flexiblefullpage -
billboard - default
interstitial1 - interstitial
catfish1 - bottom
Currently Reading

8 steps to a successful BIM marketing program

8 steps to a successful BIM marketing program

It's not enough to have BIM capability--you have to know how to sell your BIM expertise to clients and prospects.


By By Joseph Joseph , Science Applications International Corporation | May 31, 2012
BIM visualizations like this are important for client and prospect presentations
BIM visualizations like this are important for client and prospect presentations, but your firms BIM marketing program must go
This article first appeared in the June 2012 issue of BD+C.

Building owners and developers are changing their tune regarding BIM services. A few years ago, when BIM was still in its infancy, a client or prospect might issue an RFP asking for some vague level of BIM scope on a proposed project. Today, clients and prospects are becoming much more sophisticated in demanding demonstrated BIM expertise and experience on real projects.

Today, clients take the technical implementation of BIM almost for granted. As a result, the number of clients willing to pay extra for BIM deliverables is practically nonexistent. The upshot is that if your firm isn’t telling the marketplace how your approach to BIM makes it stand out against others offering “standard” BIM services, it will soon be left behind.

As a veteran manager of BIM/CAD technologies, I believe there is a systematic way to make BIM a powerful marketing force for your firm—an eight-step approach to help your firm differentiate its BIM capabilities, become a trusted advisor, and win more work.

STEP 1. Recognize the business and marketing aspects of implementing BIM in your organization.

Under recent extreme competitive pressure, many AEC firms have had to embrace BIM without spending sufficient time on the complex processes involved in adopting such a transformative technology. As a result, firms have become so caught up in the implementation of the technology (admittedly not a trivial consideration) that they have largely ignored the business development aspects of BIM.

That is unfortunate, because BIM is changing how we do business and, consequently, how we go to market. Failure to strategize, analyze, and document how BIM integrates within your business structure will negatively impact your ability to compete in a highly competitive climate, with these consquences:

• Your organizational culture will look at BIM as a tool instead of as a business opportunity offering services beyond what AEC firms have traditionally offered.

• Your firm will suffer from a lack of BIM definition, capability, and expertise.

• Your client-facing staff will not understand your overall vision and goals for BIM.

• Your business development and marketing staff will rely on legacy capabilities instead of using new skills and capabilities that BIM makes available to your firm.

Moreover, client expectations vary greatly depending on how well they understand BIM and how much experience they’ve had with it. Often AEC firms are left with an unclear understanding of how much BIM is required on projects due to a lack of direction by the client, when in fact we should be the ones customizing a BIM approach for each project.

STEP 2. Establish a BIM vision that is linked tightly to your firm’s philosophy and goals and is fully enmeshed within the fabric of your organization.

Implementing BIM as a process and technology is one thing, but building your firm’s BIM credentials requires weaving BIM into the fabric of your organization.

A BIM vision should clearly reflect your organizational culture as it relates to BIM and how it will define future direction related to staff roles and responsibilities, skill sets, service offerings, and strategic positioning. In other words, how does BIM fit within your organization, both structurally and philosophically? How will it change your business?

STEP 3. Identify a BIM champion within your organization to lead the effort.

In order to bring BIM into your organization, a strong BIM leader must either come forward or be identified. This person may not necessarily come from the tech side of your organization. That’s because the job of making BIM an effective business component of your organization will require a multifaceted individual who understands the technology well enough to strategize, manage, and deploy from a “big picture” level, but who also has an understanding and appreciation of the business and operations side—someone who can champion the effort and has a feel for how BIM can strategically redefine the organization for the better.

This individual should hold the title of Director, Managing Director, or BIM Executive and should have the authority to engage with principals in the firm, establish the budget to prioritize spending, and set the tempo of BIM adoption within your organization.

As the face of BIM in your organization, your BIM champion will have to reach out to a wide group of stakeholders, both internal––marketing, finance, principals––and external––clients, prospects, and their representatives. The BIM champion must be the kind of person who can listen to and understand the needs of clients and prospects and implement business strategies to meet those demands most effectively. At the same time, this person must have the ability to push back on those who resist change.

STEP 4. Clearly delineate your BIM capabilities to clients.

Your firm must decide how far you’re going to go in terms of BIM capability. Then make your clients and prospects aware, through your BIM marketing program, of precisely what you can offer them:

• 3D BIM: Modeling and Documentation - Allows for using BIM as a tool to develop and deliver smarter designs for all disciplines in a 3D-intelligent format as well as studying and analyzing the design intent.

