In 2005, exhibition professionals faced a unique landscape:
That year, industry bodies like UFI (The Global Association of the Exhibition Industry) began publishing standardized ROI guidelines. The “lecons d exhib” from that period emphasized human interaction, pre‑show marketing, and post‑show discipline — principles that remain the bedrock of successful exhibiting.
The best exhibitions have no “guides” visible, yet every step feels guided. This is achieved through: lecons d exhib 05 top
Lesson for online courses or documents: Use progressive disclosure, visual breadcrumbs, and “what’s next” previews – but never a bullet list of boring transitions.
Top exhibitions hide key data. They create lures – partial information that requires investigation to complete. In 2005, exhibition professionals faced a unique landscape:
Example: Instead of a label saying “This machine revolutionized weaving in 1801,” the exhibition shows a broken shuttle, a diary page, and a sound loop of a loom – letting visitors reconstruct the story.
For your lessons: Don’t give conclusions first. Create gaps learners must close. That is the essence of discovery learning. That year, industry bodies like UFI (The Global
Most exhibitions end with a gift shop or exit survey – a total letdown. Top 05% exhibitions end with:
Leçon finale: Your conclusion must launch the next cycle of learning, not stop it.