NeoCon 2026 is the single most important three days of the year for contract furniture professionals — but only if you come prepared.
With over 50,000 attendees and 500+ exhibitors spread across the massive McCormick Place floor, the difference between a productive NeoCon visit and an overwhelming one comes down to strategy. Buyers who invest time in pre-show planning consistently report better supplier connections, faster decision-making, and stronger project outcomes than those who simply walk the floor.
This guide is built specifically for furniture procurement professionals, FF&E specialists, interior designers, and project managers who attend NeoCon to find manufacturers, evaluate products, and build supplier relationships for commercial hospitality, healthcare, office, and educational projects.
Whether it’s your first NeoCon or your fifteenth, these strategies will help you extract maximum value from every hour on the show floor.
Section 1: Pre-Show Preparation — The 30-Day Countdown

| Weeks Before Show | Action Items | Why It Matters |
| 4 weeks | Register for NeoCon, book hotel & flights | Early registration saves $100+; nearby hotels sell out fast |
| 4 weeks | Review exhibitor list & mark target booths | Creates a focused navigation plan |
| 3 weeks | Define your sourcing objectives & budget ranges | Focuses conversations on your actual needs |
| 3 weeks | Prepare project specifications & quantity estimates | Enables meaningful price discussions at booths |
| 2 weeks | Email target exhibitors to schedule meetings | Pre-booked meetings get priority attention |
| 2 weeks | Organize your project files digitally | Easy reference during booth conversations |
| 1 week | Confirm meeting schedule, pack business cards | Smooth logistics on show days |
| 1 week | Review floor plan & plan your route | Minimizes walking time between target booths |
1.2 Defining Your Sourcing Objectives
Before stepping onto the show floor, answer these four questions for each project you’re sourcing:

| Question | Example Response | How It Shapes Your NeoCon Visit |
| What categories of furniture do I need? | 200 guest rooms + lobby + restaurant | Focus on hospitality exhibitors, skip irrelevant categories |
| What is my budget range per unit/item? | $800–$1,200 per guest room set | Filter conversations to manufacturers in your price tier |
| When do I need delivery? | Must be installed by November 2026 | Discuss lead times immediately — eliminates suppliers who can’t meet deadlines |
| What certifications or standards are required? | FSC, fire retardancy (CA TB117-2013), brand approval | Ask about certifications at every booth |
1.3 Essential Documents to Prepare
| Document | Format | Bring It For |
| Project floor plans | PDF on tablet | Showing booth reps exact dimensions and layout requirements |
| FF&E schedule / quantity matrix | Spreadsheet | Enabling preliminary pricing discussions |
| Design mood board / finish palette | PDF or physical swatches | Matching manufacturer capabilities to your design vision |
| Brand standards summary | PDF (for branded hotels) | Quickly confirming supplier compliance with brand requirements |
| Business cards (minimum 100) | Physical | Every conversation starts with a card exchange |
| Digital note template | Phone/tablet app | Recording key details from each booth conversation |
Section 2: Navigating NeoCon 2026 — Floor Strategy

2.1 McCormick Place Layout Overview
NeoCon occupies multiple halls at McCormick Place. Understanding the layout helps you plan efficient routes:
| Hall | Primary Categories | Estimated Exhibitors | Your Priority If Sourcing For… |
| Hall 7 | Contract furniture, hospitality, healthcare | 150+ | Hotels, resorts, hospitals, nursing homes |
| Hall 8 | Office furniture, systems furniture, seating | 120+ | Corporate offices, co-working, government |
| Hall 10 | Educational furniture, institutional, acoustic solutions | 80+ | Schools, universities, libraries |
| Hall 3 | Flooring, lighting, textiles, accessories | 100+ | FF&E finishing materials |
2.2 Optimizing Your Floor Route
Strategy: Start with your highest-priority category early each day.
