A trade show fills the pipeline once a year; buying leads, every week. We compare trade shows and events versus buying leads on cost per opportunity, volume and continuity.
Trade shows are a B2B classic: human contact, brand and leads concentrated in a few days. But their economics are demanding and their continuity between events is nil. Buying leads offers the opposite: constant flow.
Trade shows: one-off intensity
A good show generates leads and awareness, but costs a lot (stand, travel, staff) and concentrates the result in a few days a year. Between shows, the pipeline dries up. The cost per lead, properly measured, is usually high.
Buying leads: continuity
Buying leads delivers opportunities continuously, with a predictable cost per lead and no logistics. It doesn’t give a show’s face-to-face contact, but it feeds the pipeline all 12 months, validated by the Funneld engine.
| Dimension | Trade shows | Buy leads |
|---|---|---|
| Continuity | One-off | Continuous |
| Cost | High and fixed | Per lead |
| Logistics | Complex | None |
| Brand | High | Low |
| Best for | Annual awareness | Constant pipeline |
A trade show is a sprint once a year; buying leads is running all year.
Conclusion
Use trade shows for brand and relationships, and buying leads for the continuous pipeline between events. Combined, you cover awareness and flow; separately, you’re missing one of the two.
LeadMafia