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
| Feb 11, 2011
RS Means Cost Comparison Chart: Office Buildings
This month's RS Means Cost Comparison Chart focuses on office building construction.
| Feb 11, 2011
Sustainable features on the bill for dual-building performing arts center at Soka University of America
The $73 million Soka University of America’s new performing arts center and academic complex recently opened on the school’s Aliso Viejo, Calif., campus. McCarthy Building Companies and Zimmer Gunsul Frasca Architects collaborated on the two-building project. One is a three-story, 47,836-sf facility with a grand reception lobby, a 1,200-seat auditorium, and supports spaces. The other is a four-story, 48,974-sf facility with 11 classrooms, 29 faculty offices, a 150-seat black box theater, rehearsal/dance studio, and support spaces. The project, which has a green roof, solar panels, operable windows, and sun-shading devices, is going for LEED Silver.
| Feb 11, 2011
BIM-enabled Texas church complex can broadcast services in high-def
After two years of design and construction, members of the Gateway Church in Southland, Texas, were able to attend services in their new 4,000-seat facility in late 2010. Located on a 180-acre site, the 205,000-sf complex has six auditoriums, including a massive 200,000-sf Worship Center, complete with catwalks, top-end audio and video system, and high-definition broadcast capabilities. BIM played a significant role in the building’s design and construction. Balfour Beatty Construction and Beck Architecture formed the nucleus of the Building Team.
| Feb 11, 2011
Kentucky’s first green adaptive reuse project earns Platinum
(FER) studio, Inglewood, Calif., converted a 115-year-old former dry goods store in Louisville, Ky., into a 10,175-sf mixed-use commercial building earned LEED Platinum and holds the distinction of being the state’s first adaptive reuse project to earn any LEED rating. The facility, located in the East Market District, houses a gallery, event space, offices, conference space, and a restaurant. Sustainable elements that helped the building reach its top LEED rating include xeriscaping, a green roof, rainwater collection and reuse, 12 geothermal wells, 81 solar panels, a 1,100-gallon ice storage system (off-grid energy efficiency is 68%) and the reuse and recycling of construction materials. Local firm Peters Construction served as GC.
| Feb 11, 2011
Former Richardson Romanesque hotel now houses books, not beds
The Piqua (Ohio) Public Library was once a late 19th-century hotel that sat vacant and deteriorating for years before a $12.3 million adaptive reuse project revitalized the 1891 building. The design team of PSA-Dewberry, MKC Associates, and historic preservation specialist Jeff Wray Associates collaborated on the restoration of the 80,000-sf Richardson Romanesque building, once known as the Fort Piqua Hotel. The team restored a mezzanine above the lobby and repaired historic windows, skylight, massive fireplace, and other historic details. The basement, with its low ceiling and stacked stone walls, was turned into a castle-like children’s center. The Piqua Historical Museum is also located within the building.
| Feb 11, 2011
Justice center on Fall River harbor serves up daylight, sustainable elements, including eucalyptus millwork
Located on historic South Main Street in Fall River, Mass., the Fall River Justice Center opened last fall to serve as the city’s Superior and District Courts building. The $85 million facility was designed by Boston-based Finegold Alexander + Associates Inc., with Dimeo Construction as CM and Arup as MEP. The 154,000-sf courthouse contains nine courtrooms, a law library, and a detention area. Most of the floors have the same ceiling height, which will makes them easier to reconfigure in the future as space needs change. Designed to achieve LEED Silver, the facility’s elliptical design offers abundant natural daylight and views of the harbor. Renewable eucalyptus millwork is one of the sustainable features.
| Feb 11, 2011
Research facility separates but also connects lab spaces
California State University, Northridge, consolidated its graduate and undergraduate biology and mathematics programs into one 90,000-sf research facility. Architect of record Cannon Design worked on the new Chaparral Hall, creating a four-story facility with two distinct spaces that separate research and teaching areas; these are linked by faculty offices to create collaborative spaces. The building houses wet research, teaching, and computational research labs, a 5,000-sf vivarium, classrooms, and administrative offices. A four-story outdoor lobby and plaza and an outdoor staircase provide orientation. A covered walkway links the new facility with the existing science complex. Saiful/Bouquet served as structural engineer, Bard, Rao + Athanas Consulting Engineers served as MEP, and Research Facilities Design was laboratory consultant.
| Feb 11, 2011
A feast of dining options at University of Colorado community center, but hold the buffalo stew
The University of Colorado, Boulder, cooked up something different with its new $84.4 million Center for Community building, whose 900-seat foodservice area consists of 12 micro-restaurants, each with its own food options and décor. Centerbrook Architects of Connecticut collaborated with Denver’s Davis Partnership Architects and foodservice designer Baker Group of Grand Rapids, Mich., on the 323,000-sf facility, which also includes space for a career center, international education, and counseling and psychological services. Exterior walls of rough-hewn, variegated sandstone and a terra cotta roof help the new facility blend with existing campus buildings. Target: LEED Gold.
| Feb 11, 2011
Chicago high-rise mixes condos with classrooms for Art Institute students
The Legacy at Millennium Park is a 72-story, mixed-use complex that rises high above Chicago’s Michigan Avenue. The glass tower, designed by Solomon Cordwell Buenz, is mostly residential, but also includes 41,000 sf of classroom space for the School of the Art Institute of Chicago and another 7,400 sf of retail space. The building’s 355 one-, two-, three-, and four-bedroom condominiums range from 875 sf to 9,300 sf, and there are seven levels of parking. Sky patios on the 15th, 42nd, and 60th floors give owners outdoor access and views of Lake Michigan.
| Feb 11, 2011
Iowa surgery center addresses both inpatient and outpatient care
The 12,000-person community of Carroll, Iowa, has a new $28 million surgery center to provide both inpatient and outpatient care. Minneapolis-based healthcare design firm Horty Elving headed up the four-story, 120,000-sf project for St. Anthony’s Regional Hospital. The center’s layout is based on a circular process flow, and includes four 800-sf operating rooms with poured rubber floors to reduce leg fatigue for surgeons and support staff, two substerile rooms between each pair of operating rooms, and two endoscopy rooms adjacent to the outpatient prep and recovery rooms. Recovery rooms are clustered in groups of four. The large family lounge (left) has expansive windows with views of the countryside, and television monitors that display coded information on patient status so loved ones can follow a patient’s progress.