Regardless of the issues your company faces, you can be successful and become customers' preferred brand by focusing on three main points:
The December 2021 Whizard Summit yielded two insightful days for how Building Products companies can be successful in 2022. Almost every single presenter emphasized the three high-level points above, either directly or indirectly. Each of them also shared specific strategies, tactics and tools you can implement to successfully handle your go-to-market challenges.
We don’t have the space here to share every single piece of useful, actionable information we learned at the event. Instead, we want to summarize some of the do’s and don’ts that you should keep top of mind for your 2022 go-to-market strategy.
Don’t be so enamored with yourself that you forget to look at your brand from your customers’ perspective.
Do lead your marketing and sales efforts by being helpful to your supplier, distributor, dealer, engineer, architect, builder and contractor networks. Work with (and through) your partners to solve for the end customer. Train your internal and indirect sales reps to understand the business and personal challenges of the customers they are selling to.
Don’t assume your customers and partners prefer you. Brand loyalty is low and brand switching is high. Preference for product availability supersedes historic relationships.
Do refine your brand and your message to focus on a problem your customers have and the outcome they seek. This is how you will differentiate your brand.
Don’t be so focused on yourself that you forget to invest in your channel partners.
It’s easy to miss the forest for the trees.
Do make intentional efforts to collaborate, integrate and communicate with your customers and partners in ways that enrich each touchpoint. Make intentional efforts to ask the questions that get your channel partners to express the struggles they are facing. Then be prepared to help them find solutions.
Don’t narrow your field of vision down to your short-term circumstances. Business decisions taken for an immediate benefit can often cause long-term damage to your company and your brand.
Do empower every employee and indirect sales partner to find solutions for customers that address the short-term needs of your company while also upholding the long-term trajectory of your position in the market.
Don’t just make your product “better,” stronger, cheaper, prettier.
Do identify and solve for product acquisition challenges, as well as solving for your customer’s current installation, product use and product maintenance issues. Remember that having a durable, high-quality product and good customer service is the benchmark, not your differentiator.
If you want a good litmus for anything you currently do or intend to do, ask yourself the following questions:
You need to find ways to solve for the customer. There’s no way around it and no excuses not to. You can refresh your memory about what your customers and partners actually like and dislike about you by reviewing Mark Mitchell’s slide deck of Customer Interviews.
Then, you can write down your three action items as you work to solve for your customers.
Here’s an example of what that might look like:
We want to thank every presenter for taking the time and care to share strategic next steps and deep industry insights:
We didn’t just learn from the presenters either. The quality of peer-to-peer recommendations from the attendees, both during discussions and the hot seat sessions, is what gave practical application to the principles that were presented.
Thank you to each attendee for being open, willing to freely exchange ideas, ask questions, and take their place in the hot seat!
Here's an extra resource from us to get you started on becoming the preferred brand among various customers in 2022.