flexiblefullpage
billboard
interstitial1
catfish1
Currently Reading

Brand marketing: Why the B2B world needs to embrace consumers

Market Data

Brand marketing: Why the B2B world needs to embrace consumers

The relevance of brand recognition has always been debatable in the B2B universe. With notable exceptions like BASF, few manufacturers or industry groups see value in generating top-of-mind awareness for their products and services with consumers.


By John Caulfield, Senior Editor | November 11, 2016

Pixabay Public Domain

I’ve been going to trade shows for more than 35 years, and it never ceases to amaze me how many suppliers I’ve never heard of. While there are always well-known brands on display, like Kohler and
Whirlpool, marketing strategies for most suppliers typically view the general public as an afterthought.

The relevance of brand recognition has always been debatable in the B2B universe. With notable exceptions like BASF, few manufacturers or industry groups see value in generating top-of-mind awareness for their products and services with consumers. It’s far more advantageous, their thinking goes, to aim at municipalities, developers, and their AEC partners.

“It’s not in their organizational DNA” to market to the public, observes Kimberly Jones, President of Butler/Till, a media planning firm. 

But the public isn’t a passive bystander anymore. It is an avid stakeholder insisting that its input be factored into the design and construction of all kinds of projects: schools, offices, hospitals, multifamily housing, even sports arenas. Marketing that relegates the public to the sidelines misses an opportunity to influence—even tangentially—these influencers. 

I was thinking about branding while standing on the periphery of the International WELL Building Institute’s booth at last month’s Greenbuild convention in Los Angeles, watching one of a steady stream of interviews with company execs and partners, presented to Greenbuild attendees. IWBI, which launched in 2013, is striving to create a brand. But for whom, I wondered? 

Its WELL Building Standard stems from a larger wellness movement being spurred by a public that is demanding healthier home and work environments. But certification programs that measure and grade buildings and products have been mostly indifferent about propagating their brands. 

The EPA’s Energy Star program, which has been around for 24 years, gained purchase as energy rates rose. But EPA’s WaterSense labeling program, which celebrates its 10th anniversary this year, has yet to muster that level of brand awareness, in part, because water is relatively inexpensive in most markets.

The WaterSense label is on 16,000+ product models. Through 2015, it has helped consumers reduce energy and water costs by $32.6 billion. Yet, fewer than one-quarter of Americans are aware of the brand, according to a GfK survey.

My guess is that the same is true, to a greater or lesser degree, of LEED, Green Globes, Cradle to Cradle, and other regimens that hold buildings and products accountable for their efficiency, sustainability, or healthiness. Imagine the marketing boost for manufacturers and builders if these certification programs more broadly impacted consumers’ decisions about what to buy or where to live and work? 

The Cradle to Cradle label is on nearly 6,000 products under 400-plus corporate certificates. Those products include many consumer brands, from Shaw Industries (flooring) to Method (soap). The Cradle to Cradle organization is confident that the brand means something to “knowledgeable consumers” (read: Millennials), says Stacy Glass, the group’s VP of Built Environment. 

But any consumer branding campaign would be futile without critical mass. “What I’d like to see is our label on one million products under 10,000 certificates across the built environment,” says Glass.    

Related Stories

Market Data | Aug 2, 2021

Nonresidential construction spending falls again in June

The fall was driven by a big drop in funding for highway and street construction and other public work.

Market Data | Jul 29, 2021

Outlook for construction spending improves with the upturn in the economy

The strongest design sector performers for the remainder of this year are expected to be health care facilities.

Market Data | Jul 29, 2021

Construction employment lags or matches pre-pandemic level in 101 metro areas despite housing boom

Eighty metro areas had lower construction employment in June 2021 than February 2020.

Market Data | Jul 28, 2021

Marriott has the largest construction pipeline of U.S. franchise companies in Q2‘21

472 new hotels with 59,034 rooms opened across the United States during the first half of 2021.

Market Data | Jul 27, 2021

New York leads the U.S. hotel construction pipeline at the close of Q2‘21

Many hotel owners, developers, and management groups have used the operational downtime, caused by COVID-19’s impact on operating performance, as an opportunity to upgrade and renovate their hotels and/or redefine their hotels with a brand conversion.

Market Data | Jul 26, 2021

U.S. construction pipeline continues along the road to recovery

During the first and second quarters of 2021, the U.S. opened 472 new hotels with 59,034 rooms.

Market Data | Jul 21, 2021

Architecture Billings Index robust growth continues

AIA’s Architecture Billings Index (ABI) score for June remained at an elevated level of 57.1.

Market Data | Jul 20, 2021

Multifamily proposal activity maintains sizzling pace in Q2

Condos hit record high as all multifamily properties benefit from recovery.

Market Data | Jul 19, 2021

Construction employment trails pre-pandemic level in 39 states

Supply chain challenges, rising materials prices undermine demand.

Market Data | Jul 15, 2021

Producer prices for construction materials and services soar 26% over 12 months

Contractors cope with supply hitches, weak demand.

boombox1
boombox2
native1

More In Category

Healthcare Facilities

Watch on-demand: Key Trends in the Healthcare Facilities Market for 2024-2025

Join the Building Design+Construction editorial team for this on-demand webinar on key trends, innovations, and opportunities in the $65 billion U.S. healthcare buildings market. A panel of healthcare design and construction experts present their latest projects, trends, innovations, opportunities, and data/research on key healthcare facilities sub-sectors. A 2024-2025 U.S. healthcare facilities market outlook is also presented.




halfpage1

Most Popular Content

  1. 2021 Giants 400 Report
  2. Top 150 Architecture Firms for 2019
  3. 13 projects that represent the future of affordable housing
  4. Sagrada Familia completion date pushed back due to coronavirus
  5. Top 160 Architecture Firms 2021