Showcase Stands

Attractive Showcase Stands

If you want to make an impact at the next trade show that you take part in, then consider the use of showcase stands. These stands let your products take pride of place at any trade show and will allow your sales staff easy access to products in order to demonstrate their use to any trade show visitor. Showcase stands can also be personalised in a variety of ways to let your products stand out from the crowd. Many showcase stands are modular in nature allowing for easy set up and breakdown at the end of the trade show. Your showcase stands are an easy way to set yourself apart from the competition and lend an air of professionalism when presenting your products.

For information on the many varieties of showcase stands we have available, please contact us.

Showcase Stands

High Visibility Showcase Stands

If you want to maximise the impact of your point of sale material and products then you should choose from amongst the many different types of showcase stands that are available on the market. High visibility showcase stands make an immediate impact on consumers due to the fact that they can be customised to suit almost any application. As well as being portable they allow even the less experienced sales rep to set them up in a number of retail environments, making them ideal for use by small or medium sized enterprises. Their attractiveness is further enhanced by cost effectives.

If you would like to know more about how showcase stands can make a difference to your point of sale outreaches then contact us.

Showcases

Showcases and Display Cabinets

Your showcases need to display your goods in the best way possible to be most attractive to prospective buyers. The showcases also need to provide you with some security measures should the items on display be valuable or expensive. Locks as well as alarm systems can be placed on the display cabinets which only certain personnel will have access to. Storage cabinets for boxes and additional items for sale should also come with locks and security measure to further protect the goods.

To find out more about the safety measures you can use to secure the items in your showcases, please contact us.

Used Exhibits

These are existing exhibit or display stand properties, usually older and sometimes worn (though not necessarily), originally built for another purpose, available for rental or purchase. Many exhibit houses have a few of these lying about. Some exhibit houses have built their businesses on them. Just as there is nothing inherently wrong with a used car, there is nothing inherently wrong with a used exhibit. It depends upon the exhibit itself. Used exhibits may require the services of an on site labour source (show general contractor, or a labour contractor approved through show management) to set up, and often the rental exhibit provider can provided those services as part of the rental package to the exhibitor

Modular Exhibits

These exhibits fall between a pop-up display, and a panel & frame system. Whereas a pop-up is typically a small background property, a modular display is an entire space. They use a standardized basic structure, whether this be a metal framework, or thin, lightweight panel construction, which is then configured within the confines of the structure limitations to what the exhibitor requires. A study by Trade Show Week Magazine showed that modular exhibits weigh, on average, about 60% less than traditional custom exhibits. Similar to a Lego or Tinker-toy, the components are typically easily reconfigured into new layouts as the exhibitor may require from show to show. The components are often made from very lightweight materials, and transported in small traveling cases (often injection molded plastic). To learn more about Modular Exhibits call Scan Display at +27 11 447 4777

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