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Business Development Best Practices

Every month the Business Development Committee reaches out to small business owners, marketing directors, and public relations specialists to gather valuable insight into the rapidly growing construction industry.

If you're looking to create marketing proposals, build relationships with customers, and increase sales, our Best Practices article series can help.

2023

  • January 2023
    Leah Gradl, Chief Business Officer - Kent Companies

    Who are the most valuable customers on your account list? Gut instinct likely points you straight to your key accounts. If you’re like most businesses, you double down on your best customers because you have their loyalty, trust, and a profitable track record. After all, sales wisdom tells us that it’s easier to keep an account than to earn a new one. How do you push growth beyond your key accounts? One of the most strategic opportunities to grow stands with your second-tier accounts. If you can move the middle of your account list, you have a calculated path to increasing sales, footprint, and margin.

    Tags:
    Business Development, Client Interview & Presentation, Client Relationship, Communication & Collaboration, Culture & Personnel, Networking

2022

  • August 2022
    Jacqueline A. Falla, Elaine Construction

    Be careful what you wish for, it just might happen.  These behind-the-scenes meetings seem intriguing for loads of reasons, not the least of which include the intrigue and mystery that surrounds them.  What do they talk about?  Is there a secret plan for a merger, an acquisition? Are they talking about me, or you or the next big hire that will end up managing you?  The answer is likely yes.  As one dialed in politician said: “If you aren’t at the table – you’re on the menu.”  (attributed to both Ann Richards and Elizabeth Warren) Employees professional fates are being decided behind those closed doors.  Who will be hired, fired, or promoted?  Who can execute, bring energy, energize others, and has an edge?  Are you a good fit for the organization, mesh with their values, aspirations, and ways of being?  It is important for you to ask these questions of yourself, to be proactive, to add value to the organization.

    Tags:
    Business Development, Client Interview & Presentation, Client Relationship, Communication & Collaboration, Culture & Personnel, Networking
  • July 2022
    Julie Wanzer, LEED AP, Owner of Business Rewritten

    Despite the recent volatile market conditions, the construction industry remains competitive, and firms are consistently looking for that “it” factor to win more work. One of the most common analogies used in business development (BD) and the project pursuit process is the “three-legged stool”, denoting cost, time and quality. The analogy is intended to demonstrate that all three factors are weighted equally, but in this post-pandemic era when budgets and schedules fluctuate due to external factors such as a looming recession or continued supply chain issues, quality becomes the only factor that construction firms can actually control. Although quality can be a nebulous term, difficult to quantify, and certainly takes more time to establish, in the long-run, delivering quality service to clients stands to be the greatest contributor to a construction firm’s profitability.

    Tags:
    Business Development, Communication & Collaboration, Culture & Personnel, Marketing & Branding, Procurement & Pricing
  • May 2022
    Lindsay Young, nu marketing

    Virtual business development seems to be a recently coined and common term in the A/E/C industries, as business development looks much different today than it did a couple of years ago. The opportunities to drop by prospects’ offices or meet them at a networking event are few and far between.

    Tags:
    Business Development, Client Relationship, Communication & Collaboration, Digital & Social Media, Networking
  • March 2022
    Chris Martin, President, Atlas Marketing

    Business development (BD) has always been an important function for contractors. Now, with the impact of virtual offices and the ever-present office mobility, BD has truly become a greater challenge. Let’s not kid ourselves, there are multiple obstacles that BD professionals face amidst an ongoing pandemic including rising competitive landscapes, ongoing supply chain issues and labor shortages. Combining these issues with an ongoing desire for contractor demand, BD is more of a chase now, than simply developing opportunities.

    Tags:
    Business Development, Client Relationship, Communication & Collaboration, Digital & Social Media, Marketing & Branding, Marketing Research, Markets & Trends, Networking, Procurement & Pricing
  • January 2022
    Lindsay Young, nu marketing

    Networking is a naughty word in construction — most people cringe at the idea. Let’s approach networking from a different point of view that’s not cringeworthy then. Let’s think about it as making friends, learning about someone or someone’s company, or just finding common ground.

    Tags:
    Business Development, Client Relationship, Communication & Collaboration, Marketing & Branding, Marketing Research, Networking

2021

  • December 2021
    Julie Wanzer, LEED AP, Owner of Business Rewritten

    To say the last two years has been challenging for everyone in both our professional and personal lives, is quite possibly the understatement of the past 20 months. The construction industry has certainly faced a myriad of challenges, economic fallouts and other setbacks over the years, but none as far-reaching as COVID and its continued impact on all of our lives. As we reassess and begin 2022 with at least some sense of hope, the “challenge” now posed to the construction industry is to redefine our notion of success – more specifically, how we measure and celebrate successes both externally with our clients and partners, as well as internally with our employees.

    Tags:
    Business Development, Client Relationship, Communication & Collaboration, Networking, Proposals
  • November 2021
    Frank Lippert, FSMPS, CPSM

    As we trudge through the pandemic and its economic uncertainty, one thing is clear: we must continue to win work. While there seems to be no shortage of RFPs, our ability to build relationships with the clients behind the RFPs and to truly do the early work of discovery is heavily weighted towards the established relationships we built pre-pandemic. The old rule that 80-percent of our work comes from existing clients and 20-percent is from new is in question. In a recent, very informal poll, 50-percent of respondents said the 80/20 rule was still relatively valid, while the other half erred on the side that its more likely 90/10 at best. With traditional methods of meeting new clients (conferences, networking events, meals, and happy hours) almost non-existent in some places, I wondered how business developers are making connections and succeeding at winning new work. I found two fascinating examples that tell us a lot about what’s working.

    Tags:
    Business Development, Client Interview & Presentation, Client Relationship, Communication & Collaboration, Networking, Proposals
  • August 2021
    Robert Armbrister, President and CEO of SPARK Business Works

    A lot of contractors and managers still struggle to track and understand their sales data. It’s a constant battle of wrangling information from spreadsheets, paper forms, emails, and even word of mouth.

    This current, messy way of doing business is bogging down your processes and best people. It’s difficult to track your daily sales activity, qualified opportunities, and recently won projects and dollar amounts. And, unfortunately, there’s no clear path to efficiency.

    So, why are you still stuck with these methods? Because they’re familiar and what worked in the past. It’s hard to change to something new.

    But the industry is now at a tipping point. Digitization is the way forward.

    Tags:
    Business Development, Communication & Collaboration, Culture & Personnel, Marketing & Branding, Marketing Research, Markets & Trends, Procurement & Pricing, Technology & Processes
  • July 2021
    Hal Routh, President, Equalizer9

    In my many years in the general contracting industry, I ran across many prospective clients that could have benefited greatly from a negotiated team build approach, but were so committed to their traditional Bid-Build delivery model that they were not willing to deviate. First, I will admit that a negotiated approach is not always the right solution, but whenever a project has complicating factors, whether it be logistical, schedule, constructability, or its a unique one of a kind structure, a negotiated team build approach can bring early solutions to a client's most worrisome issues. Regardless of the benefits, some of these "Hard Bidders" are true believers that general contractors are all the same and that price is all that mattered.

    Tags:
    Business Development, Client Relationship, Communication & Collaboration, Procurement & Pricing