At a trade show, attention is everything.
Your team can have the best product, the sharpest display, and the cleanest marketing materials in the room — but if attendees keep walking past the booth, none of it matters.
Eric Ha creates short, repeatable mind-reading and psychology-based demonstrations that stop people in the aisle, gather a crowd, and give your sales team an easy opening to begin real conversations.
This is not background entertainment.
It is a live attention strategy for exhibitors who want more people stopping, watching, reacting, and engaging.
Trade show floors are crowded, noisy, and full of distractions.
Most booths are competing with the same tools:
Banners
Brochures
Giveaways
Product displays
Branded pens
Candy bowls
Passive sales pitches
Eric gives attendees a reason to stop.
Using interactive mind reading, influence demonstrations, suggestion, prediction effects, and audience participation, Eric creates quick moments that feel impossible, memorable, and easy for bystanders to gather around.
The result is simple:
Eric performs short, high-impact demonstrations at or near your booth.
Each demonstration is designed to:
Stop attendees in the aisle
Gather a small crowd
Create visible reactions
Make your booth look active and interesting
Give your team a natural way to start conversations
Help attendees remember your company after the show
The demonstrations can be repeated throughout the day, adjusted to traffic flow, and structured around your goals.
This can be used as pure booth attraction, lead-generation support, VIP client entertainment, or a branded interactive experience.
Short, repeatable mind-reading demonstrations designed to stop aisle traffic and pull people toward your booth.
Eric performs in cycles throughout the event, creating moments that draw attention and give your team an easy handoff.
Best for:
Exhibitors who want more booth visitors, more energy, and more conversations
Why companies like it:
It turns passive foot traffic into active curiosity.
Interactive demonstrations structured to transition naturally into a sales conversation.
Instead of a cold booth pitch, attendees first experience something surprising, funny, and memorable. Then your team has a much easier opening to ask who they are, what they do, and whether your product or service is relevant.
Best for:
Sales-driven exhibitors, B2B booths, product demos, service providers, and companies with a consultative sales process
Why companies like it:
It helps reduce the awkward “Can I scan your badge?” feeling.
A custom trade show activation built around your company, message, product, or event theme.
This can include company-specific language, product-related ideas, scripted transitions, or a repeatable demonstration that connects the impossible moment back to your brand.
Best for:
Product launches, competitive trade shows, premium booths, sponsorship activations, and companies that want a stronger brand impression
Why companies like it:
It makes the booth experience feel intentional instead of generic.
Private or semi-private mind-reading moments for key prospects, current clients, executives, or invited guests.
This works well during slower booth periods, hosted receptions, hospitality suites, after-hours events, or private meetings connected to the trade show.
Best for:
High-value prospects, client appreciation, hosted buyers, hospitality events, and executive networking
Why companies like it:
It creates a premium personal interaction that clients remember.
Eric’s trade show entertainment can be used for:
Exhibit booths
Product launches
Sponsored activations
Conference expo floors
Vendor fairs
Hospitality suites
Networking receptions
VIP client events
Dealer meetings
Sales conferences
Association events
Corporate showcases
The format can be adjusted for small booths, large booths, high-traffic aisles, tabletop exhibits, or premium exhibit spaces.
Attendees are used to being pitched.
They are not used to seeing a crowd react to something impossible.
That reaction creates curiosity.
Curiosity creates traffic.
Traffic creates conversations.
And conversations create opportunities.
Eric’s trade show work is designed to be:
Fast
Visual
Interactive
Repeatable
Crowd-friendly
Professional
Easy to understand
Flexible around booth traffic
Memorable after the event
The goal is not to distract from your sales team.
The goal is to give them more people to talk to.
Trade shows already involve enough logistics. Your booth entertainment should help the team, not complicate the event.
Before the show, Eric can coordinate:
Event date and location
Booth size and layout
Exhibit hall rules
Show hours
Peak traffic times
Target attendee profile
Key products or services
Preferred call-to-action
Sales team handoff process
Whether the performance should be branded or unbranded
On the floor, the work can be adjusted based on real-time traffic, crowd flow, and your team’s needs.
Trade show booth entertainment is quoted based on the event, schedule, location, booth goals, performance format, and level of customization.
Common formats include:
Hourly booth activation
Half-day booth entertainment
Full-day booth entertainment
Multi-day trade show package
Branded booth experience
VIP/client entertainment add-on
Corporate and adult event performances begin at $1,500.
Trade show activations are custom quoted because the value depends on show length, traffic goals, customization, and how the entertainment supports your sales team.
Eric’s trade show booth entertainment is best suited for companies that want to:
Increase booth traffic
Stand out from nearby exhibitors
Create visible crowd reactions
Give salespeople easier conversation starters
Make attendees remember the booth
Support lead generation
Add energy to a quiet booth
Create a premium client experience
Turn passive attendees into active participants
It is especially useful for exhibitors in competitive aisles, companies with a complex product or service, and brands that want something more engaging than another giveaway.
Eric performs throughout Kentucky, Ohio, Indiana, Tennessee, and surrounding areas, including:
Lexington, Louisville, Cincinnati, Columbus, Dayton, Indianapolis, Nashville, and nearby regions.
Eric is also intentionally building more corporate, convention, and trade show dates in the Columbus, Ohio area.
Tell me about your trade show, booth, schedule, and goals. Eric will recommend the best format for attracting attention, engaging attendees, and supporting your sales team.