
- Don’t go to tradeshows because your
competitors go.
- Don’t go to tradeshows because your
sales team says you have to.
Tradeshows cost too much money. Costs are
going up, attendance by qualified prospects is
down and in a down economy, tradeshows can be
your greatest opportunity to increase your
revenue or . . . just another alcohol and binge
party event for your sales and marketing team.
It is up to you, but in an economy
like today, you can grow your business quickly
and economically if your tradeshow strategy
uses a premeditated process . . . not a reactive
course.
But if
you go to a tradeshow, follow these guidelines:
- Create a pre-show marketing plan
to tease qualified prospects to come to your
booth . . . or don’t go. If you can’t afford
pre-show marketing, then you can’t afford to
go to the show.
- Don’t just go to tradeshows --
create an event that forces your IT value to
be experienced not just heard.
- Develop specific handouts with
unique messaging that forces prospects to
listen and competitors to fear you.
(Brochures are not specific handouts.)
- Do market brand, but sell value.
- Understand that it is better to
go to 2 tradeshows a year that are planned
than 6 tradeshows where you just show up.
If you are looking to increase your success
at tradeshows and maximize your qualified lead
generation right now using a proven method like
I used at Ibertech, then
learn more
here.
It’s up to you!
To your success,
Rick Erling
About Rick Erling
and The CxO Group
Rick Erling is CEO and
Founder of The CxO Group, LLC. We are a
managing partner of the Value Forward
Network and have consulting partners in five
countries making us one of the world's
largest management consulting groups focused
on helping companies increase corporate
revenue capture.
We work with senior executive teams to
integrate sales process, marketing
methodology, corporate strategy and
financial management into one outbound
revenue capture program to increase
corporate revenue. We do this by assessing
the value your customers see and the value
you think you have and then measure the
"value variance" gap between the two. Once
we have identified the "Value Variance"
between the two, we then make appropriate
strategic and tactical recommendations on
your corporate strategy and marketing
programs to close the gaps. When this is
completed, we then train your sales team to
sell to management more effectively using
techniques that are linked to our
recommendations.
Top-performing organizations are increasing
their companies' revenue, within a
constricted economy, by investing in revenue
growth acceleration strategies.
For more information, visit:
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