When a natural disaster strikes, professionals in the tradeshow industry are usually some of the first to offer their advice or assistance.
By Douglas Ducate Contributors Larry Arnaudet and Frank Poe Our industry as we know it today was born some 40 years ago.
Competition on and off the track Similar to the intense roller coaster of emotions experienced by Olympians battling to become a champion on the world’s
After VIP programs at events morphed into hosted buyer programs at meetings over the years, unique hosted buyer formats rapidly began populating major shows, including
Fashion Institute of Technology/SUNY Professor Brenda Cowan chairs the Graduate Exhibition Design.
A tradeshow manager from Sydney, an account executive from Bangkok and an exhibit designer from New York walk into a bar – no, the punchline
As a one-of-a-kind risk taker, E. Jane Lorimer, MBA, CME, made major strides for women and helped shape the present-day tradeshow industry.
Those in the industry know the tick tock of the tradeshow clock is a never-ending cycle of shows across the entire globe.
When the closing bell rings at a tradeshow or convention, a satisfactory sigh of relief can be heard from exhibitors, attendees, guests, show organizers and