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[00:00:16] Jay: Alright, we are back for do this. Not that podcast. We have an amazing guest who's here. We have Bob Ez, right? So Bob is the founder and CEO of Event, Moby Now. You might know Event Moby, but if you don't, you should because they're one of the monsters in the event world in, in terms of end-to-end event management stuff.

[00:00:36] Jay: They have, uh, platforms for everything from uh, getting lead capture to printing badges, to managing events. If you're in the event world event Mobiley takes care of over 30. Thousand different event planners across 90 countries. It is wild what Bob has built. I'm so excited. We're gonna rip through pitfalls about all things events today.

[00:00:58] Jay: Bob, welcome to the show.

[00:00:59] Bob: [00:01:00] Thanks Jay. Can I just like record that and put it on our website? I think you just did a killer pitch for Venmo. I love it.

[00:01:05] Jay: Amazing. I'm excited 'cause it's not easy 'cause you know, you all do a lot. And what we're gonna crush in this episode are all sorts of pitfalls to avoid if you're an attendee event, an exhibitor, a potential sponsor. We're gonna get into rapid fire tips on all of that, but before we do, give everybody kind of the, the one minute, how did Bob become Bob?

[00:01:24] Jay: How did it all happen?

[00:01:27] Bob: Oh boy. Uh, so I'm a very Bo I, I I, I, I was gonna say I was, but I sometimes, some guys still am a very boring engineer. That's my background. And I used, I used to work for a company called Nvidia, which nobody knew up until like three years ago.

[00:01:42] Jay: I.

[00:01:42] Bob: I wish I, I sold all of them, man. I was actually calculating, I won't tell you, I, I would.

[00:01:47] Bob: Basically be a multimillionaire if I kept all of it. But so, so is everybody else has ever worked at these tech companies anyways. I used to work for a tech company, but I love going to conferences. I love going to, um, exhibitions. It [00:02:00] just like was my jam from a networking point of view. Uh, from education point of view, and this is like, if you think about it, uh, even at the beginning of internal days, like conferences were the place where authentic, original content were being distributed.

[00:02:13] Bob: You would see new people that you would build connection from all of our across the world. So I love going to conferences and it, at Nvidia, I was working on the early chip sets that they were making mobile phones. I mean, this goes back to like 2009 and I was kind of, uh, exposed to this future of phones and that was kind of the beginning of the demo.

[00:02:30] Bob: I'm like. Oh, why do I have to carry a tote bag with these like printed show guides? And I don't know who else is going through this conference. I wanna know ahead of time so I can plan my days. And I kind of approached it from an, uh, from an attendee pain point. And that was kind of the beginning. We built a platform, uh, event planners loved it.

[00:02:48] Bob: Sponsors loved it. Um, we created a lot of engagement for speakers through the platform. Uh, and that was the beginning part of it, that mobi was to change. Attendee experience and live engagement at conferences. And [00:03:00] then we grew out to event marketing and attendee management and stuff like that, and kind of became an end-to-end solution for professional conferences, right?

[00:03:08] Bob: There's lots of different types of events, uh, and our focus is primarily, you know, multi-day, uh, corporate conferences. Training summits, sales kickoffs, user conferences, annual general meetings for, uh, trade professionals, things like that. So it's been a very interesting, what, what is it now, like 16 years.

[00:03:29] Bob: I actually started at my, uh, birthday when I was, I turned 30th. I'm like, no, I need to start my company. And that was kind of the be.

[00:03:36] Jay: That's amazing. It's an amazing story. Um, and it's a really cool background. So from that perspective, let's, let's talk about the attendees first. Everybody out there is either attended an event, they want to attend an in-person event. Uh, they, they, they're like, is it worth it? What will I get out of it? So, from an attendee perspective, what is the like, number one, either must do or pitfall to avoid to [00:04:00] really get the most out of an event?

[00:04:03] Bob: Obviously collect all this slack. Then post the pictures on LinkedIn. That's like my number one tip. Uh, I mean it's uh, it's intimidating for a lot of people going to their first conference or, or even multiple, I mean that it doesn't matter how many conferences you've been, like, you go to this new city.

