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what exhibitions teach us about modern marketing

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Attention is the most valuable currency in this era of digital channels saturated with ads, notifications, and content vying for consumers’ focus.

Yet, exhibitions and trade shows continue to command influence, reminding marketers that human attention cannot be fully replaced by algorithms or automation.

This article explores what exhibitions teach us about attention, engagement, and the psychology of buying, offering lessons for marketers across industries.

Face-to-face engagement still wins

In-person marketing has a unique advantage: it provides uninterrupted, multi-sensory engagement. Attendees are immersed in a space designed to capture their focus, giving brands a rare opportunity to make a memorable impression.

  • Duration matters: Research from VisitBritain shows that UK trade show visitors spend an average of 5.5 hours at an event, engaging with multiple brands. This level of concentrated attention is nearly impossible to achieve in a digital scroll environment.
  • Decision-making impact: Around 80% of trade show attendees influence or make purchasing decisions within their organisations, highlighting the quality and seriousness of the audience.
  • Trust and credibility: Face-to-face interactions help build confidence in a brand. Physical presence reassures prospects that a company is tangible, capable, and reliable.

Consider exhibitions as attention marketplaces. Every aspect of a stand, from design to lighting to staff interaction, is calibrated to capture focus and extend dwell time. You have more control here to create a level of engagement that digital channels struggle to replicate.

Visual memory and first impressions

Humans are wired to process visual information quickly. Neuroscience studies suggest the brain can interpret images up to 60,000 times faster than text, and people form a first impression of a visual environment in less than a second. Exhibitions leverage these cognitive traits.

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  • Clarity over complexity: Visually clean stands, with simple, bold messaging, outperform cluttered designs in terms of recall.
  • Consistency matters: Repeated exposure to brand colours, logos, and messages increases retention, making attendees more likely to remember and engage post-event.
  • Physical cues enhance memory: Multi-sensory elements, such as interactive demos or tactile product experiences, anchor information more effectively than screen-based content alone.

Even in a digital-first world, attention has to be earned. Exhibitions remind marketers that clarity, visual hierarchy, and sensory engagement directly affect brand recall and conversion.

Strategic use of physical space

One of the most underappreciated lessons exhibitions offer is the strategic role of space in shaping perception and behaviour. Every square metre of a stand can be designed to guide, influence, and focus attention.

  • Flow and layout: Open designs with intuitive traffic flow increase dwell time and allow staff to interact naturally with attendees.
  • Zoning for impact: Specific areas can be dedicated to demos, consultations, or quiet conversations, giving prospects control over how they engage.
  • Environmental cues: Lighting, flooring, and material choices all communicate professionalism and value, subtly influencing buying confidence.

For marketers, this demonstrates that context matters as much as content. A well-planned space fosters a mindset that makes people more receptive, attentive, and engaged. This can be translated to digital experiences through UX design, gamification, or immersive media.

Multi-channel integration amplifies ROI

Exhibitions are rarely standalone investments. The most successful marketers integrate trade shows with email campaigns, social media, and content marketing to create a cohesive, omnichannel experience.

  • Pre-show campaigns drive attendance to the stand.
  • On-site content, such as demos and social media shares, extends reach beyond the floor.
  • Post-show follow-up nurtures leads while the experience is still fresh in memory.

Capturing attention in a concentrated environment allows marketers to extend value across multiple channels, increasing ROI and driving measurable outcomes.

Lessons for SaaS and tech brands

High-growth tech companies, particularly in SaaS, can apply exhibition lessons to digital marketing strategies:

  • Account-Based Marketing (ABM) translation: Trade shows allow enterprise teams to engage multiple stakeholders simultaneously. Online, this principle translates to coordinated, multi-touch campaigns that combine personalised content with timely outreach.
  • Showcasing complex products: Interactive demos at exhibitions help communicate value in ways static pages cannot. Digitally, this equates to video walkthroughs, live webinars, and interactive product tours.
  • Lead quality over quantity: Decision-makers’ attention is more valuable than broad reach, underscoring the importance of targeting and personalisation across both physical and digital channels.

These insights show that physical engagement teaches digital marketers to earn attention rather than demand it, creating stronger relationships and greater conversion potential.

Attention as a KPI

Marketing metrics often focus on clicks, impressions, or downloads. Exhibitions offer a different perspective: attention itself is a KPI.

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  • Dwell time and engagement quality: Tracking how long attendees interact with a stand or demo reflects genuine interest and intent.
  • Visual memory and recall: Post-event surveys can quantify how much a brand was remembered and which messages stuck.
  • Conversion velocity: Face-to-face interactions often reduce the number of touchpoints required to close a deal, effectively lowering CAC (Customer Acquisition Cost).

