We assist with several yearly outdoor events for our Basset-Hound Rescue group, and have quite an assortment of canopy-type tents that we have used over the past ten years.
YMMV - but my observations are:
Most of the units with the "accordion-folding" reinforcements around the perimeter and from the vertical posts to the center are pretty flimsy. If you want them to last, you have to be a bit careful with them:
-When setting-up / tearing-down, use (3) people to "walk" three corners in - towards the stationary corner.
-In order to reduce damage from wind - stake them down properly, both through the flanges at the bottom of the posts, and add the wind-stabilizing stakes and lines out as far as room will allow.
-The lines that go to the top of the corners are CRITICAL if rain is in the forecast - they apply tension to "stretch" the canopy. This keeps it from sagging and collecting mini-swimming-pools. Once those happen, you're in trouble.
-If you can pull-up your stakes with your fingertips - they ain't holding squat!
-For pulling-out stakes, do not grab a tent post or anchor-line and lift - get some sort of heavy tool (pry-bar or old pair of BIG channellocks, and pull the stakes one-by-one, in a semi-proper manner.)
We have had better luck with some units that have fixed poles that snap into heavy plastic corner and top pieces. These require some assembly, but lack the flimsy pivot-joints of the "accordion-type". The ones we have use steel poles, which seem more sturdy and wind-resistant (heavier-guage vinyl-coated cloth canopy as well).
If you want to make set-up easy, get a few rolls of color-coded electrical tape. Run bands of matching colors around the sockets on the fittings and joints on the poles. That way, after a few years and lost instructions, all you have to do is play "match the colors".
(Prevents FUBAR when the rain is pouring!)
Hope this helps.