In our 2018 article, “The Rise of the Dealer Designer,” ThinkLab explored the evolving role that the dealer designer plays in the project process. We reconnected with one of our interviewees, Alexandra Tseffos, founder of Silent T Consulting and The Design POP, to see what has changed since then. At the time, Tseffos identified four shifts in the traditional dealership:
Tseffos says that these four shifts still hold true. The biggest change? Acceleration.
“The technology shifts we were expecting to see in five to ten years ended up happening in three to five years,” she explains. “The changes that were underway then are already happening now, only accelerated.”
She noted that, when we spoke to her four years ago, there was not an expectation of the current landscape of mergers and acquisitions that has created “forced shifts” in certain categories. Tseffos cited technology as a great example of this in cases of dealer alignment changes: “Many need to learn one or more new software platforms and the intricacies of countless new product lines as fast as humanly possible.”
Since that 2018 interview, ThinkLab has been researching the role of the dealer designer, digging into their preferences and pain points. What we know from recent ThinkLab research:
In ThinkLab’s latest design hackathon survey, we asked more than 850 designers from all corners of the design ecosystem about their preferred balance of digital and human during the product specification process. The respondents were a mix of architects and designers (A&D) at firms, end user designers, and dealer designers. While there were key similarities across the board, what’s important to the dealer designer from a brand is markedly different.
Here are 3 key things dealer designers want from brands:
It’s worth noting that this was twice as important to this audience than to any other category of specifier surveyed. Dealer designers are the most likely to identify as “fast followers” (not the first to try something new, but not the last either). Yet they are the most inclined to want to self-serve digitally, something you might assume was most important to an early adopter (the first to use a new way).
They are the most likely to specify products from new brands that they discover on digital aggregators, such as Material Bank, My Resource Library, etc. When narrowing down product options, they were the most likely to say they prefer to self-serve digitally, while all other members of the ecosystem most preferred to talk to a specialist within the brand.
But when they do want to speak with a human, the dealer designer wants to interact with their rep early on, when they are gathering general knowledge to do their job, not information specific to the project.
When asked why they would rather work with a local rep, these were their four main reasons:
What this means for you as a brand connecting with a dealer designer audience:
Are you interested in finding out more about the hackathon research results and how to apply them to your business? Get involved in our Design Hackathon!
Meredith Campbell is a member of the Research & Content Development team for ThinkLab, the research division of SANDOW Design Group. At ThinkLab, we combine SANDOW Media’s incredible reach to the architecture and design community through brands like Interior Design Media, Metropolis, Luxe, and Material Bank with proven market research techniques to uncover relevant trends and opportunities for the design industry. Join in to explore what’s next at thinklab.design/join-in.