How to Configure SEG Mobile Lightbox Sizes

Choosing the right SEG lightbox size starts with your booth footprint, traffic flow, and goals for the event. A modular system gives you flexibility, but the best layout still needs to be planned around how visitors will see and use the space.

Start with Your Booth Space

Your booth size determines the most practical display configuration. A 10x10 booth usually needs a strong back wall and a simple front conversation area. A 10x20 booth gives you room to create multiple zones, add counters, or include a monitor mount. Larger island booths can use double-sided lightboxes, towers, and bridges to attract traffic from multiple directions.

Common Booth Size Recommendations

For a 10x10 booth space, most exhibitors should focus on one strong back wall instead of trying to fill every side of the booth. A clean illuminated wall gives the booth a strong visual anchor while leaving enough room for staff, visitors, samples, and a counter.

For a 10x20 booth, you have more flexibility. You can create one long backlit wall, use two separate branded zones, or combine a main wall with side towers. This is a good layout for companies that need to promote multiple product lines or create a more premium presentation without moving into a full island booth.

For island or peninsula spaces, double-sided lightboxes and freestanding towers become more useful because traffic can approach from multiple directions. In these layouts, the goal is not just to create a backdrop. The goal is to guide movement through the space.

Popular SEG Lightbox Configurations

  • Single-panel display: A compact illuminated display for smaller events, retail spaces, or accent branding.
  • 10x10 backlit wall: A strong option for standard inline booths where the main viewing angle is from the aisle.
  • 10x20 modular wall: A wider layout for larger inline spaces, product zones, or stronger brand presence.
  • Bridge display: Adds depth and structure while connecting multiple lightbox sections.
  • TV mount layout: Combines backlit branding with video, demos, or presentations. See backlit displays with TV mounts.

Plan Around Traffic Flow

A good layout should make it easy for visitors to enter, understand the message, and start a conversation. Avoid blocking the booth entrance with counters or walls. Use large backlit surfaces for distance visibility, then use counters, shelving, and monitors for closer engagement.

Think Modular from the Start

Even if you only need a smaller display today, plan for how your system could grow. A modular SEGO layout can expand into larger configurations by adding panels, counters, towers, or bridge sections. This gives you a longer-lasting investment than buying a display that only works for one booth size.

Use the Configurator to Visualize Layouts

If you are not sure which layout makes sense, use the backlit booth configurator to explore different configurations before committing to a setup.

Ready to Build a Brighter Booth?

Explore SEGO lightboxes and mobile backlit displays, compare 10x10 backlit booth options, or use the backlit booth configurator to plan a modular layout.