• David Gordon
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Digitizing Contractor Interactions

Many talk about digitizing the channel and the emerging / present digitalization of the industry and then wonder why eCommerce as a percent of distributor sales is not higher.

Much is being invested into the space. Everything from product content to website development / eCommerce platforms (and CMG is involved in some of this in supporting clients as well as involved with ETIM North America).

The issue, in many cases, is that 45% of industry revenues is generated from contractors. There are 60,000-80,000 of them and they have widely varying capabilities. And from a purchasing viewpoint, 30-40% of the business is typically project-oriented.

Some contractors are very digitally-savvy. Others are, shall we say “challenged” and still have .aol email addresses, The large ones, let’s call them the ENR Top 600, have IT departments focused on automating the business and improving productivity and profitability. A good number subscribe to Trimble (the Trade Service people) for data and estimating systems and there are other estimating and procurement / ERP / accounting systems that contractors use.

Needless to say, it is a diverse market rather than a monolithic entity with similar behaviors.

The January issue of Electrical Contractor magazine had an article spotlighting some key findings from the 2020 JBKnowledge ConTech Report which shared contractor digital habits. The report, which had about 3000 respondents of which 10% were from electrical contractors, had some interesting data points:

  • 92% of construction workers use smartphones (which says they can open apps, handle text, access websites, etal … but it doesn’t mean that they will respond to the multitude of eMarketing and marketing / sales text messages that you could send them daily! They will filter out the noise.)
  • 20% use 6+ construction apps in the field (they’ll integrate with their ERP / estimating / billing systems as well as key project management workflow tools. There is an opportunity to integrate with key procurement tools as well as delivery services.
  • Mobile devices are used for reviewing project documents, creating project documentation / emails, viewing BIM models and viewing installation documents.
  • 70% are willing to bid on projects that involve BIM (and remember, with about 300 electrical responses, this is probably the larger and more sophisticated contractors.) BIM is driven more from the GC level than the sub-contractor level.
  • 40% of respondents report using pre-fab with 75%+ of this being for commercial projects, only 12% are for residential (which is probably track homes).
  • 40% of those using pre-fab say it’s giving their company a strategic advantage.

 

Some other interesting insights in the report, which is validated through anecdotal conversations with contractors and distributors include:

  • 62% of contractors rely on spreadsheets for estimating (which correlates to what we know about the electrical estimating packages … and this percent is low … remember, it’s only of “survey respondents”.)
  • 27% rely on spreadsheets for take-offs (some are using software tools such as Retrolux for lighting retrofit projects, some ask distributors to do for them!)

 

Takeaways

  • As a distributor, how much do you know about how your customers do business and what their systems are? How could you help them with their processes? Integrate with them to improve their productivity (don’t position as “reduce their costs”) – make it easy for them to do business with you. Consider conducting a survey to your customers to ask them key questions and then integrate the information into your CRM / marketing database. Determine which platforms you can facilitate (or should promote / populate.) Arm your salespeople with the key questions (caution – you know they will rarely ask unless you follow-up.)
  • Need help in conducting customer research in the construction industry and asking the right questions?
  • Categorize your customers and, perhaps, interact, or serve, different groups differently.
  • Some distributors are developing tools to integrate email into eCommerce.
  • Others are using services such as Conexiom to convert email into EDI.
  • Distributors, and manufacturers, should have Innovation Teams (or this could be facilitated by marketing groups) looking at understanding emerging digital that help facilitate jobsite ordering and contractor procurement as well as tools that are powering throughout the construction ecosystem.
  • Click here to get a free copy of the JBKnowledge ConTech Report.

 

This is another one of those areas where size matters but where marketing groups can aggregate insights to share with members or, advisors such as Channel Marketing Group can share ideas and industry insights to understand marketplace dynamics and to uncover relationships that can help optimize opportunities.

Author: David Gordon

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