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For Novice Show Promoters
Advertising
& Promotion for a Successful Event
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Event organizers need TWO separate
advertising campaigns for a successful event. First, they
must advertise for vendors. Then, in the month before
the event they must advertise for customers to come and buy from the
exhibitors.
Advertising for exhibitors ensures new products
every year to keep your event appealing. You also
need new exhibitors to fill the spaces of those who move away, or drop
out of the business.
Advertising to the public before the event
brings buyers for your exhibitors. Without good sales they
will not return. The most effective advertising for craftsmen, artists,
etc. is in a trade publication like Art & Craft Show
Yellow Pages.
Advertising for exhibitors in newspapers
read by the general public costs
more and yields less because you will not reach your target
audience. Art & Craft Show Yellow Pages subscribers
are potential participants in your event, even if they live far away.
Sometimes they travel to see family and sell their work at shows along
the way.
Advertising to the general public in regular
newspapers for craftsmen and artists costs more and
yields less because you will not reach your target audience.
Art & Craft Show Yellow Pages' subscribers are
potential participants in your event, even if they live far away.
Sometimes they travel to see family and sell their work at shows along
the way.
Who Reads Art & Craft Show Yellow
Pages?
Craftsmen, artists, food vendors, and resellers /
importers. All are looking for a place to sell their product, and
that’s why they subscribe to our magazine. . . We
publish detailed descriptions from your submitted form, so
you get responses from the exhibitor profile you want.
The listing of your event
includes date, location, contact information, eligibility requirements,
along with attendance information and show history, web site, email
address, space sizes and local sales tax, along with information about
what else is happening on-site that may influence sales: 3 stages of
live music, Antique & Classic Car Show, pony rides,
etc.
A
Display Ad in Art & Craft Show Yellow
Pages is a Great Attention-Getter!
Display
ads are positioned near the front of the
magazine with, or close to, articles geared to our
reader’s needs, e.g.: Creating Effective Display,
Marketing Techniques, Tax Information, etc.
Each display ad
is visible for a three month period until the next
issue. The best time to run a display ad is at least 5-6
months before the event. Display ads in multiple issues ensure response
from a mix of applicants. We are constantly getting new subscribers, so
a display ad in the next issue reaches a new audience, as well as
reminding readers who have seen it before to apply.
Create your display
ad to have basic information surrounded
by
lots of white space. It commands attention so the reader refers to the
detailed description in the show listings section.
Every event in
your display ad is listed separately in the listings section by state
and date, with complete details of your event. Each listing also
appears in condensed form in the index in the back of the magazine,
with each event
listed in chronological order.
There’s also an Advertiser’s Index.
Each provides another chance for your event to be seen.
What
Kind of An Event will you have?
Fine art only? (2 dimensional art: water colors, oil
paintings, photography, etchings, collage, mixed media, etc.)
Crafts
only? Hand-crafted by
exhibitor?
A mix
of the above? Art
& Crafts, - Hand-crafted by exhibitor?
Art
& Crafts, with selected new merchandise? Art, crafts, select
collectibles, imports, new merchandise? - This is called an OPEN
show.
Will you add
entertainment to your event?
This can be anything from
live music, pony rides, hay-wagons, etc. a separate craft area for kids
with Make It and Take It supervised craft creation and/or babysitting.
Have
you considered joint-ventures with an Antique Auto Show, Classic Cars,
etc.?
If you are
organizing a fund-raiser, you may want to sell food, - or perhaps local
non-profits would like to provide food for the event. Check with the
local Board of Health for requirements. If you accept independent food
vendors, will the space fee be a set fee
or a commission, - or fee-plus-commission?
Each of the above additions to an event changes it
in some way as far as vendor sales are concerned.
Pony-rides and
mid-way booths/entertainment usually appeal to producers of low-cost
goods and impulse products, vendors who sell imports and general
merchandise for resale, such as baseball caps, Beanie-Babies, etc.
They know it will draw crowds, and their product
price, size and appeal fit this crowd.
Juried or screened
art and craft events with a small admission fee and no other
distractions tend to attract exhibitors with
mid-priced and/or upper-range priced products. If your event will be
art, crafts, or art and crafts only, you may want to control the
quality of work to be sold, - or not. (First
or second-year shows should not be juried events. You want
maximum participation, and a broad range of products for your
customers.) A few years later, when the event is known in the
community, you may want to upgrade it a bit, to hand-crafted
by exhibitor only, - and either take the vendor’s
word for it, - or
jury or screen their work.
Work can be
screened informally, or juried, by requesting photos of the product to be sold.
These should arrive as clear pictures, one product per
photo, taken up-close and clear enough to see if it is attractive, and
well-made.
The Second Part of Your Advertising
Campaign
Before
the Event
Two months
before the event make a list from the yellow pages or
your telephone directory of monthly, weekly and daily
newspapers.
Send notification of your event to each of the
monthly publications’ Event Calendar section. Make it brief: Who, What, When, Where, including the
time, and admission fees if applicable.
