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How To Get Free Stuff At Shows

Enigma5O writes "The TechZone heads to the 2006 Consumer Electronics Show and came out with tons of free stuff. We're not talking cheap pens or notepads either. No, they got some really cool stuff like two Sony PSP game consoles, DDR RAM, laptop roller bags, computer tool kit, etc. This article explains how they did it."

9 of 158 comments (clear)

  1. Article Text - First Page by adamfranco · · Score: 4, Informative

    Get Your Free Stuff Here!

    One of the nice perks about attending the yearly Consumer Electronics Show in Las Vegas is all the manufacturers tries to load you up with free stuff.

    [image of backpacks, PSPs, and a whole bunch of T-shirts and other small stuff]
    You want free stuff? Man, do I have free stuff!

    Yes it's true. Everything shown in the above photo was given to me for free! Some of the more noteworthy free stuff includes 1GB of OCZ RAM, an Ultra computer tool kit, CES laptop roller bags and two Sony PSP game consoles. And these are just the stuff that I haul back home with me. Bigger free stuff are being mailed.

    There is a good chance that if you attended the CES you won't make off with as much free stuff as I did. This could be because you don't know the art of getting free stuff. Well, you're in luck because I'm going to give you the step by step to getting tons of free stuff at CES, or any other trade show for that matter.

    Step 1 - Ask For The Free Stuff

    If you want something you have to ask for it. Don't just walk up to a booth and expect them to hand free stuff out to you. It isn't going to happen. And if it does, it normally means some cheap free stuff like a notepad or a pen. If you don't ask, you don't get. If you're too shy to ask then go to the next step.

    Step 2 - Attend The Press Conferences or Product Demos

    One of the easiest way to getting free stuff is to simply attend the many press conferences or product demos that companies put on during the CES. They almost always have something good to give everyone who attends. And many will hold a contest for some really big prizes. Yes you have to sit through a demo to get your stuff but hey, it's free!

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    --
    "When ideology and theology couple, their offspring are not always bad but they are always blind." -- Bill Moyers
  2. quick summary- nothing profound by purplelocust · · Score: 5, Informative
    Not exactly profound- here are their steps:
    1. Ask for free stuff: Squeaky wheels get more loot
    2. Attend the press conferences and demos: Loot is dumped on people who sit through the spiel
    3. Make appointments: A reasonable reccommendation for stuff you might be more interested in. The vendor is more likely to give stuff to people who spend more time with them and give them contact info for followup rather than random strolling people.
    4. Attend parties/enter giveaways: Again, an investement of your time and giving them your contact info means the vendor is more likely to give stuff away.
    5. Hang around during teardown: True vultures can score big when vendors don't want to cart stuff back home.

    In my experience, the days of walking away from MacWorld/etc lugging bags full of stuff you actually want ended in about 2000 or so. Yes, there is still reasonable stuff but the scale is quite reduced from those crazy late 90s shows.

  3. Coral Cache by oscartheduck · · Score: 3, Informative
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  4. Page the Second by kotj.mf · · Score: 5, Informative

    Step 3 - Make An Appointment

    While all vendors on the show floor will talk to you about their products, you'll score major points and free stuff if you make an appointment to talk to them. This way the company is expecting you and will be prepare to give you their booth tour. After the tour, they always present you with a goodie bag fill with company information and, you guest it, free stuff!

    Attend The CES Parties

    Companies that put on parties at CES always have something to give to their guests when they leave. And there are tons of parties to attend during the 5 days that CES runs for. The problem is most, if not all, of the parties are invite only. Don't let this stop you however. Many times you can get an invite by emailing the company or going to their booth and asking for one. This really is the best way to get free stuff because you also get to attend a party as well.

    Many companies that throw CES parties will have prizes to give away. That's how I got the Sony PSP. The best thing is many of these contests are the "can't lose" type. In other words, everyone who enters wins something.

    Walk The Show Floor On The Last Day

    The last day of CES is moving out day. This is best time to get your hands on tons of free stuff. Companies are packing things up to take home and many times they will lose their packing boxes. This is the best time to approach them to ask if there's anything they want to give away and not take home? It's amazing the amount times they will say "Help yourself to whatever you like." This is because it can cost them more to ship the products back home than the product is worth.