[00:04:22] Bob: Uh, this place that did not exist. Somebody built this trade show. You're going to this room with all these strangers and unless you're like a hundred percent, you know, extrovert, like there's gotta be a lot of hesitation and you don't have to show up. Um, so naturally a lot of people kind of just try to follow the ba Okay, lemme go in the session and back in the room, listen to the content, take notes.

[00:04:45] Bob: But I think there, the, the not, and the thing that people miss out is you. You go to this event and, and we talk about serendipitous, sort of running into people and that's great, but that's kind of like, I think that's 10 years ago. Like with all this [00:05:00] stuff that's out there. Most event apps have a list. You can figure out who's, who's there, so you can plan your days, reach out to people.

[00:05:06] Bob: But you know, if you wanna do that investment, that's great. But the number one thing I think people should do is when they meet someone is like, what are you doing for dinner? Oh, let's, let's, let's meet up. Are you saying after the conference, let's go explore the city and the best, um, sort of relationships?

[00:05:24] Bob: Long-term relationship I've had has been in, um, sort of excursions outside the event has been in, uh, around lunch table, uh, the night events, a after sort of day one, day two, uh, and it's been like four or five people hanging out, you know, few hours. That's really where. You know, true networking at conferences happens, and those are the people that you probably, uh, will connect for years on.

[00:05:50] Bob: Um, so that, that, that's a very simple tip. Like just ask people what they're doing for dinner, uh, literally after the

[00:05:57] Jay: I, I, that's actually very important because you know what, I don't think people are [00:06:00] intentional about that aspect of when they go to an event, they're always like, okay, I got this session booked and this, that, whatever. But you're absolutely right that the networking is not just at a, at a booth. The networking, the real networking is being intentional about creating relationships.

[00:06:14] Jay: So I think that's an awesome tip.

[00:06:17] Bob: Yeah, it's, it's, it's huge. But, you know, there's a whole bunch of stuff, uh, you know, you as an attendee you could do in terms of planning, uh, if you have the time, but most people don't, right. It's just people running from meeting to meeting and then you just get on your next thing is like, oh my God, I forgot to book my plane.

[00:06:32] Bob: You gotta get on the trip, you know, plan your trip, you know, show up to the conference. And, you know, planners, um, you know, major conferences have a really good point. Like they do a lot of work and planning and, and ahead of time to make sure even people that are completely unprepared. It's like, Hey, show up here for this thing, and then you have this choice right now between this and this, and you can, it's, it's not a huge deal if you don't do your planning as an attendee.

[00:06:54] Bob: I hope no planners listening to this because they always want them to read all their emails, you know, no before you [00:07:00] go. But, you know, very few attendees actually really go through that stuff, unfortunately. But, uh, you know, follow the program at, at, at the sessions and, um, you know, follow up with people after the show.

[00:07:09] Bob: You'd be surprised, like. I get from people that just have random conversation, you know, at at events and when I get their LinkedIn invites, the next day I remember who they are. I remember the conference. But if it's like two weeks later, I'm like, my head is in a different place and I'm not even talking about sponsors and, you know, you know, salespeople reaching out after the show.

[00:07:29] Bob: I'm just talking about like normal conversations. People forget. So you gotta like follow up, like even as a. You know, as an engineer going to a, you know, you know, dev summit, like follow up marketer, go into marketing, then, you know, follow up with

[00:07:43] Jay: A hundred percent. You know, speed to LinkedIn is so important. Uh, I'm all about that. I'll go in my hotel room that night. I'll connect with everybody I spoke with, met with you, cannot wait. So, all right, let's flip the script now. Now, okay. I'm that marketing manager out there. I got a little bit of budget I might exhibit.

[00:07:59] Jay: At a show, at [00:08:00] my sponsor show. I mean, for me, over the years, I've wasted so much money. I bought the lanyards with my logo on it. You know, I made sure that my, my logo was on some, it's such, well, I, I had my logo on some sort of big banner. It would be like the bronze level, the lowest littlest thing. I'd be looking at it like, what did I spend my money on?

[00:08:18] Jay: Like, so what is, what is the best way to use your money to really get leads and exposure, whether you're sponsoring or exhibiting?

