Location

Websites without Phone Numbers

If you want to do business, make it easy for your customers or prospects to find you.

That would seem to be obvious. Yet many building product websites do not list phone numbers or email contacts.

Case in point:  www.BoralBrick.com.  Boral is one of the largest brick manufacturers in North America. Yet their website does not list a phone number or email address on the front page or any of the customary, obvious locations. Even their Contact Us page omits contact info. It has just a form that I can use to send them an email -- if I am willing to give them all my contact info. Some calls are too urgent to wait until someone responds via email, and their form does not allow me to attach documents, copy others, or get a copy for my records.

While it is probably just a oversight, they even omit their phone number where they intended it to be. Their Privacy Policy page provides corporate boilerplate saying:
How To Contact Us
Should you have other questions or concerns about these privacy policies, please call us at [phone number] or send us an email at [email address].
After several minutes of searching, I did find their phone number -- at the bottom of a press release. But how many potential customers would have given up the search and moved on to another supplier's site?

For reference, Boral Brick can be reached at 800-5-BORAL-5.


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By the way, spelling out phone numbers is cute and can be memorable, but it does not work anymore. Few mobile phones have letters associated with numerals on the "dial" pad anymore.

Gowalla Introduces One-Stop Check-Ins

Gowalla just made a major play to take over the location-based app market. Their latest update has integration with Facebook Places and Foursquare, meaning you can use one app to participate in several networks simultaneously.

I still think location-based programming has not matured enough yet to be very useful in our industry, but once it has this feature will make Gowalla much more useful to marketers by allowing them to multiply their efforts.

[h/t ReadWriteWeb]

Branching out?: Consider regional product preferences when venturing into new geographic markets

"My company’s building-product sales have been concentrated in one regional market. I now want to expand into new territories. What kinds of market variations can I expect? How should I decide where to make my next move?"—N.C.T., president

I once asked an executive of a foreign building-product firm what he learned about the United States after introducing a product here. He observed that the United States is not really a single country, but dozens of different regions. What sells in New England is not the same as what sells in the Rockies.

“Before I brought my product to America, I knew I would have to deal with different climates in such a big country,” he said. “But I had no idea how much construction practices, design tastes, regulatory controls, and distribution patterns would vary. Even the terminology for our product is different from one region to the next.”

The roots of these variations are buried in construction’s historic ties to the land and its climate and resources. For example, clapboard siding is associated with New England because early settlers there had vast forest resources, while adobe construction was used in New Mexico because of the dry climate and scarce building materials.

Building materials are bulky and heavy, favoring the use of locally produced products. And traditional practices often are carried through to the local building codes. Doing business in some locations—such as California, with its stringent air pollution, seismic resistance, and energy conservation requirements—may feel more like crossing an international boundary than a state line.

Regional tastes and expectations must also be considered. Pigments for colored concrete sidewalks and paving, for example, are more prevalent in southern states, due in part to the climate. Many northern builders are reluctant to spend extra money on a patio that will be covered by snow several months of the year, and are concerned about damage from freeze-thaw conditions. But the reasons also relate to more subtle cultural traditions and styles.

First-hand experiences 

Several projects I have been involved in recently bring regional differences into focus. While developing a new concrete masonry system for a California manufacturer, I had to unlearn all the masonry design guidelines I had used in the Midwest. The California product had seismic resistance constraints not needed in the Midwest, but required none of the insulation techniques I had used before. Because of the different requirements, the same product took on dramatically different designs in the two regions.

For a manufacturer of a premium roofing metal system, I had to consider several regional factors when selecting potential sites for a new plant. The competition varied by region: Slate roofing is widely used on upscale homes in the Northeast, wood shakes in the West, and tile roofs in the Southwest. My client’s product required modifications to accommodate hurricane winds in the Atlantic and Gulf states and snow and icy conditions elsewhere. In some regions, metal roofs are installed by roofers, while more expensive sheet metal contractors have jurisdiction in other areas. Finally, we had to determine whether to locate the plant where a direct competitor had already primed the demand for our roof type, or pay the higher cost of creating demand that could lead to a greater market dominance.