This reframing encourages marketers to prioritise the depth and quality of engagement, not just the breadth of exposure, which is increasingly relevant as digital channels saturate.

Sustainability and experience economy considerations

Exhibitions also teach lessons about ethical marketing and brand perception. Modern attendees value sustainability and tangible experiences:

  • Modular, reusable stands reduce waste and align with sustainability initiatives.
  • Physical interaction creates memories and emotional connections that digital-only experiences rarely achieve.
  • Attention is reinforced by authenticity and trustworthiness, not gimmicks or invasive ads.

Brands that integrate sustainability, physical presence, and engagement design benefit from both practical and perceptual advantages: reduced costs, higher ROI, and improved brand affinity.

Attention remains scarce and strategic

Exhibitions demonstrate that attention cannot be automated. In a digital-first world, marketers must actively earn focus through interaction and thoughtfully designed experiences.

Key takeaways include:

  • Multi-sensory engagement increases recall and trust.
  • Strategic physical space guides behaviour and prioritises high-value interactions.
  • Integration with other channels maximises the lifespan and value of attention.
  • High-quality, memorable experiences reduce CAC and accelerate decision-making.

While digital channels will continue to dominate budgets, trade shows and exhibitions remain valuable opportunities for understanding how attention works. Use them as lessons in how physical engagement applies across the funnel, informing design, messaging, and strategy in every medium.

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YouTube Expands Deepfake Detection Tool to Protect Personalities Against AI-Generated Content

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YouTube is finally expanding its deepfake detection tool on the platform to help combat fake, AI-generated content that was uploaded without a person’s consent.

AI deepfakes have been a massive problem since the emergence of generative AI, and many people have fallen victim to having their likeness used without their permission, which has become rampant on the likes of YouTube for many years now.

YouTube Expands AI Deepfake Detection Tool

YouTube’s “Likeness Detection” tool, which was launched last year, is now expanding to give a new batch of users a way to fight against AI deepfakes of themselves and take down the content tarnishing their name and image.

According to the streaming platform, it is now launching a pilot program for a group of journalists, government officials, and political candidates to use the likeness detection tool and put a stop to deepfakes.

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YouTube said that the tool is similar to its Content ID feature, but it will search the videos that have AI-generated content if they have impersonations of the said personality.

YouTube said that it launched the likeness detection tool last year and was first made available to content creators under the Partner Program to help them manage online content and stop AI impersonation.

Use YouTube Tool vs. AI Deepfake

YouTube’s likeness detection tool is promising as it helps find AI deepfake videos of the individuals under the program, but it is not a guarantee that these will get taken down on the platform.

According to YouTube, concerned individuals may still report or file a case about an AI deepfake video using their likeness, but its content would still be subject to review by its team. Should they find the video not harmful, citing examples like satire content, YouTube may not remove it from the platform.

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In the past years, YouTube has been infamous for hosting AI misinformation, with some containing deepfaked videos of renowned individuals. Since then, the platform has enforced several policies and tools to help fight against the problem.

Originally published on Tech Times

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Treasury holds talks on soaring heating costs as some families 'cannot afford oil'

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Heating oil prices rise by more than £100 amid Middle East conflict

The average price of home heating oil in Northern Ireland has increased significantly since strikes began in the Middle East

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Why coffee shops could buck the hospitality trend as people are ‘demanding better and better’

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Leaders from Bold Street Coffee and Coffee House join debate at Northern Restaurant & Bar showcase

The Coffee Shop Leaders panel at Northern Restaurant & Bar 2026 at Manchester Central. From left, Will Kenney, commercial director at 200 Degrees Coffee, Holly Kragiopoulos, CEO at North Star Coffee Roasters in Leeds, Matt Farrell, co-founder at Bold Street Coffee owner GSG Hospitality, and Chris Shelmerdine, managing director at North West chain Coffee House

From left, Will Kenney, of 200 Degrees Coffee, Holly Kragiopoulos of North Star Coffee Roasters in Leeds, Matt Farrell of Bold Street Coffee, and Chris Shelmerdine, from North West chain Coffee House(Image: Alistair Houghton)

The North’s independent coffee shops might be bucking the trend in the hospitality sector, some of the North’s top coffee experts have said.

Leaders from Bold Street Coffee and 32-strong North West chain Coffee House joined a debate on the future of the coffee market at the massive Northern Restaurant & Bar showcase in Manchester.

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Asked about the health of the market, Holly Kragiopoulos, CEO at North Star Coffee Roasters in Leeds, was upbeat – saying she was “definitely positive about a market for better coffee in the UK”. She added: “People are demanding better and better not just in coffee shops but in apartment lobbies and gyms…”

Matt Farrell, co-founder at Bold Street Coffee owner GSG Hospitality, said that while hospitality was having its challenges more broadly, “I would say the speciality coffee industry is probably bucking the trend in that sense” as more people look for better coffee while drinking less alcohol and looking to their wellbeing.