[00:08:25] Bob: Oh my God. The lit, literally the million dollar question. Um, and, and all this stuff you mentioned, I actually don't think they're bad. because what you're doing, going to a lot of these events, it is creating awareness, right? So people don't know you either, you're going as a startup, you know, people don't know you.

[00:08:39] Bob: You're, you're going as a small company, most of your TAM doesn't know who you are. Uh, or you're a big company. You actually want people to, like your customers to like get reminded and not go to your competitors. So all these little things actually does have an impact, but there's a priority of like impact.

[00:08:54] Bob: Um, so I'll, I'll go with my best step, which is give away a car and scan everybody's [00:09:00] badges. Um, don't do that.

[00:09:03] Jay: line item, get my budget for that right now.

[00:09:06] Bob: Yeah. Um, I mean, the car can be a toy car. I mean, it's like all in fine, fine prints, right? So, so, uh, lots of stuff to do and I think as a sponsor, it's also like you can get really lost in.

[00:09:20] Bob: Bronze package has these like 12 different options. And you know, I literally was, my brother has a AI startup and I was just, he, he is going to the trade show and he is like, what do I do? And I'm looking at him, I'm like, this is a lot of stuff for someone that has never been to a show. So usually people get better when they go to the same trade show, like year two, year three.

[00:09:36] Bob: You kind of get it. Every show has a formula. There are things that matter in a show that, in a different trade show actually is not that, you know, impactful. So, um, I think you have to test the show, but if you kind of think about the stuff that really, really matters for a sponsor going to an event. It's actually not at the show.

[00:09:55] Bob: As funny as this sounds, it is the promotion before the show. Uh, that's 'cause when [00:10:00] people are at the show, like they're going to, you know, thousands of different booth, they're talking to so many people, they're like, you literally have like five second of their headspace and then. And then it's over.

[00:10:11] Bob: Whereas before the event, people are planning and you'd be surprised how few sponsors actually do outreach to just let people know like, Hey, we're gonna be at this show that you invest. You're gonna invest a week of your time and travel going. We're gonna talk about these new things and if this fits your, you know, rocky boat, not come chat with us.

[00:10:30] Bob: And I don't think that's spam. Honestly, I, I think you can be better at targeting the right audience. So don't send it to every attendee. You gotta do the work. I mean, you're a master of email marketing, Jay, so I don't have to bring it up. Uh, on, on your show, you probably talked about a lot of this stuff, but, you know, finding the right people and that email can actually be very relevant because people going to this trade show want to know where should I go?

[00:10:51] Bob: Which booth should I visit? And when they see something in an email that they like, okay, that's a good one. They may actually delete your email. They will remember that, you [00:11:00] know, name. So when they show up, there's like, oh, this is, that's the guy that emailed me. And you know, they're afraid they don't know who to talk to, so they just go to that booth.

[00:11:07] Bob: It's like, oh, I got your email. Like, that could be like literally the opener for, for someone. So anyways, the, the promotion I think is like the thing that I would argue 90% of sponsors don't do. Isn't that crazy? Like.

[00:11:21] Jay: it, it is sad 'cause they don't even, you're, it's a great piece of advice because you're wasting your money on the sponsorship. Total waste. And lemme, lemme give you this tactic that we do, and you tell me if this is stupid. Probably is. So when we're thinking about sponsoring, uh, an event or exhibiting an event, what our team does is they look at the sponsors and they go back a few years and they see if the same companies have been sponsoring for like three plus years.

[00:11:46] Jay: Because our theory is. That means that those companies got a lot of value of it. So they, they came back year after year, after year. Do you think that that is ridiculous or a good, good plan?

[00:11:57] Bob: That is ingenious. [00:12:00] I love

[00:12:00] Jay: there you go.

[00:12:01] Bob: And especially with these AI tools, so, so easy to do a lot of this stuff, right?

[00:12:06] Jay: Yeah. That's

[00:12:06] Bob: past it was difficult.

[00:12:08] Jay: Why don't we do that? Why haven't we using AI for that?

