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case study
photos: S&C Electric Co.
S&C Electric's Mixed-Reality Product Demo Generates Results
Determined to communicate the "why" behind its wares, S&C Electric Co. puts booth visitors in the middle of a mixed-reality product demonstration – and surpasses its lead-conversion goal by 80 percent. By Brian Dukerschein
Product Demo
Exhibitor: S&C Electric Co.
Show: Distributech International, 2020
Budget: $400,000 – $499,000
Problem:
While effective at highlighting features and capabilities, S&C's in-booth product demonstrations weren't always reliable in regard to conveying why prospects should purchase the company's offerings.
Solution:
Immerse attendees in a green-screen-based, mixed-reality activation comprising a trio of electric-utility scenarios.
Goals:
Engage 75 attendees in the demo and increase first-day booth traffic and lead conversion (by 5 percent and 10 percent, respectively) compared to 2019.
Results:
Led 476 attendees through the demo, generated a 12-percent bump in traffic on the show's opening day, and attained a lead-conversion increase of 18 percent.
According to Friedrich Nietzsche, "He who has a why to live can bear almost any how." While the German philosopher was more concerned with existentialism than exhibit marketing, the meaning of the maxim he penned in 1889 still applies: Face-to-face marketers who successfully relay why their products matter are in a far better – and more stable – selling position than those who focus on features, price, and novelty.

To their credit, the exhibit-marketing team at S&C Electric Co., a Chicago-based provider of products and services for electric-power systems (i.e., electrical grids managed by massive utility companies, small municipal outfits, and everything in between), were hip to the power of "why" on the trade show floor. "Regarding our booth messaging and promotional elements over the past few years, we have been very focused on communicating results and benefits, not functions and features," says Jessica Simon, S&C's manager of marketing support and events. Rather than touting the operating capacity of a new fuse, for example, booth signage broadcast that S&C products help save utility providers millions in maintenance costs annually. Staffers were also trained to highlight big-picture benefits when walking attendees through product demos.

Nevertheless, marketers felt their strategies were about as reliable as the wiring in a garage-sale toaster. "At the end of the day, signage and marketing promotions are content items that don't always have the real estate to convey a complete story," says Alexandra Charleston, S&C's manager of strategic communications. "And because we display physical equipment, it's natural for customers to fixate on 'what' and 'how,' making it active work for our team members to pull the conversation toward the higher-level 'why' discussion. Ultimately, what we lacked was a master narrative with the ability to unpackage big ideas."


Reality Check
Staging a high-tech demo such as the one S&C Electric Co. debuted at Distributech International isn't a last-minute decision. Here is a breakdown of how and when the project came together.
July 2019:
S&C reviewed vendor pitches and bids.
July 2019:
S&C reviewed vendor pitches and bids.
September 2019:
Initial artistic direction and ideation.
October 2019:
Script development and storyboarding.
November 2019:
Hardware ordered and fabrication commenced. Virtual environments created.
December 2019:
Scenes animated and reviewed by S&C. App development begun.
Early January 2020:
Final staging and testing.
January 24:
S&C booth set up at Dtech.
January 28:
Opening day of Dtech.
Alternative Energy
When it came time to power up for Distributech International 2020 (Dtech), one of the most important shows on S&C's exhibiting calendar, Charleston and her team's top priority was finding a new way to tell the "why" story behind the products in their booth. "As we start planning for each show, we focus on key problems the industry and our customers are dealing with," Simon says. "Since the U.S. power grid is a century old, utility providers are increasingly facing challenges regarding reliability, operational and maintenance costs, and customer satisfaction – ideas much more difficult to get across with only physical products." S&C offers three pieces of hardware that not only address each of these concerns but also add a "smart" element to the grid, meaning that showing them operating in context to the grid as a whole was essential. In other words, generic product demos wouldn't have the voltage needed to power S&C's storytelling objective.

The obvious alternatives were to produce a slick video or schedule a slate of staged presentations, both of which S&C hoped to eschew. "There are so many monitors and screens at a show that it's almost impossible to stand out and grab attention," Charleston says. "As for presentations, customers are bound to the schedule, making the experience centered on the seller and not the buyer." Wanting to veer from the status quo, S&C marketers compiled a list of outside creative agencies that could bring new ideas to the table and issued a request for proposal to each. To avoid stifling ingenuity, the RFP contained few provisions about the activation apart from it needing to attract attention on a trade show floor and fit within a 20-by-20-foot space in S&C's 50-by-60-foot Dtech booth.

Many of the resulting pitches had on-point elements but didn't quite flip the switch. Some were enclosed, and marketers were concerned about attendees feeling trapped. Others were self-exploratory, and S&C wanted to drive the messaging. A few were designed for individual participants, but S&C knew that its targeted audience often covers trade shows in teams, meaning the demo would need to accommodate a group.

