Episode 012: Getting Your Feet Wet at a Small Regional Trade Show—A Practical Playbook
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Stephen shares a field report on how to get your feet wet at a small regional trade show. The win isn’t in hard-selling—it’s in researching ahead, asking smart questions, and listening for hidden fits (including sister divisions you wouldn’t spot from the booth sign). He shows how to turn the default “no” into a warm “maybe” by clarifying who their customers are, what’s slow, and where they have gaps—then setting clear next actions on the spot and following through. Bonus: small shows let you meet everyone, gather richer intel, and land credible warm introductions that shorten the sales cycle.
✨ Enhanced SummaryGetting Your Feet Wet at a Small Regional Trade Show—A Practical Playbook
Prep beats pitch. Pre-map booths and do quick research so you arrive with hypotheses—but stay open. Smaller shows are a gift: you can actually talk to everyone.
Lead with discovery, not discounts. Start with, “Tell me about your company—who do you sell to and what’s changing?” Today’s realities (slow orders, excess inventory, tariffs, consolidation, labor/freight pressure) reveal where you can help.
Hunt for non-obvious fits. Conversations often expose sister divisions or adjacent categories. Use those warm internal handoffs to bypass generic gates and talk to the right buyer faster.
Bring value as “ease of doing business.” Yes, cost matters—but your differentiator is removing hurdles: simpler onboarding, cleaner distribution adds, private-label options, and practical answers to annoying pain points.
Private label & add-on lines. If they already sell in a category, propose PL variants or adjacent SKUs that drop into existing channels without heavy retraining.
Lock the plan while you’re still at the booth. State expectations clearly: “I’ll send X by Friday; you’ll intro me to Y; we’ll review Z specs next week.” Then follow up exactly when you said you would.
Anchor to your foundations. Use your Episode 008 framework to keep both sides winning and put agreements in writing—even a brief recap email is momentum.
Bottom line: At small shows, curiosity + execution wins. Do the homework, ask better questions, spot hidden doors (divisions/partners), and write down who does what by when. That’s how you turn aisle chats into real opportunities—without hard-selling.
📬 Questions or ready to take your next step? Visit the “Work With Me” tab at findyoursource.pro to connect with Stephen directly.
13 episodes