[00:12:10] Jay: Oh, so stupid. Alright, I got a random question before we run outta time 'cause I'm curious about this and now everyone, we're gonna lose half the audience, but I don't care. One of the things that you all are involved with is actual badge making. Like when you go to a show, you got the stupid thing around your neck, you got the badge.

[00:12:25] Jay: Okay? And I was going deep on event Moby, and there you have so much stuff about the size of it. Two-sided. Whatever. I'm like sitting there, I'm like, oh my God, this is crazy. So I need you to hit me with like, like what is it about a badge that makes a great badge versus a terrible badge?

[00:12:45] Bob: You know, you wanna know the real story actually. So we do so many different things at of AM Mobi, but we were known as the event app company, right? Live engagement, uh, all this stuff happens at the conference and. We started building all these features like [00:13:00] six, seven years ago and like people would still think of us as an event app company and we're like we, we simplify.

[00:13:05] Bob: We simplify this sort of event app as one of the first companies in the space. We took something that was so complicated you had to spend 30, $40,000 with like a consultant company to build native apps. I'm talking about like 10, 15 years ago to something that you could do with a couple clicks and you have this like amazing event app for your conference for a few thousand dollars.

[00:13:24] Bob: And like we, that's how we blew up as a bootstrap company. Like all our competitors are not around anymore or they sold out and our sort of vision was event planners are so busy and they just need something really simple. And sometimes they spend a lot of time on things that don't matter. And honestly, I feel like badges are one of those things that if you talk to a very experienced.

[00:13:46] Bob: Conference organizer or an event planner, it doesn't matter if it's a corporate event, incentive trip, you know, education something, whatever it is, and you say, what's your biggest, you know, hassle. They're badges. They hate badges. Why? Why do they hate badges? [00:14:00] First of all, it's so unpredictable because the physical products, so you gotta work with the vendor.

[00:14:04] Bob: You gotta like figure out the design. You gotta send you a sample if you have all the time. And at the end of the day, there's something you're gonna get wrong and they're gonna spend, if they wanna have the budget, you're gonna spend so much money. Like I know conferences, they spend 20, 30, $40 per badge.

[00:14:18] Bob: Like a kid. You not, and I'm like. It's important, like we do a lot of content on badges because I think badges are important. It's like the first thing at the conference they put on your neck, right? Think about a medal, right? That's gonna like, welcome to this conference, here's your badge, and then you feel proud and you got this thing, and other people look at it, right?

[00:14:36] Bob: The first thing they look at is like your badge. And then they look at you, right? It's like, what's your title and company. It's like, who are you? So it is an important piece, but it's like, is it. You can simplify it. So we've been doing a lot of content and actually we redesigned our product. We also worked with some amazing partners.

[00:14:53] Bob: So when you need a really fancy badge. You know, PVC plastic, like, you know, whatever. [00:15:00] Like, I, I don't wanna go through details of this stuff 'cause all poor people that don't know anything about it, it's a whole world out there and some great companies out there. And we're like, that's not for everybody.

[00:15:09] Bob: That's for like that top tier conferences, lots of budget and there is hundred thousand events that have not a lot of time and not a lot of budget. And they need a good batch because it's important. And, and then when you go to those events, you realize. They delegate the batch to a coordinator that just started.

[00:15:25] Bob: They have no experience, uh, or a designer that's not even from the event industry. They take something that looks good on a screen and I think they, it works like as a badge. They like tiny fonts and you can't even read the name. Um, and there's like, half of it is branding. It's all these typical mistake, uh, for a name bash.

[00:15:44] Bob: And that kind of says a lot about. Event industry. 'cause we were talking like, what, like a few minutes just on the badge itself. I mean there's like so many things happen in this event and we wanted to simplify this thing that is very important. But really you can do it in a very low cost [00:16:00] and really fast.

[00:16:01] Bob: And we built a whole new design system that you, you bring your background, you design your thing, it automated automatically, pulls a lot of cool stuff, customizes it, personalize the badge. Without doing a lot of work, just a couple clicks and in the print process we're like, what? What's the biggest problem with these badges?