Next Now Inc. (dba Next/Now Agency), an experiential-marketing agency specializing in high-tech activations, sidestepped these unwritten dealbreakers and proposed an immersive engagement that checked all of S&C's boxes: a mixed-reality product demo combining digital and real-world elements. Next/Now pitched an experience in which attendees would congregate in front of a massive green screen and be livestreamed into product demos playing out on an LED wall in front of them. In essence, participants would see themselves plopped into digital environments where they shared the screen with S&C products actively solving utility providers' problems.

This was the sole concept Next/Now pitched, and it was a winner. "Handling our products in a demo is great for learning how to operate them, but it leaves the 'why' to the imagination," Charleston says. "And being told that a product can recover automatically in severe weather is a lot different than seeing it in action. The mixed-reality demo was an innovative, attention-grabbing way for our customers to see how these three products function in the real world."


Amp it Up
The ensuing production process kicked off with S&C marketers taking Next/Now reps on a deep dive into the three featured products: the VacuFuse Self-Resetting Interrupter, the TripSaver II Cutout-Mounted Recloser, and the IntelliRupter PulseCloser Fault Interrupter. After the technical brief, S&C worked on crafting a script for the demo's presenters while Next/Now gathered ideas for the activation's artistic direction. The team decided each product would be featured in a weather-based scenario, e.g., a blizzard and a hurricane, taking place in a particular setting. Using a series of storyboards, the teams settled on the demo's pacing and aesthetics. Next/Now then focused on designing and rendering the environments using software traditionally employed for creating video games, and regular technical checks with S&C's subject-matter experts ensured the featured products were accurately portrayed. Meanwhile, S&C's exhibit house, Superior Exhibits & Design Inc. in Elk Grove Village, IL, began constructing some of the demo's physical structures.

As production started to wrap, Next/Now turned its attention to building a tablet-based app that would allow presenters to control the demo, adjust the pacing of each scene, and pause it when necessary. Even when a scene was frozen, however, environmental details would remain animated. For example, should the blizzard or hurricane scenario be halted to answer an attendee's question, the snow and rain would continue unabated to keep attendees immersed in the environment.

When the digital and physical components were finished, S&C staged the completed demo in Superior Exhibits & Design's warehouse to set the angles of the cameras that would capture attendees in real time, rig various lighting components, and test the software. After working out the kinks, it was time to head to Dtech in San Antonio to see if S&C's savvy storytelling would fizzle like a short circuit or generate the desired results (i.e., to engage 75 attendees in the demo, increase first-day booth traffic by 5 percent, and boost lead conversion by no less than 10 percent).


Power Trip
Dtech's 12,200 attendees would have had a hard time missing S&C's high-tech demo placed strategically at the intersection of two aisles. A freestanding 20-by-14-foot, 2.6mm-pixel-pitch LED wall facing the main thoroughfare commanded attention and, when idle, looped stylized video clips of S&C offerings. Meanwhile, the green-screen area (comprising a roughly 15-by-10-foot wall panel clad in neon-bright vinyl that extended onto the floor) elicited plenty of curiosity about what was taking place.

After staffers scanned their badges, groups of up to approximately 10 attendees at a time congregated atop a gray oval on the green-screen floor – an area marking the optimum range of the pint-size yet powerful Marshall CV502 and CV343 video cameras mounted to the top of the LED wall. Once the attendees were in position, the S&C presenter began the seven-minute demo by pushing the appropriate button on an app-enabled tablet. The LED wall then transformed into a futuristic, "Minority Report"-esque representation of a smart grid, complete with pulses of light and glowing lines showing the distribution of electrical power. As the dazzling display unfolded, the presenter relayed the importance of considering S&C's products in the context of the entire electric grid and how the company's offerings can help utility providers deliver reliable power, reduce costs, and keep customers happy.

The screen then cut to a suburban neighborhood in the middle of a blizzard. Snow-blanketed trees and icy streets set a scene in which the glowing windows of dozens of homes indicated occupants were cozy and protected from the bitter cold. Attendees impressed by the hyperrealistically animated environment were then astonished when near-life-size versions of themselves appeared on-screen as if they were standing in someone's front yard amid the winter storm. Then, a tree branch fell onto a power line, creating a temporary power outage in several homes. Soon after, an entire tree lost its battle with the elements (accompanied by a crash emitted from discreet speakers mounted to both sides of the green-screen wall), resulting in a permanent outage affecting even more residences.