Chris Shelmerdine, managing director at North West chain Coffee House, said his journey into coffee first started when he went to the original Bold Street Coffee in Liverpool 15 years ago.

Today his business has 42 outlets – and starts fitting out numbers 43 and 44 next week. It also includes a central production site and kitchen where the coffee is roasted and bread baked, and employs some 450 people.

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“It’s been a long 15 years,” smiled Chris.

Event host Will Kenney, commercial director at 200 Degrees Coffee, asked Matt about his expansion ambitions for Bold Street Coffee. Matt said he and his colleagues had thought long and hard about how to grow sustainably, and had decided to make sure they could plan for a range of outlets from full-service food and drink outlets through to smaller coffee-focused ones. He mentioned a recent collaboration with Climbing Hangar at its South Liverpool venue, and said the firm was open to “collaboration and testing” on potential new outlets. He added that he also wanted the business to have its own roastery and bakery central unit.

Chris discussed how his business had expanded largely by focusing on locations beyond big city centres, in what are called “secondary high streets” but that are at the heart of their smaller communities. He said: “We need to stick to our knitting and continue with that”.

In terms of properties, he said the business particularly likes corner spots that were highly visible. And he said the changing retail market and uncertain economic climate has led to more such units becoming available to a small business like his, whereas “If we’d been doing this 20 years ago we probably wouldn’t have a look-in at these kinds of properties”.

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The panel was asked what advice they’d give for people looking to grow their own coffee shop chains. Holly’s Leeds business has 300 wholesale partnerships and two city outlets – with another two soon to open. She said that while she had confidence in the future, customers were challenged by rising costs and so her team had seen consumer spending change, with more people making “grab and go” purchases of coffee and cakes rather than sit-in breakfasts.

Matt agreed, saying: “I think it’s a good time to be expanding especially in the coffee industry. In the rest of hospitality, I’m not sure about that.”

He noted that the coffee and bar industries are very different in terms of how taxes work, and he said potential coffee entrepreneurs needed to pay close attention to those rules — such as, for example, the tax implications of offering hot food or not.

Chris warned that setting up a central team as his company had done was costly at first, but paid dividends down the line.

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On costs, he said he believed coffee entrepreneurs should try to self-fund their business at the early stage, and that founders should stay working hands-on in the business for as long as possible to ensure they always know how everything works. He said: “Don’t go early on the overheads. Sweat it a bit. Go through a little bit of pain.”

Holly said that post-pandemic, many more people had looked to realise their dream of opening a coffee shop. She said people needed to manage their expectations, saying for example that they needed to learn it was unrealistic for founders to think they could “remove themselves from the day-to-day within six months”.

Crowds at the Northern Restaurant & Bar 2026 at Manchester Central with a yellow s0gn on a stand in the foreground saying Happienda

Crowds at the Northern Restaurant & Bar 2026 at Manchester Central(Image: Alistair Houghton)

And she said people needed to be aware they needed cash as “a big cushion to get you through those early months” not just for initial setup costs.

Matt talked about his dealings with property agents over potential sites, and said that coffee entrepreneurs should realise that landlords need them almost as much as they need landlords.

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He said: “It’s important that operators know their own clout. Those developers, they need you in there… for high-rise communities, they need you in there”.

One audience member asked whether the panel had any thoughts on how much coffee might cost in the future, given rising costs generally and given the way climate change might affect the coffee production chain.

Chris observed that a cup of coffee was £2.40 or £2.60 for a decade but had now risen. He added that coffee operators had got to “make sure we’re really good” to make sure customers kept coming.

People enjoying a drink outside Bold Street Coffee

Bold Street Coffee has expanded from its original location to sites across Liverpool and Manchester(Image: Andrew Teebay/Liverpool Echo)

He said that despite talk of change in other industries, AI won’t necessarily make a difference to the practical operations of coffee shops. “These are people businesses,” he said. “We have to turn up every day, put the lights on, and welcome people coming through the door.”

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Matt said he believed people will still pay for a good product. He said: “People are only parting with their money if they feel they’re getting worth out of it.”

He added: “People need to pay what it’s worth. We shouldn’t be undercutting ourselves.”

Holly said coffee had “been undervalued for too long” so it will get more expensive, with a £4 cup becoming the norm.

She said: “The reality is we’ve never paid enough for coffee.”