[00:16:17] Bob: Well, they got, they got these printers that need to have like ethernet connection cables and power. It's like, forget that. Like let's make it simple like name limbo that goes on a ice badge. So we build a truly wireless batch, like you can take this thing with you. Give people their badges on a bus or on a lawn or in a yacht, uh, without worrying about a lot of these details.

[00:16:38] Bob: So that's simplification of the hardware, the printing process. Like you print, it shows up on your door in a couple weeks and we have like print partners that do that. But you don't have to go to a print house, send proof, get that stuff back. And honestly, I feel like in a, in a world of AI and automation and all these things, like that's what people need.

[00:16:54] Bob: It's just like, I need a badge, gimme a good template. Like somebody that QCs my work, because I [00:17:00] do this once a year. Like a lot of event planners, it's not like they think about the badge like every day. It's not like they, they're badge designers, but they have to do the badge as part of their job. So we kind of help them create the right badge really fast, really low cross, and it's, and it really, it blew up.

[00:17:15] Bob: It's like, and it's kind of crazy that number one selling product, like in terms of growth. We still, you know, registration and event app is, you know, core of our business. But, you know, the badge growth has been quite, uh, quite rapid. And, you know, in the world of event tech and, you know, as a software company, a lot of people that work in software companies know, it's like you have different products.

[00:17:34] Bob: Uh, you, you have different features in your product, competes with your competitors, uh, and. Sometimes you're better than somebody else. So bad is great because I think we beat almost every competitor. So they're using some other part of the competitor. But then we go in and we have to integrate with them, and then our conversation next says, why don't you use this for the rest of the event?

[00:17:52] Bob: So, uh, it's a great business strategy, um, as sort of a land and expand.

[00:17:57] Jay: I love that. And it's also a good business lesson for everybody out [00:18:00] there. You know, you don't need to make something that is, uh, brand new. You could look at, you know, pieces of an industry like badge seems like such a, a relic, but it's so critical and you add new, new spins to it, new technology, and you can really have a fantastic business.

[00:18:15] Jay: So I love that event. Moby is using that as like a Trojan horse in. To all the other services that you have and, and doing a great job, obviously. And so listen, everybody, we're gonna put all Bob's information, event Moby's information in the show notes. You gotta follow him on LinkedIn, it's Bob and then VAEZ event.

[00:18:33] Jay: Moby is event, and then MOBI. Okay, you gotta check them out. Uh, Bob, any partying words for the world out there about events and what they should be doing or not doing or whatever?

[00:18:44] Bob: Go to an event, go to a local event. If you don't have the budget, honestly, in the word of ai, the only thing authentic and original these days. From people to content is at events. Um, so we thought at the beginning of AI is like, oh, is everything gonna be automated events? Like, do people are people are gonna go to events [00:19:00] because there's so much content and all this stuff?

[00:19:01] Bob: I, I think we as human beings, we need to connect with other human beings. Uh, we need to have trust and relationship and a lot of that stuff is, is happens at events and conferences. So go support your local event or your favorite event in your industry. Join an association. Uh, have fun. Meeting new people I think is the best part of life and business life, honestly, I used to love it 15 years ago as an employee going to conferences, I would like, my boss hated me because I wanted to go to all the conferences, and I think you should do that.

[00:19:29] Bob: Go, go, go. Be the penny. Penny your boss, boss that it's like, it's just, you know, they, they need to send you to conference. Um, and, and if you are, have an opportunity as, as a, as part of your marketing team or business team, run an event, start small, like invite your local customers to a dinner. Like, it's not that hard to just build that trust one-on-one.

[00:19:49] Bob: Like we, we gotta, we gotta, there's so much digital stuff that we crave that, you know, in person, um, sort of, um, relationship and [00:20:00] interaction and you'd be surprised, um, you know how amazing lovely things happens when people meet.

[00:20:05] Jay: Listen, I, if I had to start all over again to. Day's world, I would want to be in the in-person event industry. There's nothing more, uh, AI proof. Not that AI's not gonna be a part of it, but human, human connection is everything. I think what event mobile is doing is really important. I think what you're doing is important and I appreciate you being on the show.

[00:20:23] Bob: Thanks Jay. Really appreciate it.

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