However, the presenter explained, the power grid in this scenario employed IntelliRupter PulseCloser Fault Interrupters (whose glowing silhouettes then appeared on the utility poles), which segment power lines into smaller sections and isolate the faulted area so fewer customers are impacted by an electrical outage.

Once S&C's technology kicked in and several homes' lights came back on, the hurricane scenario appeared on the screen. The sounds of pouring rain and howling winds emanated from the speakers, and attendees saw themselves on a street surrounded by multistory buildings. Thankfully, the only vehicle on the road was a utility truck making the rounds to support the grid. After the truck passed, a frond from a nearby palm tree made contact with a power line. The presenter then explained a fuse on this line would have blown because of this temporary issue, resulting in an unnecessary outage and the need for the utility crew to replace it. But S&C's TripSaver II Cutout-Mounted Recloser can test the line to determine if a fault is temporary and automatically restore power if it is, thereby eliminating the expense of sending a repair team to solve every problem.

The demo concluded with a scene of a cabin in a remote wooded area enhanced by chirping birds and playful squirrels that scampered around attendees' on-screen images. As the seasons progressed in front of them, participants saw how any number of temporary incidents, e.g., a lightning strike or an errant tree branch, can cause a service disruption in such a far-flung locale. These edge-of-the-grid risk factors can be lessened, the presenter explained, by the VacuFuse Self-Resetting Interrupter, which replaces single-use fuses above overhead distribution transformers and automatically restores power after a temporary fault.

At the end of the demonstration, the presenter invited participants to explore the rest of exhibit and, now that they had a clear idea of why S&C's products were important to their businesses and their customers, learn the technical ins and outs of what they just saw on-screen. More often than not, as soon as one group of enlightened attendees exited the demo, a fresh batch of curious observers watching from the aisle were ready to take their place and try the out-of-body experience for themselves.

Shock and Awe
S&C marketers set out to convey why the company's products matter. While that's a tough goal to quantify, the results from Dtech certainly were not. Based on benchmark data from past in-booth engagements, S&C hoped that no fewer than 75 attendees would participate in the mixed-reality demo.

However, the unique activation proved so alluring that 476 participants enjoyed some screen time by the end of the event. And since the first day of Dtech draws the most traffic in the exhibit hall, marketers wanted to increase opening-day footfalls by 5 percent compared to 2019, but ultimately bested that goal by 7 percentage points.

But perhaps the best indicator of S&C's success in the "why" department was the spike in the company's lead-conversion rate. Marketers desired a 10-percent bump compared to Dtech 2019. When the numbers were crunched, though, S&C upped its lead-conversion rate by 18 percent.

In addition to quantifiable data, marketers left the show with glowing testimonials. "Many attendees said the demo was one of the clearest, easiest ways they've seen to explain the importance of equipment like S&C's, and some asked whether they could use the activation in conversations with their regulators," Charleston says. "Not only were we able to influence our customers, but our customers wanted to influence their own stakeholders." So it seems S&C's demo generated another special effect that was anything but an illusion: a balance sheet as verdant as the green screen itself. E

Lessons Learned
Thinking of wowing attendees with a similar narrative-driven experience? Here's some advice from Alexandra Charleston, S&C Electric Co.'s manager of strategic communications.

Start planning as soon as possible. There's no such thing as too much time to plan. Successful and strategic large-scale activations require many months to bring from concept to completion, so start early – even right after you debrief from your previous show.

Involve stakeholders early. Getting your stakeholders on board from the onset helps sell ideas internally and smooths the path for budget approvals. This is especially important for large projects, first-time ideas, and companies that don't have budgets dedicated to customer experiences.

Start with your story. The power of the experience comes from how the technology supports the story. Ultimately, the goal is to have customers walk away remembering the ideas you wanted to land, and the story will make those stick. Never start with the technology and force a story into it.

Blend fun with education. Having both is key, especially in a trade show environment perfect for providing hands-on research and discovery. Even if attendees are already motivated to learn, people are people – they naturally gravitate to what's engaging. In other words, attendees come because of intrigue but stay because of content.

Consider what stands out. Trade shows are sensory-overloading experiences packed with your competitors. Think about what it's like for an attendee to walk the show, and choose a format that cuts through the clutter and differentiates you from what other exhibitors are doing.

Cater to your audience's behavior. Every audience demographic is different, and experiences should center around how they move, react, and absorb information. This influences everything, including the activation's size, structure, and duration. For example, if customers explore the show in groups, an individual experience isn't the best option.

Build an A Team. There's nothing more helpful than a strong team to support the various aspects of bringing a new experience to life. From subject-matter experts to review content and logistically minded team members to think through every detail of installation to the gregarious presenters who'll engage customers at the show, assemble the right people for the right roles and help them understand how they're integral to the big picture.
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