Friday, August 15, 2025

Selling by Stagedooring

Builders of products have a different star power than actors hired as expo booth staffers.

The sensory experience of even a day in New York City can spark ideas in any marketer’s mind, and what better source of inspiration than a live performance. However, it’s hard to sit and watch a Broadway show with the incessant chatter of questions in one’s mind, especially when one can’t have them answered instantly. While the many unanswered questions occasionally got in the way of complete immersion in the experience of a brilliant show, it was what occurred after the play that got me thinking about trade shows as performative art.

As everyone spilled out of the theater late in the night, I saw another line forming on a side street, of audience members, playbills in hand. For the theater-novice like me, playbills are like a show guide. You can learn about the actors who are characters in the play. The protocol is to review their pictures on the playbill to know what the actors look like in real life, so when they walk out that stage door in everyday attire, they are still recognizable for that must-have selfie.

Since lines are meant to be joined without question to make the most of life, I got to watch up-close the hero-worship that the actors enjoyed. I observed how delighted the members of the audience waiting in the line were to chat with the artistes. There was the banter, the autographing of the playbill, followed by a selfie. Apparently, there’s a word for it: stagedooring.

That brings me to the topic at hand. Trade show exhibitors can learn from Broadway.

At a trade show in Washington DC, I passed by a booth that featured models in factory overalls. At a trade show in another industry in Austin, TX, there were no actors or models, just industry professionals who had compounded decades of work and acquired deep domain expertise. In both instances, there was a certain star power. However, in the case of actors and models, the products or brand weren’t the main attraction. Therein lies a lost opportunity on many fronts.

Steve Jobs and his team had their signatures etched into the Macintosh mold because they were considered artists. How about arranging stagedooring to meet these artists? A company could showcase its craftspeople or designers at its trade show exhibit alongside products or product imagery. Besides a product brochure, pass around a playbill. Allow your customers the chance to learn about your products from those who manifested them. Encourage your designers and makers to obtain firsthand feedback and seek suggestions. Offer autographs, banter and selfies at your booth.

The exposure is definitely not for the faint of heart, nor for the slim of budget, and certainly not for an industry with a culture of talent-poaching by competitors. Still, it’s tempting because showcasing that kind of inhouse star-power and the consequent visible hero-worship can do wonders, both, for a brand, and its creators.