• 4D BIM: Integration for Construction - The ability to leverage the benefits of BIM tools during the construction phase results in numerous benefits for a client, including the ability to solve construction headaches through the virtual environment and improved coordination, study timeline and schedule attributes to ensure on-time delivery, and smooth constructability and delivery of projects.

• 5D BIM: Cost Estimation - A totally new way of looking at construction cost in a more virtual and automated methodology, offering up-to-date information to compare actual costs to estimates throughout a project’s life cycle.

• 6D BIM: Building Life Cycle Integration - Enhances facility management by utilizing 3D, 4D, and 5D BIM information in the operation, maintenance, and future renovation of the building.

STEP 5. Embed BIM into your firm’s marketing content. Start by creating a BIM portfolio.

Your firm’s BIM capability is almost worthless if it is not fully assimilated into your marketing content. Because business development material is dynamic and therefore must be updated frequently, you must think of ways to incorporate BIM into these materials.

The BIM portfolio is your firm’s BIM résumé. You will need to combine your recent BIM project success stories with your core services to build a new presentation of your more robust capabilities. BIM can be presented as a set of processes, workflows, and technologies leveraged within your firm to aid in your core-service delivery. BIM portfolios should include a mix of media—images, animations, and roadmaps––that showcase your BIM capabilities. There is also an important collaboration management and execution piece to BIM that most AEC organizations don’t even mention. You should. 

You should leverage your existing media capabilities as well as new ones to market your portfolio. It is critical to add BIM material to your company’s website, either as a project subset or as a full capability with proper leadership contacts and services. Additional outreach could include BIM-related social networking activities and Web interviews with your BIM Leader and software leaders. Finally, build a BIM presentation slide deck that talks about how your firm is transforming with BIM.

The point is not to overwhelm your customers with more BIM, but rather to broadcast your established BIM vision internally and externally through your marketing material.

STEP 6. Educate your client-facing staff on BIM trends, language, and culture.

Even the best marketing materials cannot win business without personal intervention. Client-facing staff, especially senior management and business development staff who interact with prospective and existing clients, need to know how to speak the language of BIM. They should not be expected to become technical experts, but they do need to stay on top of the trends in BIM within the industry and how your firm’s BIM vision addresses those trends.

This kind of individual involvement will put your firm in a position to offer expert guidance to clients based on their specific BIM needs. As a result, your firm will become the expert consultant, not the generic BIM provider.

STEP 7. Customize responses to RFPs and tailor them to the BIM-related needs of the client.

RFPs encompassing BIM requirements can typically be broken down into three categories:

Generic RFP – BIM not included in the scope, except perhaps for a small subsection.  

Technology RFP – Focus is mainly on the use of technology software. Leaves a large gap in defining other issues, such as process, integration, standards, and workflow.

Advanced RFP – Elaborates on BIM scope at length. May include complete exhibits with detailed requirements that cover:

• Standards and processes

• Strategy plan – template to develop a project BIM execution plan

• Software requirements for each discipline

• Workflow processes and methodologies: meetings, clash detection, takeoffs, and reporting

• BIM model management procedures, content management, and archiving

Proposals should always be customized and tailored to the needs of the client. If the client doesn’t know what to ask for from a BIM perspective, take it as an opportunity to offer guidance as a BIM consultant and expert.

STEP 8. To prepare a customized approach, start by studying the BIM scope.

Here is where you show your understanding of the client’s needs and expectations relating to BIM. Ask questions and offer suggestions (if invited to do so). Appreciate the client’s motive for using BIM. Brief the client on potential processes or obstacles they may not be aware of. Finally, write the response around the client’s scope and showcase the BIM portfolio and capabilities.

Over time, you will be able to develop RFP and marketing templates that address different types of BIM approaches. While these templates need to cover the basics, they must always be customized for each project depending on the dynamics of the client relationship.

Now is the time for your firm to take a position as a BIM leader and expert. The software implementation alone is not enough; building a BIM capability and portfolio that is part of a company’s brand, services, and DNA is a prerequisite. Only then can your firm successfully use BIM to help it compete in today’s extremely grueling design and construction market. +
--
Joseph Joseph is SAIC’s Managing Director overseeing all BIM/CAD Technologies strategies and initiatives, including strategizing, standards, and implementation of BIM in a design-build environment.

