Missive First Trade Show

Missive First Trade Show

The time and energy invested in our product metrics pipeline allowed us to answer questions like which industries are extracting the most value out of Missive .

After crunching our numbers (organization size, core functionalities usage, ease of on-boarding), the answer was:

  1. Logistics/Transportation (mostly brokers & carriers)
  2. Travel/Property management (luxury travel agencies, tour operators)
  3. Finance/Legal (accountants, law firms)
  4. Retail (various sectors)
  5. Manufacturing (various sectors)

With this insight, our next question was: where can we meet as many people from these industries in person? Our first instinct was to go to a industry-specific trade shows.

With that in mind, three weeks ago, we identified FreightWaves Future of Supply Chain in Atlanta as the biggest short-term opportunity. We contacted the organizers and negotiated an interesting package:

  1. A 7-minute demo on the live stage
  2. A 6x6 booth
  3. A 10-minute interview on What the Truck??? by Timothy Dooner

Organization

Once confirmed, we had two weeks to organize the whole trip. Two team members would go: Janie Blouin-Grondin, CPA, MBA (COO) and myself (CEO). The first thing I did was to make noise about our attendance. I posted on LinkedIn, X (formerly Twitter), and the Hampton founders community. My angle was to be transparent about us having zero experience and going there to learn as much as possible.?

Instantly, people started to reach out privately to give tips on how we should approach this to get as much ROI as possible. I want to personally thank two people. Vic Cherubini , who proactively reached out, organized his thoughts around trade shows before our call, and shared valuable insights:

I also want to thank Maxime Villemure , an ex-pro poker player turned logistics entrepreneur, who reached out on X and proposed a call to teach me everything about 3PL/Logistics and his industry.

Meeting call with Maxime discussion the logistic industry.

With these personal coaching sessions and Janie’s firsthand experience with trade shows, we understood the need to reach out to as many people as possible before the show.

  1. Contacted our existing customers in the industry
  2. Make noise on LinkedIn/X
  3. Cold outreach to attendees

The first two were easy. The last was harder as we did not have a list of attendees. However, the Future of Supply Chain website had logos of all the businesses attending. We took screenshots, then used ChatGPT-4o to identify the domain names related to all logos. We then passed that domain list to Hunter.io and got a list of possible email addresses to reach out to.

Janie then proceeded to message people on LinkedIn or cold-reach them via email about our presence at the event.

Execution

All in all, we successfully scheduled two demos through these messages. Not bad, but not great. The good news is the conference wasn’t huge, so all attendees saw our booth, making pre-booking meetings less important.

Vic provided excellent tips for our booth, but we ended up having no time to implement most of them. We kept things simple. Arnaud Spuhler quickly created a video that we looped on the TV:

I used my laptop to demo the product directly to attendees. All in all, we did 33 demos at the booth. I did a good job with the demo on the main stage, both highlighting the pain of brokers dealing with a massive volume of emails and the solutions Missive has to offer (team inboxes, AI, rules & automation, custom integrations and analytics).

My 7-minute demo on the main stage

Many people also discovered the product while listening to the radio interview I did live on the What the Truck??? show.

We mostly encountered three types of leads:

  1. Potential customers (mostly brokers but not only)
  2. Potential industry-specific integrations (TMS)
  3. Content/marketing partnerships (industry influencers, founders)
  4. VIPs (investors, VPs of large logistics businesses)

We scanned their badges and took screenshots of the person to remember post-event who and what. Janie also took notes in the lead retrieval app. Janie and I spent our airport transit day following-up with everyone we talked to or showed interest.

Follow-ups done in our 10-hour layover at Newark airport ??

From our conversations, I assume we can hope to convert at least 5 organizations, all having need for 50+ seats each, to Missive.

Conclusion

We have yet to assess the ROI of this trip to Atlanta, but just as an experiment, it was an absolute eye-opener and I came away wanting to invest way more resources into attending industry-specific trade shows.

For industry veterans and salespeople, all the above is SO obvious, but for us at Missive, product people, it's all new.

I need to do/experiment with those things before I can fully internalize their value. One quote from Paul Graham I absolutely abide by is “action produces information,” and we absolutely did with this first trade show.

p.s. Special thanks to Craig Fuller who gave last minute pass to experience racing Porsche!


Ishu Bansal

Optimizing logistics and transportation with a passion for excellence | Building Ecosystem for Logistics Industry | Analytics-driven Logistics

5 个月

What were some of the key takeaways from your first trade show experience as a product person?

回复
Timothy Dooner

WHAT THE TRUCK?!? Host & Producer at FreightWaves + SiriusXM | Award-winning podcaster | TEDx Speaker | Follow me on Twitter @timothydooner

5 个月

Philippe-Antoine Lehoux thank you so much for checking out our industry, it was an honor to be part of your introduction to this space!

Andrew Verboncouer

I help logistics & supply chain companies innovate like startups.

5 个月

Great job with the rapid-fire demo and great meeting you in person!

Trenton Martin

Broker Expansion Account Executive

5 个月

You handled it like a PRO! Hope to see you at more trade shows in the future and happy to have you in my network. Excited to see Missive grow!

要查看或添加评论,请登录

Philippe-Antoine Lehoux的更多文章

社区洞察

其他会员也浏览了