Tuesday, January 18, 2011

Ignoring the pundits of Wall Street

The pundits of Wall Street and Washington have done a great job of scaring many businesses to a stand still. Personally, I’m pretty sure the longer we stand still the longer it will take to get going again. You know it's that old theory, an object in motion stays in motion while an object at rest stays at rest. But for those of us confident in our products, services and teams, we need to keep moving forward, keep innovating, keep producing. There always will be demand for good and ethical businesses at the top of their game.

Thinking positive is an option. We don’t have to follow the countless companies, big and small, hunkered down and keeping profits stowed away in bank accounts. We can choose to grow by investing in the future.

At RP, we are putting our money where our heart is…we are investing in our team and our clients. In early 2011, we’ll complete an addition to our building that will allow us to meet the growing needs of our clients. We choose to believe in ourselves not the pundits. Positive thinking is important, especially when you're willing to take action to support it. The success of the American economy is depending on it.

Friday, January 14, 2011

Two days, two views.

I have to admit, sometimes experience can get in the way. Or maybe it's expectations that get in the way. My two days exploring the International Builders' Show and talking with attendees and exhibitors reminded me that the same experience can be viewed through very different eyes. Long-time exhibitors in spacious booths were concerned about the light traffic. Yes, it was the first day of the show, and yes, the weather across the country was not cooperating, but wow. This was not the Builders' Show they remembered, with crowded aisles and long lines for registration, coffee and giveaways.

But a few conversations with first-time exhibitors made me look at the show through their eyes: they see an opportunity to engage with thousands of builders (how many are they really going to be able to talk with, anyway?), "break in" to the "main" (only) exhibit hall, and they are excited and pleased and optimistic. They're looking forward to following up with all those leads.

The second day of the show, traffic picked up quite a bit, and it'll be interesting to see what the final numbers are. I'm not sure the show will ever be as big as it once was, but I think that's OK. Maybe we all just need to look at it differently.

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Monday, January 10, 2011

2011 Builders' Show

I'm heading to the International Builders' Show in Orlando tomorrow, and am so curious to see how it goes, and what the tone is. Twenty years ago, it was a "can't miss" event for building products manufacturers. I remember hearing the speculation that some manufacturers had spent more than a million dollars on their booth for this grandaddy of trade shows. Anyone who was anyone exhibited at IBS. At one point, attendance at the show was estimated at more than 100,000.

But recently, a number of big players have decided to sit out a year or two (or more). Some of them attend the show, schedule meetings with customers and the media, but don't invest the tens or hundreds of thousands of dollars just to share some floor space with thousands of other manufacturers. On the other hand, it appears that some smaller, new companies are seeing this as the perfect time to "break in" to IBS and get noticed in a less crowded field. Their attitude seems to be, "who cares if attendance is 'down' to 50,000 or so? That's still a lot of builders!"

Is the same thing happening with trade shows in other industries? Let us know your thoughts!