by Tom Myers
February 03, 2026
Reading Time: 5 minutes
In a time when reliable information can be hard to find, associations stand out as credible voices in the professions they serve. A Smithbucklin survey found that about 75% of professionals trust information they get at association events more than information from any other source.
That credibility creates an opportunity for associations. When associations build their sales approach around the trust members place in them, it can lead to stronger relationships with exhibitors, sponsors and advertisers.
The Association Trust Advantage
Members trust associations because they believe associations act in service of their profession, not profit. This distinction shapes how members receive and evaluate information. Trust grows when an association stays focused on its mission, reflects what members care about, creates opportunities for members to learn from one another and operates with openness and accountability in every interaction.
This matters for sponsors. Associations offer access to engaged audiences who show up ready to learn, engage and apply what they hear. In a crowded and skeptical information environment, that setting is valuable.
Why Events Amplify Trust
Association events are especially high-trust environments. Attendees invest their time and resources knowing they’ll get reliable education relevant to their day-to-day work. They want to build connections with colleagues and meet industry leaders.
Unlike digital advertising or other media, events immerse attendees in learning alongside peers. Conversations reinforce ideas. Context deepens understanding.
When sponsors enter this environment, they benefit from the trust the association has built with its members. The association does not endorse individual sponsors, but it does create a unique setting where attendees are more likely to notice, consider and remember sponsor messages.
Focus on Trust as Sponsor Value
Associations can strengthen sponsorship sales by shifting the sales conversation from exposure to engagement. The core message is this: Your brand presence is more than logo exposure, because isn’t just buying visibility. You are part of a trusted industry environment where your product or service is at the top of the “short list” with every buyer or influencer.
Reinforce the value of these opportunities through:
- Relevance: Show exhibitors and sponsors where their products and services align with the event theme, programming and audience objectives.
- Context: Highlight products that place the sponsor’s messaging or thought leadership within the context of trusted elements of the event. Combining the sponsor’s messaging with high-credibility sessions helps their customers see them in a highly credible light.
- Engagement: Support sponsors to create opportunities for your event audience to interact directly with sponsors in meaningful, learning-centered ways.
Make the concept of trust explicit in your association’s media kit, conference sites and other sales materials. Trust can be difficult to quantify, but member loyalty and satisfaction data, event participation and engagement metrics (especially if attendance is rising!) and the longevity of conference messaging in post-event conversations all give your sales team evidence they can use in sponsor conversations.
Build Sponsorship Packages Centered on Harnessing Trust
After you show sponsors the value of your members’ trust, make that trust the focal point of the sponsor’s investment.
Review your association’s sponsorship package to make sure the options you offer your sponsors benefit from your members’ trust. Focus on offerings that build sponsors’ credibility while also giving members resources to support their careers and profession, such as thought leadership sessions, peer roundtables and adding sponsor content to whitepapers, session recaps or toolkits.
Consider coaching sponsors on how to deliver value-driven content for attendees, avoiding promotional or salesy gimmicks.
Finally, report sponsor results using data that reflects trust and engagement, not just impressions.
Trust is a rare asset and associations already have it. When they design and communicate sponsorship offerings around trusted content and engagement rather than visibility alone, they increase both sponsor value and retention.
Meet the Author
Tom Myers
Senior Vice President
Sales Services
Smithbucklin