I want to bring a camera to the trade shows we're already going to, interview people at their booths, and send them the edited clips for free. This doc covers what we get out of it, proof the format works, the questions I'd ask, and what I need from you to run it.
Proposed series title: “Booth to Buy Box”Man-on-the-street style interviews with brand founders at their booths. Five to seven minutes each: their brand, their product, and a few questions about what's going on in the industry.
They get edited clips for their own socials, free. We get the conversation, the relationship, a reason to follow up, and their answers to the questions we care about.
Run it at Groceryshop and NACS this fall, maybe Accelerate. I need a badge, a branded shirt, and maybe someone from sales. I'll handle the rest.
The idea is to skip the booth and walk the floor with a camera instead. Every exhibitor there paid five figures to stand at a table and talk about their product, and for most of the day nobody's talking to them. I come by with a camera and get them talking.
Each interview runs five to seven minutes. What they make, what they're launching this year, then two or three questions from the list further down. Tariffs, Amazon fees, agencies, AI, whatever's current. Then a handshake and a badge scan, and I tell them their clips will be in their inbox next week.
This is the same format behind some of the fastest-growing accounts of the last few years. A few examples:
About 2.5M followers and $1.6M in 2024 revenue. NowThis bought the whole operation in January. CNBC, TIME, and Forbes have all covered it.
One question, then a home tour. His Barbara Corcoran episode did 41.5M views. People share their own episodes, which is the part that matters for us.
4B+ views, and the subjects do it for free, because they like being asked good questions on camera.
Sponsors include Google, Microsoft, and UPS, so B2B marketing budgets are already paying to be in this format. We'd be producing our own instead of sponsoring someone else's.
It's moved into B2B. Chili Piper filmed hot-take interviews on the floor at INBOUND, SaaStr, and Dreamforce, part of an event plan they say booked about 100 meetings in three days. GaryVee's team films everything at VeeCon and cuts it into weeks of clips. Cognism wrote attendee interviews into their media playbook.
Here's what the format actually looks like. Tap any of these to play:
The two-question street interview. This is the operation NowThis bought in January.
Watch on YouTube ↗His rent question, on Barbara Corcoran's $12M penthouse. The collab did 100M+ views across platforms.
Watch on YouTube ↗Asking wealthy Texans how they got rich. Nobody in these videos is getting paid to talk.
Watch on YouTube ↗One mic, one hot take per ride. Google, Microsoft, and UPS have all sponsored this show.
Watch on YouTube ↗A B2B software company doing this on a conference floor. Same move we'd be running.
Watch on YouTube ↗A creator walking a CPG floor, interviewing brands at their booths. Proof it works at our kind of show.
Watch on YouTube ↗If the players don't load wherever you're reading this, the YouTube links under each one work.
Based on a July 2026 sweep of the seller-event circuit and B2B event content. We found nothing, but I can't prove nobody's doing it.
Some context numbers first:
So the standard playbook is: pay five figures, scan badges at $112 apiece, then call almost none of them, including the half who asked to be called. The bar is low.
One more that matters: buyers decide earlier than we'd like. 6sense surveyed 4,000+ B2B buyers in 2025. 94% had a vendor shortlist before they ever contacted anyone, and the day-one favorite won the deal 77% of the time. Getting on that shortlist happens through content and reputation, months before any sales call. Edelman and LinkedIn found 73% of decision-makers say a company's thought leadership tells them more about its capabilities than its marketing materials do.
On distribution: LinkedIn's own numbers have video viewership up 36% year over year, growing about twice as fast as every other post format. Engagement peaks on 90β120 second videos, which is our clip length. And content shared by a person gets roughly double the click-through of the same content on a company page. Every founder who posts their clip and tags RivrHub is putting us in front of an audience of other founders, for free.
Even if no clip breaks a thousand views, we still get all six of these:
Founders describing their problems in their own words. Feeds ad copy, site copy, Josh's LinkedIn, and email. In CXL's testing, copy built from customer interviews pulled 400%+ more CTA clicks.
Every interview is an open conversation with a target prospect where we gave them something. They're not stuck listening to a pitch, so people actually talk.
"Your clips are ready" is an email that gets opened and answered, because there's something in it for them.
Founders meet a lot of vendors at these shows and forget almost all of them. Getting put on camera, then getting a finished edit in your inbox a week later, sticks.
Twenty founders answering the same five questions is a real read on the industry. We package it each quarter as a gated "State of the Floor" report, which generates its own leads.
Every interviewee leaves the show knowing who we are, and we haven't asked them for anything. The follow-up sequence below takes it from there.
“If your agency can't tell you how their fee ties directly to your margin, they're not a partner. They're a tax.”
Josh made this argument in March in “Expo West So Far: Brands Don't Need More Vendors.” This series turns that argument into a repeatable program. Everyone on that floor is trying to sell these people something, which is why free clips with no strings attached will stand out.
The agency questions do extra work for us. When a founder describes on camera what their agency fees actually bought them last year, they're making our case for us, and we keep the footage.
The timing helps too. Cartograph sold to Harvest in April, Momentum sold to PMG, and Podean bought four agencies in ten months, with the same private equity firm behind two of the buyers. Founders are wondering whether their agency will exist next year and whether it'll still care about a brand their size. They'll want to talk about it, and we get to be the ones asking.
And the interviews feed everything we're already building: Josh's LinkedIn, the re-engagement sequences, the newsletter.
Plus the question-by-question supercuts (twenty founders on the tariff question, twenty on agency fees), a show recap, quote graphics, and one gated State of the Floor report. That's around three months of content from two days at a show we were going to anyway.
First draft, and it'll change per show. Two filters for every question: will a founder enjoy answering it, and do we care about the answer.
LinkedIn connect that night from me or Josh: "Great talking today, clips coming your way next week." They accept, because an hour earlier we made them look good.
Full clips, every format. "Post whatever you like, tag us if you want." I'm deliberately not asking for anything at this stage.
Their followers are mostly other brand operators, basically our prospect list. We reach them without spending a dollar.
I send their clip's numbers and what other founders said about the same question. This is where discovery calls come from, because by now they've heard from us three times and none of it was a pitch.
Everyone flows into the sequences we're already planning, old-lead emails and Josh's LinkedIn outreach, as people who already know us instead of a cold list.
| Show | Dates | Where | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| GroceryshopRun | Sept 22β24, 2026 | Las Vegas | ~4,000 senior CPG and retail people, C-suite heavy |
| NACS ShowRun | Oct 6β9, 2026 | Las Vegas | The convenience channel. Wall to wall with shelf-stable snack and beverage brands |
| Amazon AccelerateMaybe | Sept 22β24, 2026 | Seattle | The most concentrated Amazon-seller audience of any show. β Same three days as Groceryshop, so it's one or the other unless we split coverage. |
On floor quality: CEIR's long-running research puts 81% of trade show attendees at buying authority. And for us the exhibitors themselves are the prospect pool, not just the badge holders.
If the fall works, the spring calendar is deep: Expo West (where we already exhibit), Sweets & Snacks, Fancy Food, Prosper. That decision can wait for fall results.
I'll handle the rest: questions, gear, releases, shooting, editing, delivery, and the follow-up.
What I'd call a successful fall: