Standalone pop-up builds get most of the attention in experiential marketing coverage. But two other formats, trade show booths and retail activations, account for a significant share of how brands actually show up in physical spaces. Both formats operate inside existing environments rather than building foot traffic from scratch, which shifts the challenge from attracting audiences to capturing attention and driving meaningful interaction within a fixed context.
Pop Up Mob is a global experiential agency founded in 2014 by Ana Corina Pelucarte and Rita Tabet. The company has produced more than 250 activations for over 175 brands, working as a one-stop shop that guides brands from strategy and concept through design, fabrication, and live execution. Pop Up Mob’s portfolio includes standalone pop-ups, mobile tours, guerrilla campaigns, influencer events, and a growing body of trade show and retail activation work for beauty, fashion, and lifestyle brands. The agency’s approach spans both strategic and executional layers, ensuring each activation aligns with brand objectives and audience context.
How Trade Show Activations Differ From Other Formats
A trade show booth operates under a different set of constraints than a pop-up on a city sidewalk or a leased storefront. The challenge is not driving traffic, it’s competing for attention, communicating quickly, and converting within a high-density, high-distraction environment.
Floor space is assigned, load-in and load-out windows are fixed, and neighboring brands compete for the same audience within feet of your booth. Power, rigging, and signage are all governed by venue-specific rules that limit what can be built and how it can perform.
47% of B2B marketers plan to increase their trade show activity in 2026, according to EventTrack 2026. 85% of B2B attendees report feeling more educated after attending a live event, and lead generation remains the top-ranked metric for B2B event programs. Those numbers explain why trade show investment is rising even as brands produce fewer total events and focus on higher-impact activations.
Pop Up Mob approaches trade show builds with the same strategy, design and production rigor it applies to standalone pop-ups. Every booth is treated as a branded environment engineered to attract, engage, and move people through a clear interaction journey. Pop Up Mob’s render-to-reality process produces high-fidelity 3D visualizations of the finished space before fabrication begins, giving clients a near-exact preview of what attendees will experience on the show floor.
Cecred at Ulta’s FLC Conference in 2025
Pop Up Mob partnered with Cécred to design and deliver an experiential booth at Ulta Beauty’s FLC (Friends, Lovers, and Community) conference in 2025. Cecred, a new haircare brand founded by Beyoncé, needed to establish a clear identity, communicate its positioning quickly, and stand out within a dense and visually saturated floor.
Pop Up Mob led the project from creative direction through on-site execution, aligning design, spatial flow, and production to support both brand storytelling and on-floor performance. Pop Up Mob also built booths at the same conference for OUAI, Supergoop!, and Bondi Boost, each with a distinct design concept tailored to the individual brand.
Producing multiple booths at a single trade show requires coordinated logistics across fabrication, transportation, setup crews, and brand-specific staff training. Pop Up Mob manages all four builds under a single production timeline, reducing the coordination overhead that would result from each brand hiring a separate vendor.
How Retail Activations Work Inside Existing Stores
Retail activations sit at the opposite end of the format spectrum from trade shows but share a similar constraint. The space is not yours. Whether the activation takes place inside a Sephora, an Ulta, or an independent retailer, the brand must work within the store’s layout, traffic patterns, visual standards, and operational rules while still finding a way to interrupt, engage, and convert.
Pop Up Mob has produced retail activations for brands including Rare Beauty, Benefit Cosmetics, and Gisou inside Sephora locations, as well as store takeovers for Garage and retail storefronts for ASOS. Each project required navigating the retailer’s approval process, adapting design concepts to the existing floor plan, and coordinating installation during off-hours to avoid disrupting regular store operations.
Kulani Kinis LA retail storefront in 2025
Pop Up Mob produced Kulani Kinis’ first US pop-up storefront on Abbot Kinney Boulevard in Venice Beach, Los Angeles. Kulani Kinis is an Australian swimwear brand that had operated primarily online before this activation.
The objective was not just presence, but to translate a digital-first brand into a physical retail experience that could drive discovery, trial, and emotional connection in a new market.
Pop Up Mob created a summer oasis environment with a personality quiz to match shoppers with their ideal swim set, a partnership with OLIPOP for on-site beverages, branded zines, a courtyard photo area, and a Polaroid wall where visitors could leave their mark. Sensory details covered all five senses, following Pop Up Mob’s storytelling-driven design approach.
For a digital-first brand entering physical retail for the first time, the production challenge goes beyond fabrication. Staff need training on product fit, sizing, and customer interaction in a physical store setting. POS systems, inventory management, and daily operations all need to be built from scratch. Pop Up Mob manages these elements alongside the creative build, ensuring the experience functioned not just as a branded environment, but as a fully operational retail channel.
Where These Formats Fit Within a Broader Program
Trade show booths and retail activations often sit alongside other experiential formats in a brand’s annual calendar. A beauty brand might run a guerrilla sampling campaign in the spring, an influencer event for a summer launch, a trade show booth at an industry conference in the fall, and a retail takeover during the holiday season. Each format targets a different audience and serves a distinct role within a broader marketing and commercial ecosystem.
Pop Up Mob’s à-la-carte model allows brands to engage the agency for one format or several across the year. Brands that work with Pop Up Mob across multiple formats benefit from continuity in strategy, design language, brand messaging, and operational standards that would be harder to maintain when switching between unrelated vendors for each activation.
EventTrack 2026 data shows that 57% of both B2B and B2C attendees plan to increase their event attendance in the year ahead. 82% of brands have or are developing sustainability policies for their event programs. Both data points suggest that trade show and retail activations will continue to receive investment as brands seek controlled, high-traffic environments where they can reach engaged audiences without building foot traffic from the ground up.
The formats may get less press than a flashy standalone pop-up, but for many brands, they are where the most consistent, scalable, and measurable experiential work happens. Agencies like Pop Up Mob that can deliver across the full range of formats, from a guerrilla cart on a Manhattan sidewalk to a trade show floor in San Antonio, give brands the flexibility to run a year-round experiential program with consistency, speed, and strategic alignment across every activation.