“ABC Community
Arts Council presents the 3rd. Annual Art & Craft Fair at the
fairgrounds on Rte. 9, Saturday and Sunday June 4th & 5th, from
10:00-5:00. Handcrafted work and fine art will be sold for the benefit
of the Children’s wing of XYZ Hospital. Adm. $2.”
If rides, etc. are available:
“Food, Apple-Pie Sale, live musical entertainment, pony
rides, and a separate supervised craft-making area for children
6-12.” (Needless
to say, sign up volunteers and staff early, - or don't take on this
extra responsibility!)
If a non-profit organization benefits from the
proceeds, mention it in the news release. Keep it as brief as possible and
they may print it in its entirety.
Do the same for weekly
newspapers 2 weeks before, and again a week before,
- and make sure the most popular daily papers have your information in
time to be published the week before your event.
Contract for display ads in the local
daily paper beginning the week before the event. Make it as large as possible, at least 3”
x 4 or 5”, preferably with a black background and white
letters for all or part of the ad to help it compete for attention on
the page, (called reverse type). It should run
daily, for a week or at least 6 days, through the date of the
event.
Focus on the needs of both your
exhibitors and your customers, - and cater to them! If you’ve had at least one show in the
past, take time to consider what went well. Ask your most successful
exhibitors for tips on how to keep the good parts of the event, and
make the rest, - better. In down times, we all look for a
sense of safety, security and family. Capitalize on these areas in your
approach to your show, from food, to advertising, to the kind of
products your exhibitors sell at your event.
Continue to rotate exhibitors at your show.
This includes bringing in new ones to attract new customers along with changing
the traffic flow, - how people move through the show, - to
keep it fresh.
Don’t shrink your advertising budget. If you have less money for promotions this year,
don’t let that affect the quality of advertising. Your entire
event needs to be professional—from the application to the
ads to the entrance way, - to the tables, etc.
Ask! Don’t ever stop asking your
customers, both craftsmen and paying guests, for suggestions on how to
improve. If you have
a hard time getting feedback, offer an incentive for returning a survey
or give customers a discount (or even a free drink coupon) for
participating in a survey.
Inexpensive
and Free Advertising:
Two weeks
before the event, near the event site, on a major road, put
up a big sign: “Craft Fair” and the date and
location. That’s
all people will be able to read as they drive by.
A month ahead:
Print
miniature posters, 4 on a page, with information: (Who, what,
when, where, etc.) “Holiday Craft Fair, November
20, St Jude’s Parish Hall, 10:00-5:00. Handcrafted gifts and
Specialty Foods” - “Free Admission.” If
you have special events planned, this is the place to mention them:
“Frog-jumping contest, live music, hayrides,
apple-dunking, -more.”
These should be
prepared on light-colored paper, and about 50 sent to each exhibitor at
least a month before your event. Enclose a letter asking them
to take them to shows, put them on their table as
‘pick-ups’ and to put one in with each purchase.
This will boost attendance, and their sales at your event!
Two weeks
before the event:
Put posters on 8 1/2 x 11” sheets of light-colored paper,
place them in local supermarkets and other store windows no
earlier than two weeks before the event. If they are up for too long a
time, people don’t even see them anymore.
Ten days before the event:
Radio: Some radio stations will read community service
events on the air. Send in 3” x 5” cards to each
radio station, one for each day of the week prior to the event:
“Please read this
with your community service announcements and special coming events on
Monday, June 1st”
(Make
sure you include: Who, What, When, Where,
- event times and admission fees if applicable, along with
miscellaneous information, such as hand-crafted work by local
artists and artisans, or hand-crafted work by
artists and artisans from all over the northeast (nation),
hay-rides, contests, etc.)
(Write another card
“to be read on Tuesday, June 2nd”, Wednesday, etc.)
Fundraisers and benefits for non-profit organizations
usually receive preferential treatment from
news media, so make sure you mention this if it’s
applicable.
Sometimes a volunteer
group will help craftsmen bring in their displays. While this is not
necessary, craftsmen and artists work long hours and appreciate
amenities, such a preferential treatment in the refreshment line with
an exhibitor’s badge.
Even though you have
your own food booth, you may want to accept vendors of “Specialty
Foods”. Specialty foods are not usually eaten
on-site. They may be jams, jellies, herbal sauces, gourmet
candies/chocolates, salad dressings. These do not detract from
food-vendor sales; they are a different category. Screen to make sure
the products will complement your food sales, not compete with them.
I hope
you find these ideas useful. As always, we are thankful
to be partners in this industry. Please contact us with your feeedback
and ideas, (845) 790-3413 or email me at betty@CraftShowYellowPages.com
*
* * * *
Betty
Chypre writes for craft industry magazines and publications. Her
articles have been published and used in Arts Council and Guild
workshops from New Orleans, LA to Oswego, NY and across the nation. As
editor/publisher of Art & Craft Show Yellow Pages Betty teaches
workshops for beginning craftsmen and artists, and Marketing for
Micro-Businesses.
A
21-year member and former vice president of the Hudson Valley Artisans
Guild, she wrote articles for and published the Guild Newsletter for
more than seven years. As a production silversmith she sold her work at
craft shows and writes about her experiences on both sides of the
display table.
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New England & Northeast
Art & Craft Shows, Fairs
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