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May 2019
Table of Contents
EXHIBITOR Q & A
Hospitality Event Staffing
We're hosting a hospitality event in conjunction with our trade show booth. How should we best staff this event?
ASK DAN
Retirement
I'm eligible for retirement but may not take it. Do I have any obligation to discuss my plans with my supervisor?
EXHIBITING 101
The Post-Show Push
Ensure your exhibiting program's success by keeping these easy-to-forget post-show tasks top of mind.
AMMUNITION
Ideas That Work
Play Ball, A Refreshing Idea, Sweet Charity, and more.
PRODUCTS
New Tools
Designer Series Caps, eBanners, T3twistlite, Wireless Charging Tables, and more.
FIXING SNAFUS
Snowball Effect
An unfavorable forecast meant the booth wouldn't make it to Las Vegas in time for the show.
TEN BY 10
Mobile Marketing
We asked 10 experts to share their views and opinions on mobile marketing.
ARCHIVE
Spud Stud
1949: Jays Foods brings a barrel-clad staffer to the National Potato Chip Convention in Chicago.
EXHIBIT DESIGN AWARDS
EXHIBITOR Magazine's 33rd Annual Exhibit Design Awards
Honoring the best trade show exhibit designs in the world.
Vertical Markets
This stunning double-deck exhibit for lighting provider Ledvance GmbH displayed more than 1,000 products.
Driving Force
Audi Japan K.K. displayed its artificial-intelligence-enabled A8 sedan surrounded by 466 LED tube lights.
All Kidding Aside
While the focal point of Munchkin's booth was its colorful product displays, sophisticated elements elevated the design.
Picture Perfect
Canon Europa N.V. provided immersive, real-life shooting scenarios for attendees to test its latest cameras and lenses.
Taking the Floor
To accommodate a height restriction of 4.5 feet, Peugeot Citroen Japan's stand comprised a series of in-floor displays.
The Shining
A pair of crystal chandeliers formed the centerpiece of Preciosa - Lustry a.s.'s exhibit.
Above the Fold
ZTE USA Inc.'s exhibit was inspired by the company's hinged Axon M smartphone.
House of Cardboard
Wildchild Stockholm Inc.'s exhibit was inspired by the dreamlike islands of Victorian-era greenhouses.
Big Data
To explain the role it plays in data processing, Intel Corp. built a series of vignettes that spanned its CES exhibit.
Welcome Matte
Drutex S.A., a Polish door and window manufacturer, wowed attendees with a simple color scheme and a bold accent wall.
Field of Beams
Almost 600 acrylic and wood beams formed an unforgettable back wall and canopy in Rubrik Inc.'s exhibit.
Soraa's Salon
Luxury LED lighting firm Soraa Inc. was hoping to attract high-end architectural designers to its space.
Coffee House
UCC Ueshima Coffee Co.'s exhibit for its premium line of beans featured a sophisticated "coffee lab" theme.
Metal Fabrication
Constellium designed an airy, cityscape-like exhibit that depicted the myriad ways aluminum is used in everyday life.
Mmm, Mmm, Good
The Campbell Soup Co. stirred up an aromatic stand offering piping-hot soup and displaying hundreds of basil plants.

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exhibitor q&a
Ask Dan
Q.
I'm eligible for retirement but may not take it. Do I have any obligation to discuss my plans with my supervisor?

A.
According to Pew Research and the Social Security Administration, about 10,000 men and women a day hit the usual retirement age of 65. So the problem you face is no doubt one that's cropping up all across the contemporary work landscape.

Unless your company has a specific policy requiring notification of your intentions upon reaching retirement age, you are not obligated to discuss the matter until it suits you. But whenever you leave, your company will still need to find a suitable replacement, and it could take a significant amount of time to do so.

If and when you decide to retire, it would generate considerable goodwill to start succession planning by first broaching the topic with your boss and setting a general time frame for your eventual departure. Offer to start compiling a list of your job duties and responsibilities that can be used as a training and reference document by your successor. Once you've taken these steps, you can also offer to help break in your replacement, assuming the company brings him or her on before you actually leave.

While you're making a plan for work, be sure you're creating one for home as well. Prepare your finances, of course, but also ready a strategy to keep physically and mentally active and involved in your interests. This way, you'll have something to retire to and not just a place you'll retire from. E



Dan Lumpkin, organizational psychologist, is the president of management-consulting company Lumpkin & Associates in Fairhope, AL. Need answers? Email your career-related questions to askdan@exhibitormagazine.com.
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