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eTrak Online Sessions
June 9, 2026
2023 Crash Course: What You Need to Know About Trade Show Shipping
June 16, 2026
4007R Exhibit Law Primer: Legal Concepts and Practical Advice
July 9, 2026
3006R Omnichannel Marketing Strategies for Your Live Events and Trade Shows
July 28, 2026
3050R Focus on Attention: How to Optimize your Messaging on the Trade Show Floor
Aug. 4, 2026
6010R The Basics of Event Planning and Management ‑ Part I
All Sessions >>
2023 Crash Course: What You Need to Know About Trade Show Shipping
June 16, 2026
4007R Exhibit Law Primer: Legal Concepts and Practical Advice
July 9, 2026
3006R Omnichannel Marketing Strategies for Your Live Events and Trade Shows
July 28, 2026
3050R Focus on Attention: How to Optimize your Messaging on the Trade Show Floor
Aug. 4, 2026
6010R The Basics of Event Planning and Management ‑ Part I
All Sessions >>


or its inaugural appearance at the Chicago Auto Show in 1959, the Toyota Motor Corp. dressed its booth staff in traditional
kimonos. The three Toyotas that filled the automaker's exhibit, however, were as plain as the staffers' attire was exotic.
Touting its products' "value unattained in any other automobile," Toyota sold just 976 of its cars in the United States that
year. It was an uninspiring promotion in a show where excess was in the driver's seat: Cadillac, for example, displayed a
concept car with radar. But 49 years later in 2008, Toyota became the best-selling automotive brand in the U.S. market.