    You won't get big items, like plasma TVs, for free but many times the companies will sell it to you for a stupidly low price. I remember one year when RCA was the official TV of CES and had their displays scatter throughout the convention center. Instead of packing the $3,000 TVs home, they offered it anyone who was willing to pay $500 for it.

    Another reason to walk the show floor on the last day is you will find many abandon booths with stuff still left behind. Most of the time, the stuff is junk but you will come across some really nice stuff once in a while.

    --
    hang brain.
  5. Re:Free Vacation by Oliver+Wendell+Jones · · Score: 2, Informative

    If you're good at saying "No", then those can be a great deal. I've attended several and they really aren't very pushy. I did buy one timeshare several years back because I got a good deal on it, and now when I attend new sales presentations I just tell them "thanks, but I've already got one and my job doesn't leave me with more vacation time".

    In a lot of places like Orlando or Vegas you can get free tickets (to a big show or a theme park) for attending. First time we used one of these 'deals' we went to Daytona for 3 days then Orlando for 4 more for $99. While in Orlando, we attended another 4 hour presentation to get free tickets for Disney. Disney is nice, but it's not worth the $55+ per person per day, but it was worth 4 hours of my time which included a nice lunch buffet.

    --
    A computer once beat me at chess, but it was no match for me at kick boxing -- Emo Phillips
  6. Next time, ask for a spell-checker! by scovetta · · Score: 2, Informative

    ...bag fill with company information and, you guest it, free stuff!

    Oh come on now. That's not a typo like 'teh', or a common mistake like 'their/there/they're'-- that's just plain wrong. I'm going to have to turn this matter over to the regional spelling police-- they might want to question you further.

    --
    Wer mit Ungeheuern kämpft, mag zusehn, dass er nicht dabei zum Ungeheuer wird. --Nietzsche
  7. Re:Free Vacation by Impy+the+Impiuos+Imp · · Score: 2, Informative

    > 12 months in a year, 4 weeks in a month and 5 work days
    > in a week and 8 hours in a work day

    For future reference, your yearly salary is roughly 2080 x hourly. Even more roughly, just multiply by 2000.

    And many engineers negotiate a yearly salary, and their pay is just that / 12, or that / 52.

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    (-1: Post disagrees with my already-settled worldview) is not a valid mod option.
  8. Re:getting free stuff by edunbar93 · · Score: 2, Informative

    Ok, this one is difficult as it involves convincing the people with the PSP, that it is in fact an evil artifact that must be thrown into Mount Doom

    That didn't usually work very well in the book. In fact, most were willing to kill any number of people to take it from you.

    --
    "No problem. I have the capacity to do infinite work so long as you don't mind that my quality approaches zero."-Dilbert
  9. The Church of Jeff by the_ed_dawg · · Score: 3, Informative
    Allow me to tell you the story of a guy named Jeff. I'm a Ph.D. student working with this guy, who is a masters student. This guy has "free stuff" down to an art. Seriously, nobody can top Jeff in terms of free stuff.

    For example, he showed up at a College of Engineering open house event for homecoming. While he was there, he got some free cookies. Then, he walked up to the stadium and parlayed said cookies into football tickets from some cute girl. Bam! Free football tickets!

    Jeff goes to DAC (Design Automation Conference) in Anaheim. Conference admission is a couple hundred bucks. Dude comes back with close to $1000 in free stuff from the vendor show, including flash drives, MP3 players, etc.

    College of Engineering career fair rolls around. I ask him to pick me up a highlighter while he's out because I'm reading papers. He comes back with no less than 20 of them. Oh yeah, he's also gotten laundry detergent for a couple of weeks, enough Easy Mac to feed him for a couple of weeks, more office supplies than the entire lab could use in a semester, and tons more stuff. He replaced the items on his bookshelf with the free booty from multiple trips.

    We built a tower out of no less than 200 packs of bubble gum from a Wrigley's promotional stand.

    Jeff walks around campus and records dates and times of free food flyers into his cell phone. Then, he goes back to his office and enters them into an Outlook calendar. The only time this guy pays for food is when I invite him out to eat with the rest of the group.

    He says the key is to be completely shameless. I've seen him walk right up to the organizer of a booth and flat out ask him for a box of stuff. Then, after getting the box (much to my dismay), he'll turn around and ask for a box for his officemate. He'll walk right up to displays and dump the entire contents of the display into a bag. Most people are too polite to stop him, so he gets away with it.

    --
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