While doing sales training for a window producer, I had to adjust to regional variations in its sales force. Depending on the area, the company used either salespeople, independent reps, or building material dealers to handle local promotion and sales. This may sound unwieldy, but it was responsive to regional trade patterns and the firm’s relative strengths in different communities. In one region, for example, the company acquired strong distributors after buying out a local manufacturer. But in another region, where sales were low, the company used independent reps. That strategy kept overhead down while maintaining a regional sales presence to selectively pursue attractive projects.

Picking your region  
Before starting business in a new territory, conduct market research to learn more about the region. Approach each region separately to understand the local market conditions and your competitive strengths and weaknesses there.

Market research can be a new experience for entrepreneurs who built their businesses based on first hand knowledge of local conditions and personal relationships with specifiers and contractors. To begin, look at regional economic indicators to determine the market’s size and growth potential. Find out as much as you can about competitors already in the region. If competitors are not active there, ask why and what would happen if they did enter the market. Talk to potential customers about their buying habits and find out if they’re satisfied with existing suppliers. Visit local plan rooms and construction sites to see what is being specified and built. Compare the region to your established territory.

The natural inclination for many firms is to expand into regions adjacent to their established territories. This approach may cost the least initially because it builds off of existing sales and distribution routes, but its long-term potential may not be optimum. If you sell water repellent coatings along the Gulf Coast, for example, the dry hinterland of Texas may not hold much promise despite its proximity. Instead, start with a broad geographic view, and don’t overlook international opportunities. Look for regions with the best overall growth potential.

Another common expansion strategy is to look at statistics to find current growth markets. While current growth should be considered, relying solely on this criterion has several drawbacks. Hot markets can cool off just as rapidly as they grow, and the boom may be over before you become profitable. Furthermore, hot territories attract other competitors, setting you up for a price cutting war when activity settles down.

A sound approach is to look for underlying market strengths and an intimate match between your products and regional market demands. Remember, too, that one of the reasons for expanding is to minimize your vulnerability to regional economic cycles in construction. Stay away from areas that historically rise and fall in sync with your existing territory.

Have a question you'd like us to answer?
Send an email to michaelchusid@chusid.com 

By Michael Chusid
Originally published in Construction Marketing Today, Copyright © 1995

iPad in Construction

Can iPad help your sales presentation? Here's one example:



Second, check out the Construction Equipment Owner's Blogs podcast "Construction Uses for the iPad".

I had the chance to view iPads in the wild, so to speak, recently and my opinions - both positive and negative - have been reinforced.

First the good.

At CONSTRUCT this Spring I saw one exhibitor using their iPad as part of the booth display. Mostly they showed videos and pictures of their product in the field. Was the video better than it would be on a desktop pc? No. But when he put the video into my hands, letting me view and control it, the impact was considerable. Most booths I would just walk past, catching the video out of the corner of my eye. In his booth I stayed to watch the entire clip, and then spent a few minutes playing around with his photo gallery.

Granted, that was as much about playing with the technology as about his product (ok, it was mostly about the technology), but this gets back to the concept of engagement; I spent 30 minutes playing with the iPad, but I was looking at his pictures, his videos, his product literature while I did it. That increases the amount of time eyeballs stay on your literature and builds a relationship with the brand. This effect may decrease as the novelty of the iPad (and slate or tablet computers in general) wears off, but transforming prospects into participants rather than viewers of your message will remain powerful.

A hotel I stayed at recently used iPads at the front desk for similar purpose. Instead of suggesting restaurants and scribbling directions on scrap paper, the concierge invited guests to "explore the neighborhood" themselves, pulling up restaurant reviews, showtimes, directions, and even booking tables. Again, the payoff was increased engagement with the guests; even if the actual utility and information gain remained the same - it didn't; it increased - the richer experience improved their perception of the interaction.

I believe this will be a very powerful feature for selling to architects. In addition to being very visual, architects tend to be very experiential. Giving them something they can manipulate - either a physical object or digital representation - will reach them more than static photography or videos. 

