Sunday, January 24, 2010

CES 2010 attendance up while exhibitor participation drops


Here is an interesting article on the shape of 2010 Exhibition season. CES has shown that attendees are ready to jump back into the market; it will be really interesting to see how exhibitors react. 2009 was a year of cautiousness, but based on our discussions with clients, 2010 looks like it will be much more active than 2009.

Written by Aleta Walther

Many consider the annual Consumer Electronics Show (CES) in Las Vegas each January to be the bellwether event of the tradeshow industry, the crystal ball foretelling the general health of the tradeshow industry for the coming year.

If such is the case, show producers and exhibitors may see an up tick in show-related attendance and/or business throughout 2010. On the other hand, general contractors, installation and dismantle (I and D) companies, exhibit houses and other tradeshow suppliers must still contend with corporate cutbacks that are negatively impacting tradeshow attendance.

Held at the Las Vegas Convention Center and several neighboring hotel venues January 7-10, CES is the world's largest tradeshow for consumer technology and one of the largest shows worldwide. According to a CES press release, about 120,000 attendees registered for the 2010 event, up about 6 percent over the 2009 attendance of 113,085.

It sounds optimistic until you consider that the 2008 CES had a verified attendance of about 141,000 visitors; that's about a 5 percent drop between 2008 attendance and 2010 attendance. Admittedly, there are probably more than a few show producers that will believe a 5 percent dip in show attendance this year over last year is tolerable as many experienced attendance slides of 20 to 30 percent between their 2008 shows and 2009.

Although CES attendance was up in 2010 compared to 2009, the number of exhibiting companies dropped 7.4 percent from about 2,700 exhibitors in 2008 and 2009 to 2,500 for 2010.

In closing, this writer would like to add that having spent five days on the show floor, I am happy to report that the show's overall energy appeared stronger and attendee and exhibitor enthusiasm higher compared to 2009. So, I am going to opt to see the CES glass as half full.

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Monday, January 26, 2009

Show attendance down, but quality of leads up – a mixed blessing in Las Vegas

Written by Helen Holzer   

LAS VEGAS – As the numbers are trickling in from all sectors, overall convention attendance in Las Vegas is dropping, like a rock.

The 42nd annual Consumer Electronics Show (CES) ran Jan. 8-11 at several venues in Las Vegas. Attendance in 2008 was pegged at 140,000, but this year that figure dropped to 110,000, marking a 21 percent decline. At times, the show floor was nearly empty.

Worse yet, prime CES show floor exhibit space was also left empty, as key exhibitors dropped out in this sagging economy. At least 10 percent of last year's exhibitors failed to show up in 2009.

And if trade shows are indeed a true reflection of the economy, then the consumer industry that's been hit perhaps harder than any other – home building – took another hit at the National Association of Home Builders' (NAHB) Show/NextBuild. Attendance was down a whopping 29 percent at the Jan. 20-23 show at the Las Vegas Convention Center.

Leaving the Orange County Convention Center in Orlando after four years, hopes were high for an upturn in numbers by moving the NAHB show to its new venue in Las Vegas. Attendees numbered 91,000 last year, but only reached about 65,000 in 2009. The 29 percent drop reflects the dismal house sale figures that have only recently started to rebound in some parts of the country. Exhibitors at the show also dropped about 10 percent, with a similar reflection in the show's net square footage.

What's the exhibitor response to the numbers? At both shows, booth personnel were upbeat about the quality of attendees and getting the right people to attend. Those who came were serious buyers in serious times.

One official at NAHB said, "Exhibitors are telling us that these are the people they need to see." Adding, "It's a testament to the power of face-to-face marketing."

Another January show that schedules at the same time as CES to draw in its crowds also saw a decline in attendees and exhibitors. This year's annual AVN Adult Entertainment Expo Jan. 9-11 at the Sands Expo and Convention Center is the largest event for the adult entertainment industry worldwide. Last year's attendance numbered 12,000 sex industry workers, 17,000 fans and 1,300 members of the media.

But this year, only 250 exhibitors showed up, down 18 percent, according to expo spokesman Sean Devlin. So even though "sex sells," it doesn't sell as much as it used to.

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