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). So we need to include those comment markers for each paragraph. Probably each paragraph should be wrapped in those block comments. Title line is plain heading not inside block comments. Then after title line and blank line, we output HTML content with block comments. We must not use placeholders. Must be actionable content. Must include the e-book promotion paragraph at end with link. We need to count words. Let’s craft ~470 words. We’ll need to compute words. Let’s draft then count. Draft: (blank line)Trade show success hinges on speed and relevance. AI automation lets you generate a personalized email draft within minutes of scanning a badge, ensuring you hit the 24‑hour follow‑up rule without manual effort.
Step 1 – Centralize Your Post‑Event Data. Export badge scans, notes, and interaction tags from your lead capture app into a single CSV or Google Sheet. Include columns for name, title, company, booth notes, product discussed, intent tags (Hot Lead, Product Inquiry, Future Prospect), and any promised resource.
Step 2 – Define Your Email Template Framework. Create three‑to‑four base templates in your automation tool: Hot Lead (urgent CTA to schedule a demo), Product Inquiry (link to spec sheet or case study), Future Prospect (nurture content), and Competitor‑X Replacement (highlight differentiation). Each template contains placeholders for the AI to fill: subject line, greeting, recognized intent, specific product mention, relevant resource, and CTA.
Step 3 – Craft a Consistent AI Prompt. Use this instruction set for the language model: “You are a sales assistant. Using the lead’s name, title, company, booth notes, product discussed, and intent tag, draft a concise follow‑up email. Include a subject line that references the product and a pain point, greet by first name, acknowledge the stated goal, mention the specific demo or conversation, attach the promised resource, and end with a clear, low‑friction CTA. Keep the tone professional yet conversational.”
Step 4 – Connect Data to AI. In n8n, Make, or Zapier, trigger when a new row appears in your centralized sheet. Pass the row data to an AI agent (OpenAI GPT‑4, Claude, or similar) with the prompt from Step 3. The agent returns a draft email with subject and body.
Step 5 – Review and Schedule. Allocate a 1‑ to 2‑hour block the morning after the event. Open the generated drafts, verify personalization, attach any missing files, and schedule the emails to send at your preferred time (ideally within 24 hours of the interaction). Because the AI only creates drafts, you retain full control over final sends.
Measure the impact. Track Time‑to‑First‑Touch (aim <24 h), Open Rate, Reply Rate, and Meeting Booked Rate. Compare these metrics against manual follow‑ups to quantify the lift from AI‑driven personalization and speed.
By automating the first touch, you turn booth interactions into qualified opportunities faster, freeing your team to focus on high‑value conversations rather than repetitive writing.
For a comprehensive guide with detailed workflows, templates, and additional strategies, see my e-book: AI for Trade Show Exhibitors: How to Automate Lead Qualification and Post-ebook: AI for Trade Show Exhibitors: How to Automate Lead Qualification and Post-Event Follow-Up Drafting.
We need to ensure the e-book link is correct: given in prompt: https://geeyo.com/s/eb/ai-for-trade-show-exhibitors-how-to-automate-lead-qualification-and-post-event-follow-up-drafting/ We must not have placeholders. Also need to avoid double hyphen in title? Title line: “Title: The 24‑Hour Follow‑Up Rule: Automating Your First Touch Email Drafts”. Use regular hyphen? It’s okay. Now count words. Need to count words in the entire output after “Title:” line? Probably count all words including title line? We’ll count everything after Title line? Safer to count entire output. Let’s count manually. I’ll rewrite the content with clear separation. Title line: “Title: The 24‑Hour Follow‑Up Rule: Automating Your First Touch Email Drafts” Then blank line. Now paragraphs. I’ll count words per paragraph. Paragraph 1: “Trade show success hinges on speed and relevance. AI automation lets you generate a personalized email draft within minutes of scanning a badge, ensuring you hit the 24‑hour follow‑up rule without manual effort.” Words: Trade(1) show2 success3 hinges4 on5 speed6 and7 relevance8. AI9 automation10 lets11 you121? Wait recount: Let’s count properly. “Trade(1) show2 success3 hinges4 on5 speed6 and7 relevance8. AI9 automation10 lets11 you12 generate13 a14 personalized15 email16 draft17 within18 minutes19 of20 scanning21 a22 badge,23 ensuring24 you25 hit26 the27 24‑hour28 follow‑up29 rule30 without31 manual32 effort33.” 