I also was struck again by the iPad's portability. It was smaller, but heavier than I expected. I would not hold it one-handed like I would a book I was reading. Still, its slim profile means it fits nicely into a briefcase, laptop bag, purse, or portfolio, making it incredibly convenient to carry it with me on sales calls.

Now the bad. The iPad has been called "the ideal device for multimedia consumption"; that title is both a compliment and a limitation. Its use has expanded to multimedia content creation, but it still seems somewhat limited to the "multimedia" part. Which means an iPad may be a wonderful addition to my gadget library, but it's just that; an addition. It will not replace anything I'm currently using.

I still need my camera (although I wouldn't be surprised if one gets put in the next generation), I still need my smartphone, and I still need my laptop. Granted, this could greatly reduce laptop usage, but Apple's insistence on maintaining a walled garden prevents some of the utility I need from my laptop as a business and productivity tool. Plus, for extended text writing (such as this blog post) I think I would need the wireless keyboard. And by the time I'm carrying the iPad, a keyboard, peripherals, and a power supply, I might as well be using my laptop.

In summary, I see great potential for the iPad as a new sales tool, but it will be an extension to your tool kit. This might change in future generations, and as competing tablet products reach the market, but for now the iPad remains a tool for the sales team and for personal entertainment.


5 Uses For Location-Aware Technology

Location-aware technology is the current hot-topic in social media circles. As is the case with most new forms of technologies, the first crop of applications are essentially toys and games (Foursquare, Gowalla, Brightkite, CauseWorld, etc.). The most successful and useful location-aware programs (Yelp, Twitter, photo galleries) are primarily preexisting programs that added location features. Either way, the underlying technology has huge implications and potential. Here are five ways location-aware technology can be useful in building product marketing:

  1. Geo-tagging Photos: Using location-data from the other side, photos tagged with location data provide an extra layer of information about the featured projects. As Michael is fond of saying, all construction is local. Architects don’t just want to know your product was used, they want to know it was used in their neighborhood, or one similar to it. Increasingly, photo gallery programs feature built-in location filters that automatically create “albums”, meaning architects can both flip through projects near them, and find the location of their favorite ones.
  2. Create Project Tours: This is something Gowalla does well, demonstrating again that this year’s “toys” can become next year’s indispensable tools. Users can create tours, marking several of their favorite locations and linking to information about each. Use this feature to create a walking tour around towns where you have several notable projects; encourage your prospects to check-in at each (achieved by clicking an in-program button while at the location), and have a prize or coupon for those that visit all the sites. In addition to building engagement, this is a good way to advertise how much work you’ve done around town.
  3. Job Signs: Similar to QR codes, geo-tagging is a good way to publicize your involvement in a project. While QR codes require active participation (users must open the program and scan the image), location-based ads can be more passive, popping up on maps automatically within a defined range. This can also create a permanent digital signature on your work, especially as the precision of these programs increases. Imagine getting a message on your phone as you walk through a building: “Look up! The light fixture shining on you was made by Juno Lighting”, with a link for more information.
  4. Trade Show Ads: This is most similar to the typical retail uses of location-based ads. As show attendees approach your booth, a message pops up telling them about your new product and any special show offers you may have. Alternatively, you might list all the shows you are attending this year, and have special offers for people that check-in at more than one of them. This also works with allied products: attendees visiting a concrete polisher might receive ads informing them of near-by stain or cleaning product manufacturers.
  5. Architectural Location-Based Network: Eventually I hope one of the existing networks will create architecturally-focused addons, or someone will create a location-based network specifically for the construction industry. In this network, buildings’ location-tagged profiles could tell users about materials used, design team, energy savings, and similar important information. Architects would gladly participate, both creating and viewing profiles, because they would enjoy the meta-level experience of seeing a building on so many different levels. Meanwhile manufacturers and contractors capitalize on the architect’s experience by linking their name to the project.
These uses focus on the social media-aspect of location software; there is an entirely different range of applications within design programs, combining BIM with location-aware software to improve many aspects of design and construction. I will address those in a future post.