Banner Stands White Papers 10-14-10
Transcription
Banner Stands White Papers 10-14-10
An overview of banner stand options, including marketing ideas, basic production guidelines for trouble-free graphics, the types of banner stands available and their recommended applications. Banner stands can be used for a variety of applications and can provide a foothold into markets you may have never considered. For instance, there’s a trade show, expo or meeting for every conceivable type of business. You might be surprised at the niche markets that produce miniature trade shows and meetings locally. Keep an eye out for all the meetings and events in your area and tap into the opportunity to provide banner stands to those who are exhibiting. Here’s but a partial list of venues, special events, organizations and businesses where you can sell banner stand graphics: • Sporting events: The venue itself, boosters and businesses that provide services at the venue, as well as businesses that would like to advertise at the event Banner stands are an economical, portable and interchangeable alternative for all types of displays. • Schools: Local schools are looking for relatively inexpensive ways to promote their events and provide directional graphics at the event itself • Festivals: From the festival organizer to the vendors, opportunity knocks exponentially • Art shows: Give the artist that extra boost with a banner stand, and find partners in the art and photography markets who will want banner stands for future events and to provide to their own customers. Wedding photographers, for instance, would love to have that extra something special for their wedding bride clients 800-453-9538 • lexjet.com Making the Most of Banner Stands | 1 • Chamber of commerce: Your local Chamber always has some type of event going on, from meetings to seminars to simple Chamber cocktail parties and the like • Local clubs and service organizations: Partner with Kiwanis and similar organizations to provide them with nice banner-stand graphics for their various events and meetings • Sales meetings: Companies are always looking for ways to build and reinforce their messaging to their employees during these all-hands-on deck meetings • Special events: Chili cook-offs, car shows, gun shows, bike shows, boat shows… The list is endless • Local governments: A municipality and all of its departments, for instance, are a lot easier to sell graphics to than the state or federal government, and they always have something going on that requires graphics, particularly banner-stand graphics. The parks and recreation department is a great one to take a closer look at; think of all the sports, camps and activities it provides, as well as all the facilities it operates Banner stands provide eye-level, attentiongrabbing advertising for your customer. • Speakers and seminars: Keep an eye out for seminars and workshops travelling to town and hit them up for banner-stand graphics that will reinforce their message • Showrooms: Businesses all up and down Main Street are looking for quick and easy ways to promote their sales and any special events they have planned at street level or in their showroom • Local malls: Not all malls or shopping centers are owned by a giant conglomerate. Find out if any are locally owned and make a sale • Community-wide sales events: In Denver, for instance, the Denver Sports Authority hosts its annual Sniagrab (Bargains 800-453-9538 • lexjet.com Making the Most of Banner Stands | 2 spelled backwards), a pre-season ski industry sale that starts Labor Day Weekend. Other sports stores in the area hold similar events, usually through October. Vendors inside and outside the store who show up to sell their wares include ski resorts, ski apparel and equipment companies. These types of events offer an excellent opportunity to approach multiple companies and organizations with banner-stand graphics for their vendor booth, which is usually a tent in the case of Sniagrab Production Tips Before we discuss the three basic types of banner stands – retractable, telescoping and spring-back – we’ll start at the beginning with some basic production guidelines to ensure you don't get caught on the back end with graphics that fail while they're out and about on the trade-show circuit or on display in a store, at a meeting or any other venue. There are few things more hateful than a customer's desperate (and usually angry) phone call from some trade show in Timbuktu demanding replacement graphics right away. Sporting events of all kinds are excellent venues for banner stands. There are a lot of opportunities to sell graphics to everyone involved in the event, from sponsors to organizers. Drying time: After printing, and if you decide to laminate the graphics (more on that decision-making in the next section), the recommended drying time before lamination is at least 24 hours. If the ink is dry to the touch after 24 hours, and not at all tacky, it should be good to go. Furthermore, be careful not to oversaturate the graphic with ink. Profiles, settings, and file management are extremely critical. Cure time: As with ink, the laminate's adhesive should be given 24 hours to cure before graphics are trimmed and rolled. Given time constraints in production, the full 24 hours may not be possible, so allow at least two hours. Still, the longer you can allow 800-453-9538 • lexjet.com Making the Most of Banner