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Key Takeaways
- Creating emotional experiences draws people to your booth far more effectively than traditional giveaways or promotions.
- In an AI-driven marketing world, authentic human moments help brands stand out and build stronger connections.
Every year at major franchise conferences, the same conversation eventually happens among exhibitors.
Someone mentions how slow their booth traffic felt, another questions whether their booth location hurt them, and a third starts wondering whether trade shows are still worth the investment. And eventually someone says it.
“We just didn’t get enough people to our booth.”
Whenever I hear that complaint, I usually ask a simple question: What did you actually do to bring people there? Because the reality is that most booths follow the same predictable formula. A banner, a looping video on a monitor, a stack of brochures and maybe a small giveaway for anyone willing to scan their badge.
In a convention hall filled with hundreds of companies doing the same thing, everything starts to blur together. No one is walking across a crowded exhibition floor for a $10 gift card. At this year’s International Franchise Association (IFA) convention in Las Vegas, our team approached the booth with a different mindset. Instead of focusing on what materials we would display, we focused on what kind of moment we wanted people to experience when they walked by.
So we partnered with a local animal shelter and brought adoptable puppies to the booth.
It’s something we’ve done for three years now, and every time the reaction is immediate. People slow down when they notice them, someone stops to pet a puppy, and within minutes, a small crowd forms as conversations start naturally between strangers. This year, something even better happened.
Two of those puppies were adopted right from the trade show floor.
Why most booths fail to attract attention
Trade shows are environments of constant stimulation. Bright signage, product demos, speakers, music and hundreds of competing brands all fight for the same limited attention span from attendees who are often tired and overwhelmed.
In that kind of environment, information alone rarely captures attention. People are moving too quickly and processing too much to stop for another brochure or another product explanation. What breaks that pattern is emotion.
When something makes people smile, laugh or feel curious, it interrupts the rhythm of the trade show floor. Instead of scanning and walking, they pause — and that pause is where real engagement begins. The puppies created that moment instantly.
People walking by who might normally glance at a booth for two seconds suddenly stopped and stayed for several minutes. Some knelt down to hold a puppy. Others began telling stories about their own pets back home. Conversations that normally start with a pitch instead started with laughter. The entire tone of the interaction changed.
Authentic experiences create stronger conversations
What surprised many people wasn’t just the presence of puppies at a franchise conference. It was how naturally conversations unfolded afterward.
There was no need for an opening sales line or rehearsed introduction. People approached because they were happy and curious, and that meant every interaction started in a relaxed and genuine way. From there the conversations naturally shifted toward storytelling, marketing and how brands connect emotionally with their audiences. Authenticity has a powerful effect on engagement. When people feel comfortable, they listen more closely, share more openly and remember the interaction far longer than a typical transactional exchange.
Experiential marketing works because it replaces scripted pitches with shared moments.
Why authenticity matters even more in the AI era
There is another reason experiences like this resonate so strongly right now.
We are living in a marketing environment increasingly filled with artificial content. AI-generated images, stock footage and templated messaging have made it easier than ever to produce polished marketing materials.
But that convenience has also created a sense of sameness.
When everything looks perfectly produced, it often starts to feel impersonal. Audiences can sense when something is manufactured rather than experienced, and they respond much more strongly to content that feels genuine. That’s why real storytelling has become such a powerful differentiator. Real footage, real stories and real emotional reactions create a level of credibility that scripted content often struggles to achieve.
For us, that philosophy extends beyond the videos we produce and into the way we show up at events. If our brand is about capturing authentic stories, the experience at our booth should feel just as real.
Designing moments instead of booths
Entrepreneurs often spend months planning the logistics of trade shows. They design signage, print materials and promotional items while preparing talking points for the conversations they expect to have.
Those things matter, but they rarely determine whether someone remembers your brand after the event. What matters far more is the moment you create. People may forget the product features you explained or the brochure you handed them. But they will remember the experience that made them stop walking and engage with you in the first place.
At IFA this year, two puppies went home with new families.
But hundreds of attendees walked away with something else — a reminder that the most powerful marketing doesn’t always look like marketing at all. Sometimes it looks like a genuine moment in the middle of a busy trade show floor, where people pause, smile and connect over something real. And in a world increasingly filled with artificial content, those real moments matter more than ever.
Key Takeaways
- Creating emotional experiences draws people to your booth far more effectively than traditional giveaways or promotions.
- In an AI-driven marketing world, authentic human moments help brands stand out and build stronger connections.
Every year at major franchise conferences, the same conversation eventually happens among exhibitors.
Someone mentions how slow their booth traffic felt, another questions whether their booth location hurt them, and a third starts wondering whether trade shows are still worth the investment. And eventually someone says it.
“We just didn’t get enough people to our booth.”



