『The Intersection - Episode 3: Four Organizational Decisions Hidden in a Website Redesign』のカバーアート

The Intersection - Episode 3: Four Organizational Decisions Hidden in a Website Redesign

The Intersection - Episode 3: Four Organizational Decisions Hidden in a Website Redesign

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SummaryMegan Kacvinsky, Steve Coffey, and Deneen Harper reveal the four organizational decisions that determine whether a website redesign succeeds or stalls: sample fulfillment, CEU scaling, distributor locator strategy, and customer service transformation. These aren't design problems—they're operational ones that catch most manufacturers off guard.Key InsightsA website redesign will increase sample order volume significantly—manufacturers need a clear plan for cost, inventory, and fulfillment bandwidth before launch.Sample ordering should be treated as a sales tool and relationship-builder, not just a fulfillment task disconnected from the sales team.Fulfillment outsourcing options exist beyond Material Bank and Swatchbox—mid-tier partners (including those with CNC capabilities) offer a flexible middle layer.CEU programs need to scale: an in-person-only model won't meet demand. On-demand and virtual options, hosted through platforms like AEC Daily or Acelab, remove the administrative burden of tracking credits.Distributor locators are often broken, outdated, and brand-damaging—but when done well, they drive leads, improve SEO, and enable geotargeting.Customer service teams fielding basic questions can be repurposed as proactive outbound sales resources when a well-designed website removes routine call volume.AI-powered chatbots are now capable of sophisticated product guidance and lead routing—and customer expectations for this experience are rising fast.Tracking internal site search in Google Analytics reveals what customers can't find—a goldmine for FAQ development and customer service optimization.Practical Takeaways for ManufacturersBefore launch, map your sample order process end to end—volume projections, fulfillment capacity, turnaround time, and how sales will follow up on every lead.Evaluate whether your sample experience has best-in-class 'surround sound'—email follow-up, sales outreach timing, and nurture content—not just the kit itself.Connect your CEU program to third-party platforms (AEC Daily, Acelab) that auto-register credits with AIA, eliminating manual tracking overhead.Audit your distributor locator for accuracy, usability, and completeness. Fix errors in business hours, phone numbers, and addresses before redesigning anything else.Consider a content hub architecture that segments resources by audience type—architects get their section, installers get theirs—with CEUs, BIM objects, and technical docs in one place.Review internal site search data in GA before finalizing your sitemap. What people search for tells you what they can't find.Model your customer service team's future state—fewer inbound routine calls creates capacity for outbound, relationship-building activity that directly supports revenue.Quotable Moments"…If you've got someone who you know who's on your site and is super excited or is looking for you through Google or wherever, that is looking for you proactively and wants to find out where they can buy the product, if you don't have that right infrastructure in place from a technology perspective to make that findable or easy for the customer to be able to figure out what the that location looks like…you've bled the margin right on out of all these great things that you've done to get the customer to that point”– Megan Kacvinsky"I find a real easy hack that a lot of companies, again, very big companies, very small companies, don't take advantage of is tracking the search feature on their websites. Because that oftentimes tells you a lot of insight. What are people looking for when they get to the site? They obviously haven't found it, so they're searching for it." – Steve Coffey“I find too that these content hubs should really be in a section of the website that's dedicated to architects and designers. Because if you kind of try to mix it all in, one, it's much harder for them to find and they're just gonna skip out on the website. But two, the way that you speak to an architect is totally different than the way you would speak to an installer or another person. So having that section specifically for them, the…the BIM objects, everything else that they're looking for." – Megan KacvinskyNext Steps for ManufacturersIf a website redesign is on your roadmap—even 12 months out—start these four conversations now. Get with your ops team on sample fulfillment capacity. Talk to your product training team about on-demand CEU options. Pull your distributor locator data and check it for accuracy. And have an honest look at what your customer service team is fielding and what could be deflected. None of these require a redesign to fix—but all of them will determine whether your redesign pays off.About the HostsMegan Kacvinsky — CEO | Point To PointMegan Kacvinsky helps Building Product Manufacturers drive specification through targeted AEC marketing. As a partner at Point To Point, she specializes in demand generation, customer ...
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