A restoration contractor in Queens once hired a marketing agency that launched a full social media campaign within the first week. Professional-looking posts went out daily-generic construction content with stock imagery and captions about “building excellence.” The problem was that the firm specialized in waterproofing and concrete repair for parking structures, and none of that showed up in the marketing. The agency never asked what the company actually did, who their clients were, or what kind of projects they wanted to attract. Two months and several thousand dollars later, the contractor had a polished Instagram feed that meant nothing to the facility managers and property owners who hire waterproofing contractors.
That’s what happens when marketing starts without a proper briefing. The visuals look fine. The copy reads well enough. But nothing connects to the actual business because nobody took the time to understand it first.
Every engagement we take on starts with a discovery and briefing session-because construction marketing that works has to be built on specifics about your company, your market, and your goals.

