
The Road Less Traveled
(Image of IBM Under the Surface 2023) The Legacy of George P. Johnson In the ever-evolving landscape of experiential marketing, one name commands attention: George
(Image of IBM Under the Surface 2023) The Legacy of George P. Johnson In the ever-evolving landscape of experiential marketing, one name commands attention: George
(the above image is a concept for the 2024 Q1 print issue for Exhibit City News, coming in January) Coming Soon! Chris Kappes, Strategic Advisor
Industry veteran Christopher Kappes, the founder and COO of Exhibitshub, an online marketplace of exhibits and services billed as the nation’s first “Airbnb of exhibits,”
Organizers of the inaugural Event Tech Live USA & Canada, which opens on June 8, will use an extra day to accommodate the weight of
(Pictured above L-R (top row): Stacey Kashubeck, Paul Coulter, Jim Kelley, (bottom row) Karen Cooper, Gordon Stake and Kimberley Gishler) Celebrating 31 years of service
Agency bolsters EMEA operations following the appointment of Claudia Stephenson as Managing Director in September 2020 London-based INVNT, the global live brand storytelling agency, announces
Founding partners Czarnowski, Exploring (the parent company of ID3 Group, Brumark, Shelmarc Carpets, Chisel 3D, Atlantis WaterJet and GCI Graphics) and George P. Johnson have begun “Live For Life,” (https://www.liveforlifec19.com/) a
Live Marketing, an experiential marketing agency and WBENC-certified woman-owned business, has announced Chris Kappes as vice president, strategic partnership development, a new position responsible for
Global experiential marketing agency Impact XM has hired Erik McKinney as a leader in the creative department. As executive creative director, McKinney will leverage his
Lanham, Maryland-based Hargrove has hired industry veteran Tara Higgins as president of the growing experiential events, exhibits and expositions company. Higgins brings to Hargrove more
The IBM Think 2019 conference took over the streets of downtown San Francisco Feb. 12-15, closing Howard Street as an estimated 30,000 people made their