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Walk a Trade Show Floor. You’ll See the Problem Instantly.

DKIND
DKIND

 

Spend an hour at any trade show.

Walk the floor.
Look at the stands.
Read the messaging.

You’ll start to notice a pattern.

“Optimise performance”
“Empower your teams”
“Drive transformation”
“Unlock efficiency”

Different companies.

Same words.

It all sounds right

That’s the problem.

Nothing is technically wrong.

But nothing is clear either.

If every stand says the same thing:

    • What do they actually do?
    • Who are they for?
    • Why should you choose one over another?

It becomes impossible to tell.

I’ve been part of it too

I’ve written those words.

Used those phrases.
Signed off messaging that looked and sounded like that.

Because at the time, it felt right.

Professional.
Safe.
What marketing “should” sound like.

But standing on the outside, looking in…

It’s obvious.

It’s noise.

Buzzwords hide meaning

They smooth everything out.

They remove risk.
They avoid being too specific.
They sound broadly applicable.

And in doing that, they remove the one thing that matters.

Clarity.

Your customer doesn’t think in buzzwords

They’re not walking around thinking:

“I need to optimise performance.”

They’re thinking:

    • Why is this process slow?
    • Why are we losing time here?
    • Why isn’t this working the way it should?

Real problems.

Specific frustrations.

If your messaging doesn’t reflect that, it doesn’t connect.

Trade shows amplify the issue

Because everything is side by side.

Same space.
Same audience.
Same language.

There’s nowhere to hide.

And the brands that stand out aren’t louder.

They’re clearer.

Clear beats clever

The stands that work are the ones where you instantly get it.

    • What they do
    • Who it’s for
    • Why it matters

No translation needed.

No buzzwords to decode.

Just understanding.

Why we default to this

Because it feels safer.

Less chance of getting it wrong.
Less chance of being challenged.
Less chance of standing out too much.

But that safety comes at a cost.

You become forgettable.

What to do differently

Next time you look at your messaging, ask:

Would this fit on any competitor’s stand?

If the answer is yes, it’s not strong enough.

Push it further.

Make it:

    • More specific
    • More direct
    • More human

Final thought

Marketing doesn’t fail because it’s too bold.

It fails because it’s too vague.

Trade shows just make that visible.

And once you see it, you can’t unsee it.

If your messaging sounds like everyone else, your customer has no reason to choose you.

Clarity is what cuts through.

If you want help cutting through the noise and focusing on what will actually work, get in touch

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