Stands | 3 the adhesive to cure, the better off the graphics will be. If the adhesive is not given enough time to cure, it will not bond properly to the print, causing tunneling, delaminating and edge lift. The adhesive’s cure time is the most important factor that determines the strength of the graphic. Cutting and trimming: Always cut through the softer material first, when applicable. Use a sharp blade and trim the graphics with a straight edge at a 90-degree angle on tempered glass. Self-healing mats and other softer surfaces will compromise the bond between the laminate and the print. When producing a fabric display, use a hot knife to keep the fabric’s edges from fraying. Rolling graphics: Always roll the graphics with the thinnest material facing out. For instance, when using a 7-mil display film with a 15-mil laminate, the display film should be on the outside as the graphic is being rolled up for shipment. When both materials are the same thickness, always roll them the same way every time, and don't roll them in the reverse direction to make them lay flat. Also, roll the graphics at a minimum 12-in. diameter. Make sure to provide the customer with simple rolling and packaging instructions. Think of all the empty spaces and events that could use a banner stand graphic – or two or three or ten – from malls to meetings. Sledding: Use a sled when you laminate. A sled – which should be made of a hard substrate like Masonite, acrylic, or aluminum – helps ensure even pressure across the web. Apply a release liner to the sled to prevent adhesive build-up. The release liner will allow you to easily clean off the adhesive. Eliminating curl: If you're having a problem with curling when you apply pressure-sensitive laminates and backers, either reduce the speed of your take-up reel or put less pressure on the rollers. 800-453-9538 • lexjet.com Making the Most of Banner Stands | 4 Printing on film: The best material choice for rollable trade-show graphics is an inkjet film, such as polycarbonate, polyester and polypropylene. Fibrous paper tends to split, tear and curl. Making a Stand Spring-back, telescopic, and retractable banner stands are space-saving, lightweight, collapsible solutions for single-panel displays that can also be displayed together for a multi-panel display. Retractable banner stands have the added benefit of protecting the graphic in transit and during setup since the graphic is rolled up into the hardware itself, but they’re usually more expensive than spring-back and telescopic stands. Most retractable banner stands can only use a graphic that’s 15 mils or thinner, but the safest bet is to keep the total thickness (printable material and laminate) to 12 mils or less since there are many banner stands on the market that can’t hold anything over 12-13 mils thick. Make sure you know the limitations of your display hardware ahead of time. Partner with artists and photographers to help showcase their work. With retractable displays you don’t have to laminate unless you want to change the finish (a textured finish works best in a trade-show environment, while gloss may be best for retail to give the display more pop and bring out the colors), or if it’s going to be placed in a high-touch area. Generally speaking, you can use a less expensive media like polypropylene without lamination for retractable banner stands. However, for whichever type of banner stand you decide to use it’s best not to use a low-grade vinyl banner material since it will have a tendency to curl, particularly when the temperature changes a lot. And, when using a pressure-sensitive laminate avoid paper print media, which has less durability and tends to split after repeated use. Display films and fabric both work well with all types of banner stands. 800-453-9538 • lexjet.com Making the Most of Banner Stands | 5 There are a number of different retractable banner stand styles, widths and finishes available. The better-made and more flexible the banner stand, the more expensive it will be. For instance, some retractable stands include an interchangeable cartridge system so that you can simply plug a new graphic into the cartridge and ship that, rather than sending the client an entirely new banner stand. For tighter budgets and simple setups, spring-back and telescoping banner stands may fit the bill. As the name implies, a telescoping banner stand has the advantage of controlling the height of the banner, typically up to 80 inches tall. The spring-back banner stand, on the other hand, is under tension and needs to be a certain height. Its advantage is simply that it costs less. Opacity is an issue you’ll want to consider if the banner will be placed in the middle of a well-lit space. If you don’t want to see the hardware’s shadow behind the graphic it’s best to use a block-out display film, fabric or banner. But, if it’s against the wall you can use lighter fabrics and films. If you use a fabric, make sure to pick one that cuts easily without fraying; cotton, for instance, tends to fray. Use different materials and banner stand configurations for different effects to draw more attention to the display. If you have any additional tips or interesting projects you’d like to share, or questions about finding the right combination of banner stand and materials, contact a LexJet account specialist at 800-453-9538. 800-453-9538 • lexjet.com Making the Most of Banner Stands | 6