Exhibition Services

Scan Display’s responsibility is to put your company on the floor at an exhibition in such a way that your display stand attracts customers. Our exhibition services include

  • Project management – Our team includes project management experts who will help put your campaign together. Our highly trained team of professionals will design and deliver a powerful eye catching display for your campaign. It will be delivered on time and we guarantee satisfaction.
  • Marquees – Scan Display can supply a wide range of marquees for your next Trade Show.
  • Floor plan design – Our team of professionals include exhibition architects who will design and build a floor plan for your exhibition stand.
  • Electrics and lighting – All display stands require lighting and electrics designed to be compatible with the display and the equipment to be used. Our team of experts will handle this for you.
  • Carpets and floors – these are part of the overall project and included in our exhibition services
  • Air conditioning – the South African climate is such that air conditioning is sometimes a necessity. Our project management team will include this in the overall project.

Scan Display has been in the exhibition services business for twelve years and we have the experience that enables us to come up with a design that will pull potential customers to your display like a magnet. Take a look at our extensive portfolio to see some of our award winning display stands. To learn more about using our exhibition services , contact us at +27 11 447 4777

Exhibition Printing Considerations

When shopping for providers of exhibition printing services consider the following:

  • Types of exhibition printing offered
  • Costs involved
  • Materials on which they can do exhibition printing
  • Design capabilities of the team

The quality of exhibition printing must be outstanding, especially considering the fact that you will only have one chance to make a positive impression. The visitors will decide within ten seconds whether they want to visit your site or not. Once the visitors are at your booth, you will want them to take brochures, remember specific messages, and enquire about advertised products or services. For such you will need high quality exhibition printing and design. Don’t settle for the first company that offers such. Opt for a company with a proven track record in printing for exhibitions. The choice should be Scan Display.

Do your research first

Before you commit yourself to participating in a particular trade fair or exhibition, do yourself a favour and carry out a little research first. You need to be sure that a specific trade show is the best one for your goods or services. It is essential that you choose a trade show that has the kind of attendees that you want to target. Try to discover what the objectives are for a particular trade show, and evaluate the likely people who will attend. When you’ve got all the information you need, then is the time to evaluate whether this is the show for you. If it is, then is the time to start thinking about the design of your display stand. Scan Display can help you here. Once we know what your objectives are, our design team can set about designing a stunning display for you.

Trade show costs

Trade fairs often involve a considerable marketing investment by participating companies. Costs include space rental, design and construction of trade show displays, telecommunications and networking, travel, accommodation, and promotional literature and items to give away to attendees. In addition, costs are incurred at the show for services such as electrical, booth cleaning, Internet services, and material handling. If your company has never exhibited at a trade show before, budgeting for these costs may well be a shot in the dark, but they can add up to a considerable percentage of the overall marketing expenditure.

The Editor’s Note

About 60% of South Africa’s Blue Crane population resides in the Western Cape. Here the birds favour farmlands, particularly pastures and wheat plantations, above the indigenous Fynbos habitat. But climate change threatens this unusual success story. The western parts of our country are expected to be most hard hit by the extreme weather conditions that climate change brings, and existing agricultural practices could become economically unviable, with detrimental effects for the cranes.

Kerryn Morrison manages the ICF/EWT Partnership for African Cranes and, together with her passionate team of crane conservationists, is carefully monitoring the Western Cape’s Blue Cranes so that we can react to the signs of climate change well in advance of it becoming an insurmountable problem.

When I asked Kerryn how she came to be so passionate about cranes, she said they are a perfect flagship species that can be used to highlight environmental issues to people and so change environmentally destructive behaviour. Kerryn was just four years old when her nursery school teacher predicted she would work with animals, and she has never wanted to be anything other than a conservationist. Her dedication is not without reward, and she has received broad acclaim for her exceptional dedication to crane conservation, and is recognised as being instrumental in combating the trade in cranes that takes place throughout Africa on a daily basis. We are extremely proud of being able to say that Kerryn has grown her career with the EWT since 1995.

We will be celebrating the success of our crane conservationists on World Environment Day, on 5 June, with this year’s theme being ‘Your Planet Needs You – Unite to Combat Climate Change’. Learn more about this day and other EWT climate change projects by entering our online competition , open only to our loyal supporters, and stand in line to win a fabulous getaway to a South African destination.

– The Editor

Projects
The EWT at Nampo Harvest Day 2009

Every year the NAMPO Harvest Day provides the EWT with an opportunity to engage with visitors on conservation issues and projects, talk about problems and solutions, distribute educational materials to farmers, school groups and the like and promote the EWT as a whole. This year was no different. Click here to read more.

Contact: Claudia Hodkinson