| Time of Day | Recommended Activity | Rationale |
| 9:00–10:00 AM | Visit pre-booked meetings at priority booths | Fresh energy, exhibitor attention is highest |
| 10:00 AM–12:00 PM | Walk target booths without meetings | Exhibitors are actively engaging walk-in visitors |
| 12:00–1:00 PM | Networking lunch / review notes | Break to process information, prioritize afternoon visits |
| 1:00–3:00 PM | Second-tier booths and discovery | Lower traffic means more time with exhibitors |
| 3:00–4:30 PM | Follow-up conversations, sample collection | Many exhibitors have more time for detailed discussions |
| 4:30–5:00 PM | Collect catalogs, exchange final contacts | Some exhibitors may give away display samples |
2.3 Hall 7 Spotlight — Where Hongye Furniture Exhibits
Booth 7-1114 is strategically located in Hall 7, the primary hall for hospitality and contract furniture. If your sourcing needs include any of the following, Hall 7 should be your first stop:
| Need | What You’ll Find in Hall 7 |
| Hotel guest room furniture | Casegoods manufacturers, bedding suppliers, custom woodwork |
| Lobby & public area | Seating systems, reception desks, decorative lighting |
| Healthcare furniture | Patient room, waiting area, nurse station solutions |
| Restaurant & F&B | Dining tables, banquet seating, bar furniture, outdoor furniture |
| Senior living | Ergonomic furniture, accessibility-compliant designs |
Section 3: Evaluating Exhibitors at the Booth — The 15-Minute Assessment
You’ll have limited time with each manufacturer. Use this structured approach to gather the most valuable information in 15 minutes.
3.1 The Quick-Assessment Framework
| Assessment Area | Key Questions to Ask | What Good Looks Like |
| Product quality | “What materials do you use? Can I see the construction detail?” | Solid joinery, quality hardware, consistent finish |
| Manufacturing capability | “What’s your monthly capacity? Do you manufacture in-house?” | Own factory, clear production photos, dedicated QC team |
| Customization | “Can you modify dimensions, materials, or finishes for our project?” | Yes, with clear process and timeline (not “we’ll try”) |
| Project experience | “Can you show examples of similar projects you’ve delivered?” | Relevant case studies with photos, client names if possible |
| Certifications | “What quality and safety certifications do you hold?” | ISO 9001, FSC, fire safety, relevant market certifications |
| Lead time | “What’s your typical production lead time for X quantity?” | Specific timeline (not vague “depends”), realistic buffer built in |
| Communication | “Who will be my project contact? How quickly do you respond?” | Dedicated PM, responds within 24 hours, speaks your language |
| Pricing | “Can you give me a preliminary price range for this item at X quantity?” | Transparent pricing structure, willing to discuss volume discounts |
3.2 Booth Conversation Red Flags
| Red Flag | What It Might Mean | Suggested Response |
| “We can make anything” | No specialized capability, likely subcontracting | Ask for specific examples of similar items they’ve manufactured |
| No factory photos or videos | They may be a trading company, not a manufacturer | Request a video call factory tour |
| Can’t provide project references | Limited experience or no satisfied clients | Ask for at least 2 recent client contacts for verification |
| Vague about certifications | Certifications may not exist or may be expired | Request certificate copies with issue dates |
| Only shows brochures, no physical products | May not have manufacturing capability | Ask to see construction details, material samples, joinery quality |
3.3 Post-Booth Note-Taking Template
After each booth visit, spend 60 seconds recording:
| Field | Your Notes |
| Exhibitor name | |
| Booth number | |
| Products of interest | |
| Preliminary price range | |
| Strengths noted | |
| Concerns or gaps | |
| Follow-up needed | |
| Contact person & card | Photo of business card |
| Rating (1–5) |
Section 4: Post-Show Action Plan — Converting Connections Into Contracts

4.1 The First 48 Hours After NeoCon
The exhibitors who get your business are the ones you follow up with immediately. Most buyers contact 20–30 exhibitors at NeoCon — the ones who respond fastest and most thoroughly win.
| Day | Action | Purpose |
| Day 1 after show | Email all promising exhibitors referencing your conversation | Re-establishes connection while memory is fresh |
| Day 2 after show | Send your FF&E schedule / project specs to shortlisted suppliers (3–5) | Enables accurate quotations |
| Day 3–5 | Review preliminary quotations, compare pricing and capabilities | Identifies best-value candidates |
| Week 2 | Request samples from top 2–3 candidates | Physical comparison of quality and finish |
| Week 3 | Schedule virtual factory tours or video calls | Verifies manufacturing capability |
| Week 4 | Negotiate final terms, issue RFQ or PO | Moves from conversation to contract |
4.2 Effective Follow-Up Email Template
Subject: NeoCon 2026 Follow-Up — [Your Company] × [Exhibitor Company]
Hi [Contact Name],
Great meeting you at NeoCon 2026, Booth [Number]. I was particularly
impressed by your [specific product/collection] and would like to
explore it further for our upcoming project:
Project: [Hotel/Hospital/School name or type]
Location: [City, Country]
Scope: [Brief description — e.g., “200 guest rooms + lobby + restaurant”]
Target delivery: [Month/Year]
Could you please provide a preliminary quotation based on the
attached FF&E schedule? I’ve also included our design mood board
for reference.