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These Stocks Are Today’s Movers: Hims & Hers, Live Nation, Broadcom, Carnival, Vertiv, Sandisk, Strategy, and More

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These Stocks Are Today’s Movers: Hims & Hers, Live Nation, Broadcom, Carnival, Vertiv, Sandisk, Strategy, and More

These Stocks Are Today’s Movers: Hims & Hers, Live Nation, Broadcom, Carnival, Vertiv, Sandisk, Strategy, and More

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'Rural families need green energy support'

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'Rural families need green energy support'

Jemma McCarron fears the cost of using heating oil will mean her family needs to cut back.

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Vertiv Stock Jumps. Why Joining the S&P 500 Trumps the Iran War.

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Vertiv Stock Jumps. Why Joining the S&P 500 Trumps the Iran War.

Vertiv Stock Jumps. Why Joining the S&P 500 Trumps the Iran War.

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abrdn Diversified Income and Growth completes asset sales

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abrdn Diversified Income and Growth completes asset sales

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Search Enters Sixth Week With New Leads in Tucson Abduction Case

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Nancy Guthrie was last seen on the evening of Jan. 31 at her home in the Catalina Foothills suburb of Tucson. She was reported missing the following day, Feb. 1, after failing to appear for a planned church service gathering with friends. Authorities with the Pima County Sheriff’s Department quickly classified the disappearance as an abduction, believing the independent and mentally sharp widow was taken from her bed in the early morning hours against her will.

Nancy Guthrie
Nancy Guthrie

The case has gripped national attention, fueled by Savannah Guthrie’s emotional public pleas, more than 3,000 tips to law enforcement, multiple reported ransom notes demanding Bitcoin payments, and intense speculation on social media and cable news. Savannah Guthrie, who has described her mother as a deeply religious and active woman, has returned intermittently to the “Today” show but has largely stepped back to focus on the search and family.

On Tuesday, investigators were examining a damaged utility box located near Guthrie’s residence, which may be linked to an internet outage that occurred around the time of the disappearance. The outage reportedly disrupted several nearby home surveillance systems, including doorbell cameras, potentially hindering early evidence collection. Police have not confirmed a direct connection but said the damage is under active review as part of the broader probe.

A neighbor, Aldine Meister, recently came forward with a potentially significant tip, telling NewsNation she observed a “suspicious man” walking slowly toward Guthrie’s street on Jan. 11 — about three weeks before the disappearance. Meister described the individual as wearing a low baseball cap, appearing hunched over and scanning the area in a way that seemed out of place for routine activity. She reported the sighting to the FBI, which has since requested doorbell camera footage from neighbors specifically for that date.

The FBI has released images of a person of interest captured on footage at Guthrie’s doorstep prior to the incident, though details remain limited due to the ongoing nature of the investigation. Multiple individuals, including two men initially detained as persons of interest — Carlos Palazuelos and Luke Daley — were questioned and later released, with authorities stating the investigation had “moved on” from them.

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Pima County Sheriff Chris Nanos has described the probe as making progress, telling reporters that investigators possess “a lot of intel” while keeping most details confidential to protect the case. However, the sheriff has faced scrutiny over his own background, including past questions about his resume and departure from an earlier policing position in El Paso, Texas.

No arrests have been made, and Guthrie’s condition and whereabouts remain unknown as of March 11. A body discovered in a canal roughly 100 miles from the home was ruled out as unrelated after identification. Other reported sightings and leads, including various ransom communications, have not yet yielded verifiable results.

The disappearance has drawn international coverage, with outlets from the BBC to Fox News tracking developments. Savannah Guthrie has spoken publicly about the family’s faith sustaining them, noting her mother’s planned participation in an online church service the morning she vanished. A pastor connected to the family has shared messages of hope and continued prayer.

Law enforcement continues to urge anyone with information — particularly footage from Jan. 11 or details about unusual activity around Jan. 31-Feb. 1 — to contact the Pima County Sheriff’s Department or the FBI tip line. The case remains active, with searches and forensic efforts ongoing in the Tucson area.

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As the investigation stretches into a new month, unanswered questions persist: Who targeted the 84-year-old woman living alone? Was the abduction motivated by ransom, personal grudge or something else? And why has no definitive trace emerged despite widespread publicity?

Family, friends and authorities say they remain hopeful for a resolution, even as the days turn into weeks without Nancy Guthrie’s safe return.

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ASX edges higher on hopes of record oil reserve release

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ASX edges higher on hopes of record oil reserve release

Australia’s share market has defied a hawkish interest rate outlook to clock a second session of gains, as reports of a record release of crude reserves took the pressure off oil prices.

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AD FEATURE: The Open returns to Southport with enhanced hospitality offering

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AD FEATURE: The Open returns to Southport with enhanced hospitality offering


The major sporting event has launched a new range of hospitality ticket options as it comes back to Royal Birkdale for the first time since 2017

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