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Bottled Up
Eco-friendly business practices are important to many consumers, and The Coca-Cola Co. wanted attendees at the Food Marketing Institute show in Las Vegas to know they're also important to the worldfamous beverage manufacturer. So to educate attendees on its various eco-friendly efforts, Coca-Cola devoted a side wall in its exhibit to telling the story of its $40 million investment in the world's largest bottle-to-bottle recycling plant. Text on the wall noted the company's new line of apparel and consumer products made from 100-percent- recycled PET bottles, and its new PlantBottle, which is up to 30-percent plant based and 100-percent recyclable. At the center of the display stood an oversized Coke bottle full of crushed plastic atop a pedestal that read, "This carpet is made from 100-percent post-recycled plastic bottles." It ain't easy being Green, but this display made sure FMI attendees knew Coca-Cola was doing its part, one plastic bottle at a time.

Nice Package
Packaging a press kit is a little like wrapping a present. You want your kit to stand out, but you don't want to spend more on the wrapping than you did on what's inside. Atattooed, a division of Randall S. Corp. USA, mastered this dilemma by repurposing its product's packaging for the Magic Marketplace show. The company placed two press releases, a product onesheet, and a page printed with the company's URL and email address inside cardboard packaging typically used for its Commandhose hosiery. Atattooed then slid a final sheet inside the package printed with the text "Randy's Commandhose Press Pack," which was visible through an oval cutout in the envelope that is usually intended to give consumers a glimpse of the product inside. Simple, cost-effective, and unique, this little press kit was the perfect package – wrapper and all.
Out of the Box
To display its wares at the National Stationery Show, Minneapolis-based Russell+Hazel placed its office supplies and accessories atop the wooden crates it used to ship them to the Jacob K. Javits Convention Center in New York. Rather than storing the crates after setup and waiting for them to be returned after the show to complete dismantle, Russell+Hazel placed a sheet of Plexiglas atop each crate, effectively turning it into a display table. Then, after the show ended, staffers simply removed the products, packed them – along with the other exhibit elements – back inside the wooden crates, and headed home. Talk about an easy, out-of-the-box solution.

Aerial Display
How do you infuse the raw, adrenaline-pumping excitement of a Supercross event into a static exhibit on a show floor? Live-action productions company Feld Motor Sports did it at the Licensing International Expo by dangling a pair of motorbikes from the ceiling of the Mandalay Bay Convention Center. The bikes, each straddled by a mannequin dressed in full racing regalia, seemed frozen in midair. But thanks to the position of the bikes and their riders – which were posed like they'd been caught mid-stunt – the display possessed an undeniable momentum, as if at any moment the riders might spring to life. The overhead element caught attendees' eyes and gave staffers the perfect opportunity to discuss potential licensing opportunities.
Match Play
Monster Worldwide Inc. put a new twist on the game "Memory" at the Society for Human Resource Management show, where it invited attendees to play the "Monster Match." Featuring a stage for the host, an electronic leader board, and 12 touchscreen monitors for the contestants, the game was held every 30 minutes throughout the show. Designed to promote the company's 6Sense search technology (which delivers precision matching for job seekers and employers), the game challenged 12 attendees at a time to match six pairs of job seekers. After the host explained the game and the technology, players "flipped" over an on-screen card by touching it to reveal the image of a job seeker. However, only two cards could be revealed at one time, testing attendees' memory of which job seekers were positioned where. And in case they got stuck, attendees could hit the 6Sense button on the bottom of the screen, which revealed one pair for them, but could only be used once per player. At the end of the game, the player with the highest number of matched pairs won one of the show's most coveted prizes – a stuffed Monster mascot. Meanwhile, all players walked away with a mini version of the mascot, a memorable Monster experience, and a brief intro to the 6Sense technology.

The Igloo
Exhibit
To give its "Ice Age: Ice Breaker" arcade game a suitable context at the International Association of Amusement Parks and Attractions Expo, Innovative Concepts in Entertainment Inc. erected an inflatable igloo. Flanked by signs and twodimensional cutouts featuring characters from the popular animated "Ice Age" films, the igloo housed three of the "Ice Breaker" gaming stations, allowing interested prospects to enter the exhibit and go head to head with other attendees.

While the games proved an almost irresistible lure in and of themselves, the lightweight igloo helped to grab attention from the aisle and pull people inside for a closer look at the company's new game.
A Knight's Tale
Once upon a time, steel encasement was the only way to protect data stored on small devices, such as radio-frequency identification (RFID) chips. Enter Revere Security, which engineered a data-encryption code that negates the need for the clunky metal armor. So to tout its technology and illustrate its tagline, "Don't bring old armor to a hacker fight" at the RSA Conference, Revere created a series of webisodes that followed a knight in armor attempting everyday tasks. The webisodes, which were uploaded to YouTube and emailed to attendees before the show, depicted the knight doing everything from awkwardly frolicking on the beach to getting into a cab. Restricted by his suit of armor (meant to represent the metal encasement used to protect small devices), the knight failed at everything he tried. The webisodes were amusing and successful, garnering more than 1,600 views and driving traffic to Revere's exhibit.
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