Yesterday, I (again almost accidentally) discovered another new and rapidly growing construction industry network, konstructr.com, founded by Vik Duggal, from the Seattle, Washington area.
The new network has some intriguing similarities to the Design and Construction Network, established (it appears) about the same time, in the winter months of 2009, by Tim Klabunde in suburban Washington, D.C.
The near-parallel launches may reflect that when the time is right for a good idea, it will emerge in more than one location, almost simultaneously. The Design and Construction Network, of course traces its roots to a the other side of the continent from konstructr.com, and has distinctive differences, but many similarities.
Editor's note: This is a a very early report -- I only discovered Konstrutr.com through a link from a guest posting to Matt Handal's Help Everybody Everyday, which has become the official blog of the Design and Construction Network, so my facts are incomplete. I've sent in my registration for konstructr.com but not everyone is expected to be awake and responding to inquiries at 1 a.m. on a summer weekend!)
Similarities:
- Time of origin;
- Rate of growth;
- Multi-media orientation (both networks have online magazine components; the Design and Construction Network is associated with The Design and Construction Report, http://www.dcnreport.com, which we publish);
- Focus on social networking, and integration of various construction-industry disciplines under a common umbrella.
- Founders of both networks work in marketing positions in places which use the name "Washington" (though the companies are different and the Washington's are 3,000 miles apart.)
- Routes for personal interaction: The Design and Construction Network has developed member-sponsored "happy hours" (in Washington and soon in Philadelphia) where members can put faces to names in a social setting. Vik Duggal, conversely, has chosen to speak at industry events and symposiums;
- Private versus Public Network: Although both networks are pretty well open to anyone who qualifies (and screening processes apply to keep out trouble-makers and spammers); the Konstructr.com appears to be built as a totally private and separate organization from other networks, while the Design and Construction Network is founded within Linkedin.com;
Could you copy the framework here and create your own network? Possibly, but I sense you will be too late, unless you are focused within a sub-niche which could support this type of resource. In his 50 minute presentation at the ZweigWhite A/E Marketing Now Summit 2009. Duggal explains how you might want to set up this type of network yourself. He also explains the role the new social networks and resources have in construction industry marketing.
I've set a permalink for Konstructr.com in the sidebar and will report more as I learn more. I've also redesigned the sidebar to create a new links group for construction industry networks with a focus on marketing. I sense this list will grow in the months ahead.
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