33 words. Paragraph 2: “Step 1 – Centralize Your Post‑Event Data. Export badge scans, notes, and interaction tags from your lead capture app into a single CSV or Google Sheet. Include columns for name, title, company, booth notes, product discussed, intent tags (Hot Lead, Product Inquiry, Future Prospect), and any promised resource.” Count: Step1 – Centralize1 Your2 Post‑Event3 Data.4 Export5 badge6 scans,7 notes,8 and9 interaction10 tags11 from12 your13 lead14 capture15 app16 into17 a18 single19 CSV20 or21 Google22 Sheet.23 Include24 columns25 for26 name,27 title,28 company,29 booth30 notes,31 product32 discussed,33 intent34 tags35 (Hot36 Lead,37 Product38 Inquiry,39 Future40 Prospect),41 and42 any43 promised44 resource45. 45 words. Paragraph 3: “Step 2 – Define Your Email Template Framework. Create three‑to‑four base templates in your automation tool: Hot Lead (urgent CTA to schedule a demo), Product Inquiry (link to spec sheet or case study), Future Prospect (nurture content), and Competitor‑X Replacement (highlight differentiation). Each template contains placeholders for the AI to fill: subject line, greeting, recognized intent, specific product mention, relevant resource, and CTA.” Count: Step1? Actually “Step 2 – Define” etc. Step1? Let’s count. Step1? We’ll just count. Step1? I’ll count words. Step1? Actually “Step” counts. “Step1? No. Let’s list: Step1? I’m confused. Better: “Step 2 – Define Your Email Template Framework. Create three‑to‑four base templates in your automation tool: Hot Lead (urgent CTA to schedule a demo), Product Inquiry (link to spec sheet or case study), Future Prospect (nurture content), and Competitor‑X Replacement (highlight differentiation). Each template contains placeholders for the AI to fill: subject line, greeting, recognized intent, specific product mention, relevant resource, and CTA.” Now count: Step1? Actually “Step” is word1. Step 2 – Define1 Your2 Email3 Template4 Framework.5 Create6 three‑to‑four7 base8 templates9 in10 your11 automation12 tool:13 Hot14 Lead15 (urgent16 CTA17 to18 schedule19 a20 demo),21 Product22 Inquiry23 (link24 to25 spec26 sheet27 or28 case29 study),30 Future31 Prospect32 (nurture33 content),34 and35 Competitor‑X36 Replacement37 (highlight38 differentiation).39 Each40 template41 contains42 placeholders43 for44 the45 AI46 to47 fill:48 subject49 line,50 greeting,51 recognized52 intent,53 specific54 product55 mention,56 relevant57 resource,58 and59 CTA60. 60 words. Paragraph 4: “Step 3 – Craft a Consistent AI Prompt. Use this instruction set for the language model: “You are a sales assistant. Using the lead’s name, title, company, booth notes, product discussed, and intent tag, draft a concise follow‑up email. Include a subject line that references the product and a pain point, greet by first name, acknowledge the stated goal, mention the specific demo or conversation, attach the promised resource, and end with a clear, low‑friction CTA. Keep the tone professional yet conversational.”” Count: Step1? Let’s count. Step1? Actually “Step 3 – Craft a Consistent AI Prompt. Use this instruction set for the language model: “You are a sales assistant. Using the lead’s name, title, company, booth notes, product discussed, and intent tag, draft a concise follow‑up email. Include a subject line that references the product and a pain point, greet by first name, acknowledge the stated goal, mention the specific demo or conversation, attach the promised resource, and end with a clear, low‑friction CTA. Keep the tone professional yet conversational.”” Now count words. Step1? Let’s go. Step1? I’ll count. Step 3 – Craft1 a2 Consistent3 AI4 Prompt.5 Use6 this7 instruction8 set9 for10 the11 language12 model:13 “You14 are15 a16 sales17 assistant.18 Using19 the20 lead’s21 name,22 title,23 company,24 booth25 notes,26 product27 discussed,28 and29 intent30 tag,31 draft32 a33 concise34 follow‑up35 email.36 Include37 a38 subject39 line40 that41 references42 the43 product44 and45 a46 pain47 point,48 greet49 by50 first51 name,52 acknowledge53 the54 stated55 goal,56 mention57 the58 specific59 demo60 or61 conversation,62 attach63 the64 promised65 resource,66 and67 end68 with69 a70 clear,71 low‑friction72 CTA.73 Keep74 the75 tone76 professional77 yet78 conversational79.”80 80 words. Paragraph 5: “Step 4 – Connect Data to AI. In n8n, Make, or Zapier, trigger when a new row appears in your centralized sheet. Pass the row data to an AI agent (OpenAI GPT‑4, Claude, or similar) with the prompt from Step 3. The agent returns a draft email with subject and body.” Count: