Draper DNA

Draper DNA We specialize in marketing that surprises and delights our building products clients and their custom

DRAPER DNA is a high performance marketing team using Lean business principles to provide the balance of fundamentals and innovation, challenging conventional thinking to drive sales for home and building products manufacturers. We bring client side experience from leading companies Andersen Windows, Weather Shield Windows and Doors, Simonton Windows, and Fypon; and, specialty omnichannel retailer

, Woodcraft…

And, traditional agency experience providing sales driving, award winning campaigns for industry leaders AIA, John Deere, Target, DeWalt, Black & Decker, The Home Depot, Kwikset, Interface, DalTile, GAF, Dryvit, Stihl, Sikkens, Behr, Allsteel, Schindler, and others…

To introduce something new to the B2B market place. A collaboration of the industries best people, thinking, and skills for strategy, content, and design. We focus on the art and science of working with AUDIENCE DNA to define, engage, and motivate your customers; BRAND DNA to determine and articulate who you are and what makes your unique; and CORPORATE DNA to align the right products, price, channel, sales, marketing, and service to generate revenue and profit. AUDIENCE DNA:
Demographics
Sizing
Segmentation
Psychographics
Purchasing behavior

BRAND DNA:
Positioning
Messaging
Identity
Reputation management
Measurement

CORPORATE DNA:
Product
Pricing
Channel
Sales and service
Marketing communications

After everything we’ve covered, one idea ties it all together:The housing market isn’t extreme.It’s tense.Final post:“Wr...
05/28/2026

After everything we’ve covered, one idea ties it all together:

The housing market isn’t extreme.
It’s tense.

Final post:
“Writing the Story of 2026 Housing.”

Here’s what defines this moment:

Demand is there—but limited
Supply is growing—but not enough
Builders are building—but carefully
Buyers want in—but can’t always afford it

That tension makes the market feel stuck.

But it’s not stuck—it’s changing.

Quietly, steadily, and in ways that will shape the next decade.

The best way to think about it:
A market that looks still… but isn’t.

https://bit.ly/4tykPUM

The market may be stabilizing—but that doesn’t mean the risks are gone.Part seven of our series:“Emerging Risks to Watch...
05/26/2026

The market may be stabilizing—but that doesn’t mean the risks are gone.

Part seven of our series:
“Emerging Risks to Watch.”

Here’s what’s quietly building beneath the surface:

• More signs of financial stress among homeowners
• Ongoing economic uncertainty
• Builders facing tighter margins and tougher decisions

Individually, each one is manageable.
Together, they have the potential to shift the market again.

This isn’t about fear.
It’s about paying attention to what could come next.

https://bit.ly/4tykPUM

05/25/2026
After everything we’ve covered this month, one conclusion stands out:The housing market isn’t collapsing. It’s recalibra...
05/22/2026

After everything we’ve covered this month, one conclusion stands out:

The housing market isn’t collapsing. It’s recalibrating.

That’s the focus of our final post:
“The Bigger Picture: A Market in Recalibration.”

Here’s where things stand:

Prices are leveling off.
Mortgage rates are still high—but may ease.
Sales are slower—but finding stability.

This isn’t chaos.
It’s a market adjusting to new realities.

And at the center of it all?
Affordability.

It’s shaping decisions across buyers, builders, and the entire industry.

This isn’t the end of the market.
It’s the next version of it.

https://bit.ly/4tykPUM

“The housing market” doesn’t exist anymore.That’s the focus of the final post in our series:“The Housing Market Isn’t On...
05/20/2026

“The housing market” doesn’t exist anymore.

That’s the focus of the final post in our series:
“The Housing Market Isn’t One Market Anymore.”

Across the U.S., housing conditions are splitting:

Some areas are seeing:
• More inventory
• Price reductions
• Buyer-friendly conditions

Others are still experiencing:
• Strong demand
• Limited supply
• Rising prices

So which one is the real market?

Both.

What’s happening depends on where you are—and why people are moving there.

This is the new reality:
Housing isn’t national. It’s local. And in 2026, it’s hyper-local.

https://bit.ly/4tykPUM

The older I get, the more I believe this:Success is measured by relationships, not money.Money comes and goes.Titles cha...
05/18/2026

The older I get, the more I believe this:

Success is measured by relationships, not money.

Money comes and goes.
Titles change.
Markets shift.

But the people you build trust with over time? That’s the real value.

In business and in life, relationships are what carry you through the hard seasons and make the good seasons even better.

That’s a metric worth paying attention to.

Builders want to build. That’s not the issue.The issue? It’s getting harder—and more expensive—to do it.Part four of our...
05/15/2026

Builders want to build. That’s not the issue.

The issue? It’s getting harder—and more expensive—to do it.

Part four of our series is here:
“Builders Want to Build—But the Economics Don’t Work.”

Material costs are unpredictable.
Skilled labor is hard to find.
Financing is expensive.

So even when demand exists, supply can’t keep up.

What does that lead to?
• Fewer homes hitting the market
• Higher baseline prices
• Longer build timelines

This isn’t a slowdown.
It’s a squeeze.

And it’s shaping what gets built—and what doesn’t.

https://bit.ly/4tykPUM

What happens when people can’t afford what they actually want?They settle for what they can.That’s the focus of part thr...
05/13/2026

What happens when people can’t afford what they actually want?

They settle for what they can.

That’s the focus of part three in our May series:
“The Rise of ‘Good Enough’ Housing in an Age of Affordability.”

Homes are getting smaller.
Finishes are getting simpler.
Entire new formats—like townhomes and build-to-rent—are gaining ground.

This isn’t a design trend.
It’s a financial one.

Housing is being shaped less by lifestyle… and more by what people can realistically pay each month.

It’s not the market slowing down.
It’s the product changing.

Follow along as we break down what that means for the future of construction.

https://bit.ly/4tykPUM

Here’s the thing—simple wins.If your message takes too long to explain, people tune out. Not because they’re not interes...
05/11/2026

Here’s the thing—simple wins.

If your message takes too long to explain, people tune out. Not because they’re not interested… but because they don’t have the time.

Clarity builds confidence.
Confusion kills momentum.

Say it simply. Or don’t expect it to stick.

More homes on the market… and yet, the problem isn’t going away.That’s the focus of part two in our May series:Construct...
05/08/2026

More homes on the market… and yet, the problem isn’t going away.

That’s the focus of part two in our May series:
Construction and Housing in May 2026: A Market in Transition, Not Collapse

“More Homes, Same Problem: Why Inventory Gains Aren’t Fixing Housing.”

Yes, inventory is rising.
Yes, prices have leveled off.

But the U.S. is still deeply undersupplied—and affordability is still holding buyers back.

So what do you get?

A market that should move… but doesn’t move much at all.

It’s not broken. It’s stuck in a balancing act.

If you’re in construction, building products, or design, understanding this shift is critical.

Follow along as we unpack where things are really heading.

https://bit.ly/4tykPUM

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Raleigh, NC
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