Promotional model

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A Promotional Model is a person hired to drive consumer demand for a product, service, brand, or concept by directly interacting with consumers. A promotional model can be female or male, and typically is attractive in physical appearance, and not only provides information to the consumer about the product or service, but makes it appealing to them in some way, enabling the consumer to identify with the product, service, or the company that offers it. While the length of interaction with the consumer may be short, the promotional model delivers a live experience that reflects on the product or service he or she is representing.

Even though this form of marketing touches fewer consumers per dollar spent than traditional advertising media (such as print, radio, and television) the consumer’s perception of a brand, product, service, or company, is often more profoundly affected by a live person-to-person experience. The influence of this type of marketing campaign on consumer’s purchasing habits tends to be more enduring as well. Promotional models often interact with many people per unit time so as to maximize quantitative influence on consumer demand. The responsibilities of the promotional model depend on the particular marketing campaign she or he is carrying out, and typically include but are not limited to the following:

  1. increasing product awareness
  2. creating an association in the consumer’s mind between the product or brand and a particular idea (natural beauty, classic heritage, edgy sex appeal, reliability)
  3. providing product information
  4. handing items to consumers, such as a sample of the product itself, a small gift, or printed information

Marketing campaigns that make use of Promotional Models may take place in stores or malls, at tradeshows, special events, clubs, or even at outdoor public spaces. They are often planned at high traffic locations to reach as many consumers as possible, or at venues at which a particular type of target consumer is expected to be present.

Contents

[edit] Spokesmodel

Main article: Spokesmodel

[edit] Trade Show Model

Eidos "Booth Babes" E3 2000
Eidos "Booth Babes" E3 2000

Trade Show Models work a trade show floorspace or booth, and represent a company to attendees. Trade Show Models are typically not regular employees of the company, but are freelancers hired by the company renting the booth space. They are hired for several reasons. Trade Show Models make a company's booth more visibly distinguishable from the hundreds of other booths with which it competes for attendee attention. Also, Trade Show Models are articulate and quickly learn and explain or disseminate information on the company and its product and service, and can assist a company in handling a large number of attendees which the company might otherwise not have enough employees to accommodate, therefore increasing the number of sales or leads resulting from participation in the show. Trade Show Models can be skilled at drawing attendees into the booth, engaging them in conversation, and at spurring interest in the product, service, or company. Trade show models may be highly skilled at screening the mass of show attendees for target consumers or at obtaining attendee information so that they may be solicited after the show. Attire varies and depends on the nature of the show, and on the image the company would like to portray. They may wear a dress, or simple but flattering business attire. They sometimes wear wardrobe that is particular to the company, product, or service represented. The slang term 'Booth Babe' has occasionally been used to refer to a trade show model. The term focuses on physical appearance, or specifically on wardrobe, which, depending on the type of trade show, can be thematic or sexy. For example, at a builder's convention a model may be dressed as a construction worker with cut-offs, tight t-shirt, tool belt, and hard hat. Girls that work at a car show or similar event are often called 'Car Show Girls', 'Race Queens', 'Pit Babes'.

[edit] Cosplay Models VS Traditional Promo Models

Recently there's been controversy about whether to place the promotional model, or the more product-savy cosplay model, in trade shows like The Cable Show and E3.

Cosplay Models are pursued by many companies for promotional and print opportunities that were previously filled by regular agency models. Their ability to re-create fantastical costumes and portray their chosen characters with accuracy is what's fueling the switch from the standard promotional models of the past, that were merely 2-D reflections of the characters they were hired to exude.

[edit] References

[edit] External Links

Using Trade Show Models Effectively

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