Looking forward to continuing our conversation.
Best regards,
[Your Name]
[Title]
[Company]
4.3 Sample Evaluation Checklist
When samples arrive from shortlisted manufacturers, evaluate them systematically:
| Evaluation Criteria | What to Check | Pass/Fail Indicator |
| Material quality | Wood grain, metal finish, upholstery hand-feel | Matches approved specifications |
| Construction | Joint tightness, hardware operation, edge banding | No gaps, smooth operation, secure edges |
| Finish quality | Color accuracy, evenness, scratch resistance | Matches approved sample within acceptable tolerance |
| Dimensional accuracy | Measure against specification drawings | Within ±2mm tolerance |
| Weight & stability | Test structural integrity, weight distribution | No wobbling, appropriate weight for category |
| Packaging | Inspection of shipping packaging quality | Protective wrapping, no damage in transit |
| Documentation | Included material certificates, care instructions | Complete and accurate paperwork |
Section 5: Maximizing ROI — Beyond the Show Floor
5.1 Educational Sessions & Keynotes
NeoCon offers a robust program of educational sessions alongside the exhibition. For sourcing professionals, these sessions provide valuable market intelligence:
| Session Type | What You’ll Learn | Recommended For |
| Market trend keynotes | Industry outlook, material innovations, design directions | All buyers — shapes your sourcing strategy |
| Sustainability sessions | Green certifications, circular economy, low-carbon sourcing | Projects with LEED / WELL requirements |
| Contract furnishing panels | Procurement best practices, supply chain strategies | Project managers, procurement specialists |
| Technology showcases | Smart furniture, integrated power, acoustic solutions | Modern hotel and office projects |
5.2 Networking Events
| Event Type | Value Proposition | Strategy |
| Exhibitor parties | Informal relationship building with suppliers | Attend 1–2 parties hosted by your top-priority suppliers |
| Industry association events | Peer networking, benchmarking | Connect with other buyers to share sourcing experiences |
| Show floor happy hours | Quick conversations with exhibitors you missed during the day | Use for discovery of new suppliers |
FAQ
Q1: How much does it cost to attend NeoCon 2026? A: NeoCon registration is free for industry professionals who register online before the show deadline ($50 on-site). Major costs include travel (flights), accommodation ($180–350/night near McCormick Place), meals, and ground transportation. Budget approximately $1,500–$2,500 for a 3-day visit from major U.S. cities, or $2,500–$4,000 for international attendees.
Q2: Can I bring project drawings to show exhibitors at their booths? A: Absolutely — and you should. Bringing floor plans, design intent documents, or mood boards on a tablet enables exhibitors to provide meaningful feedback and preliminary assessments on the spot. Many experienced manufacturers can give rough budget estimates during the conversation if they can see your scope and specifications.
Q3: How do I handle exhibitors who only accept large MOQ orders? A: Be transparent about your project quantities upfront. If your order is smaller than their standard MOQ, ask about “stock” or “standard catalog” items that may have lower minimums. For larger projects, consolidating multiple property orders or negotiating phased deliveries can help meet MOQ thresholds. Hongye Furniture, for example, offers flexible MOQs starting at 50 pieces for standard items.
Q4: Should I sign any agreements or place deposits at NeoCon? A: Generally, no. Use NeoCon for relationship building, product evaluation, and preliminary discussions. Place formal orders only after receiving detailed quotations, reviewing samples, and conducting due diligence (factory visits, reference checks). If a supplier pressures you for an on-the-spot deposit, consider it a warning sign. Legitimate manufacturers understand the procurement process takes time.
Q5: What’s the best way to compare multiple furniture manufacturers after the show? A: Create a standardized evaluation spreadsheet with weighted criteria: product quality, price, lead time, certifications, project references, communication quality, and customization capability. Request quotations on the same specification basis from all shortlisted suppliers so your comparison is apples-to-apples. Include landed cost (product + shipping + duties) rather than just FOB price for accurate comparison.
