That Means "Giveaways Galore"
By Rose Dorcey
The 16th Annual International Women
in Aviation Conference in Dallas has broken all previous year's
records as far as the number of exhibiting companies and booth
spaces sold.
Peggy Chabrian, Founder and President of Women in Aviation,
International announced the numbers at a Cessna Aircraft Company
and General Aviation Manufacturer's Association sponsored media
breakfast March 11. One-hundred-eighteen companies
exhibited in 184 booths, which is up 2% from last year.
That means lots of gadgets and giveaways for the near record
number of conference attendees. You will find lots more than the
typical pens, pencils and post cards. Let's take a look…
Riding down the escalator to the Adam's Mark Hotel and
Conference Center's packed exhibit hall, you can't help but notice
an air of enthusiasm. Broad smiles, laughter, women in uniform and
the sound of cowbells ringing. Cowbells? That's right. Cowbells. In
the roomy Fed Ex booth, attendees try their luck at throwing two
rubber horseshoes for a chance at prizes. When some lucky cowgirl
gets a ringer, the cowbells jangle. Judging by the constant sound
of clanging bells, it is safe to say that women in aviation know
how to a horseshoe.

A few aisles over, there's another contest going on… the
Southwest Airlines Peanut Toss. Contestants receive two snack
packages of Southwest Airlines peanuts and try their skill at
throwing them into holes on a map that depict Southwest
destinations. Make a "basket" and you win a cute, stuffed Southwest
Airlines airplane. The peanut-toss is an attention-grabber, but a
word of warning if you're dawdling on the backside of Southwest --
I saw peanut packages flying high over the top of the display
booth.
I went to Continental Airlines, where they gave me and nearly
2,800 attendees like me a pedometer. It's 2300 as I write this. A
quick check shows that I've walked 7,344 steps today.

Next, I went to Telex, where booth attendants convinced me to
try their putting green. Actually, they convinced me to smack the
ball while aiming for a dustpan several feet down the aisle. (I
can't even get dust balls to go into my own dustpan back home.) I
tried, and lucky for me, the golf ball bounced off another woman's
heel and landed right in the cup, err… the pan. No cowbells
for me, but I did win a nifty Telex CD holder and a bottle opener
that is shaped like a maraca. It sounds like a baby rattle when you
shake it (let's not go there). I don't know whose idea the maracas
were, but conference attendees loved them.
The Telex booth attendants and I talked about the variety of
promotional items that draw people into show booths. They said,
compared to many other aviation conferences they attend, the Women
in Aviation event is more "festive." The promotional items and
contests reflect that atmosphere. "We find that the companies that
exhibit at Women in Aviation are more inventive, more creative and
not-so-traditional with their giveaways. Many booth visitors are
moms who want take home things for their kids," the said.
Some items are hot, and are gone if you don't get there in time.
I missed out on the Boeing Company reading lights. They went fast.
I did score on the Rolls Royce t-shirt, the Air Force Reserve
baseball cap, the Delta Airlines travel mug, and the JetBlue
Airways blue potato chips.
Wings Financial gave tropical-scented lip balm and pencils with
magically appearing clouds when warmed by your hands. Mouse pads
from Independence Air, jar openers from Express Jet, luggage tags
from America West Airlines and a really nice zippered leather
travel portfolio from Northwest Airlines. I had to pick the right
key and open a locked treasure chest to score that item.

Lint brushes, band-aid holders, telephone cord extenders, tape
measurer, drink coasters, inflatable balloons, flashlights, compact
mirrors, Airbus airplane pins, Electro-Blast fizz tabs, and
finally, a bag clip -- to keep my blue potato chips fresh. Oh, how
will I ever get all this stuff home?