Related Stories

| Mar 17, 2011

Perkins Eastman launches The Green House prototype design package

Design and architecture firm Perkins Eastman is pleased to join The Green House project and NCB Capital Impact in announcing the launch of The Green House Prototype Design Package. The Prototype will help providers develop small home senior living communities with greater efficiency and cost savings—all to the standards of care developed by The Green House project.

| Mar 17, 2011

Hospitality industry turns to HTS Texas for ‘do not disturb’ air conditioned comfort

Large resort hotels and hospitality properties throughout the Southwest have been working with local contractors, engineers and HTS Texas for the latest innovations in quiet heating, ventilating and air conditioning (HVAC) equipment. The company has completed 12+ projects throughout Texas and the Southwestern U.S. over the past 18 to 24 months, and is currently working on six more hotel projects throughout the region.

| Mar 16, 2011

AIA offers assistance to Japan's Architects, U.S. agencies coordinating disaster relief

“Our hearts go out to the people of Japan as a result of this horrific earthquake and tsunami,” said Clark Manus, FAIA, 2011 President of the AIA. “We are in contact with our colleagues at AIA Japan and the Japan Institute of Architects to offer not only our condolences but our profession's technical and professional expertise when the initiative begins focusing on rebuilding."

| Mar 16, 2011

Are you working on a fantastic residence hall project? Want to tell us about it?

The feature story for the May 2011 issue of Building Design+Construction will focus on new trends in university residence hall design and construction, and we’re looking for great projects to report on and experts to interview. Projects can involve new construction or remodeling/reconstruction work, and can be recently completed, currently under construction, or still on the boards.

| Mar 16, 2011

Foster + Partners to design carbon-neutral urban park for West Kowloon Cultural District in Hong Kong

Foster + Partners has been selected by the board of the West Kowloon Cultural District Authority to design a massive 56-acre urban park on a reclaimed harbor-front site in Hong Kong. Designed as a carbon-neutral development, “City Park”  will seamlessly blend into existing streets while creating large expanses of green space and seventeen new cultural venues.

| Mar 15, 2011

What Starbucks taught us about redesigning college campuses

Equating education with a cup of coffee might seem like a stretch, but your choice of college, much like your choice of coffee, says something about the ability of a brand to transform your day. When Perkins + Will was offered the chance to help re-think the learning spaces of Miami Dade College, we started by thinking about how our choice of morning coffee has changed over the years, and how we could apply those lessons to education.

| Mar 15, 2011

What will the architecture profession look like in 2025?

The global economy and the economic recession have greatly affected architecture firms' business practices. A Building Futures survey from the Royal Institute of British Architects looks at how these factors will have transformed the profession and offers a glimpse of future trends. Among the survey's suggestions: not only will architecture firms have to focus on a financial and business approach rather than predominantly design-led offices, but also company names are predicted to drop ‘architect’ altogether.

| Mar 15, 2011

Passive Strategies for Building Healthy Schools, An AIA/CES Discovery Course

With the downturn in the economy and the crash in residential property values, school districts across the country that depend primarily on property tax revenue are struggling to make ends meet, while fulfilling the demand for classrooms and other facilities.

| Mar 14, 2011

Renowned sustainable architect Charles D. Knight to lead Cannon Design’s Phoenix office

Cannon Design is pleased to announce that Charles D. Knight, AIA, CID, LEED AP, has joined the firm as principal. Knight will serve as the leader of the Phoenix office with a focus on advancing the firm’s healthcare practice. Knight brings over 25 years of experience and is an internationally recognized architect who has won numerous awards for his unique contributions to the sustainable and humanistic design of healthcare facilities.

| Mar 11, 2011

University of Oregon scores with new $227 million basketball arena

The University of Oregon’s Matthew Knight Arena opened January 13 with a men’s basketball game against USC where the Ducks beat the Trojans, 68-62. The $227 million arena, which replaces the school’s 84-year-old McArthur Court, has a seating bowl pitched at 36 degrees to replicate the close-to-the-action feel of the smaller arena it replaced, although this new one accommodates 12,364 fans.

boombox1 - default
boombox2 -
native1 -

More In Category



AEC Tech

Lack of organizational readiness is biggest hurdle to artificial intelligence adoption

Managers of companies in the industrial sector, including construction, have bought the hype of artificial intelligence (AI) as a transformative technology, but their organizations are not ready to realize its promise, according to research from IFS, a global cloud enterprise software company. An IFS survey of 1,700 senior decision-makers found that 84% of executives anticipate massive organizational benefits from AI. 


Codes and Standards

Updated document details methods of testing fenestration for exterior walls

The Fenestration and Glazing Industry Alliance (FGIA) updated a document serving a recommended practice for determining test methodology for laboratory and field testing of exterior wall systems. The document pertains to products covered by an AAMA standard such as curtain walls, storefronts, window walls, and sloped glazing. AAMA 501-24, Methods of Test for Exterior Walls was last updated in 2015. 

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