tjones
New member
Im looking to start a reptile expo in the Chippewa Valley if there is anyone that is interested in helping to find vendors or to avdertise or anything like that just send me a reply.
Thanks
Thanks
Your main limit is in terms of demographics- are there enough people in the immediate area WITH MONEY to support both your new large show as well as the existing shows. IF shows in your area were drawing huge crowds, the organizers of the other MI shows would probably also have expanded.
I would be cautious about starting a new show, especially now with the economy the way it is. You could very easily end up losing money, especially when factoring in such things as advertising, insurance- very expensive, staff/security/ facility and table rental, etc.
If you do go ahead, best of luck
Bruce Lowder
NY Reptile Expo
From: Dallas Bartholomew
Sent: Friday, March 06, 2009 12:25 AM
To: bruce
Subject: Hello I have a question about reptile expos
Hi Bruce,
I am currently living in michigan Ive been to a couple reptile expos around her but they are rather small i would like to start my own reptile expo on a bigger scale can i do this or is there some kinda limit to these things thanks
Dallas
I already figured all of this \/I have to agree with Bruce (who, btw is AWESOME) - starting a new show is TOUGH, believe me. There are so many things to consider, and just when you think you have them all figured out, something else comes along.
and 95% of this is really easy to take care of most of it i already do on a daily basisOne thing that was not mentioned was checking the laws in the area you want to have a show. You have to think of state laws, county laws, township laws (or however your area is divided), and then call the police station to make sure they aren't going to shut you down for something stupid, your local branch of the Fish and Game department (or whomever handles reptiles)...then you also need to think about getting a business license through your state (and filing a fictions name application), filing with the IRS for a tax id number, finding a good accountant to help figure out the tax stuff involved,
But honestly after reading all of that just makes me not want to do it that much more no with the bad economy so thanks for the information.paying for a domain name and getting a website designed, finding a good print shop for fliers, finding every reptile forum imaginable to post about your show (as well as paid advertising on these sites), figure out your advertising budget for things like print ads (i.e., Reptiles Magazine, local newspapers, non-local newspapers, etc), rounding up vendors, advertising some more, making sure your payments are in on time to the venue, not to mention HOW to pay for the venue and all this advertising while the show is growing and not paying for itself....Be ready to lose every penny you put into doing this for at least a year, if not more.
I could list a million other things as well. This should get you started. Like Bruce said, there are a lot of downfalls to starting a new show in this economy unless you can really figure out a way to get the people in the door that have money to spend (browsers do your vendors no good, and when they aren't making money, they don't stick around). It's a ton of hard work and almost a full-time job in itself. BUT if you can make all the right things happen at the right time at the right place, I do have to say, starting a show is a VERY rewarding experience (except in the pocketbook for awhile!)