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  • BDmag.com turns 30

    BDmag.com turns 30

    On May 16, 1996, bdmag.com became one of the first industry websites to go live. Adapting to the changing landscape of the…

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  • Pending home sales see 1.4% increase

    Pending home sales see 1.4% increase

    According to a report from the National Association of Realtors (NAR), the spring housing market saw a slight bump in…

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  • BDmag.com turns 30

    BDmag.com turns 30

    On May 16, 1996, bdmag.com became one of the first industry websites to go live. Adapting to the changing landscape of the print publication, Builder and Developer used its newfound online presence to continue to channel original content via online avenues and social media pages alongside its hallmark print publication.

    This year marks the website’s 30th anniversary a testament to our commitment to bring industry professionals high quality stories, news and products.

    For this 30-year milestone, our BDmag.com adopted a rebrand, bringing our readers a contemporary platform to access our industry insights, feature stories, breaking news, videos and more.

    Here’s to many more years communicating what’s most important in U.S. housing.

     

  • Controlling The Build Narrative

    Controlling The Build Narrative

    Homebuyers are creating a narrative about your company from every interaction, intentional or not. Smart builders use psychological principles to shape their experiences and leave nothing to chance. 

    During their open-wall walk, what if you hand the customer a hammer to drive a nail into the framing of their own home, then sign a small sticker beside it? It takes 30 seconds. They’ll laugh, take a photo and never forget it. Psychologists call this the IKEA effect: people assign disproportionately higher value to things they had even a small hand in creating. 

    Buyers experience a home as something that happens to them rather than something they participated in. Bring your customers into the build. Tell them this nail and sticker will be behind the drywall forever. That nail becomes a story they tell for years. It is simple: Stories sell homes.

    People are consistently wrong about how they will feel in the future, this is described as forecast illusion. Buyers who expect a smooth build interpret normal friction as a crisis. Buyers who are warned early will feel reassured their builder knows what they are doing.

    Builders who over-promise the experience of designing and building a home to be seamless, allow for customers to feel like every normal delay is unusual. You should walk buyers through a brief emotional map: Which stages feel exciting, which feel stagnant and what is actually happening behind the scenes. Emotionally prepared buyers are far less likely to escalate, complain or tell horror stories at the neighborhood block party.

    Imagine your customer two months into their build hears a friend talk about how builders are struggling with delays right now. While this customer has not experienced a single delay, that comment sticks with them. This is the availability heuristic; the most emotionally loaded information they’ve heard recently overpowers whatever calm experience they are actually living.

    A buyer’s own positive experience can lose to a secondhand story if the builder leaves any emotional vacuum in between. The solution to this is to have a superintendent send 20-second videos at major milestones. No production value needed, just close communication. You have pre-loaded the most available story in their head and you wrote it yourself.

    The same goes if a buyer submits a warranty request and expects delays. Instead, they get a same-day call. The rapid acknowledgement is unexpected. Psychologists call this the reciprocity principle, when someone does something unexpectedly for us, we feel a pull to return the favor.

    Warranty timelines are usually set by operational capacity. Buyers expect slowness here, which means the bar for surprising them is low. 

    You may not control when a trade shows up, but you control when a human calls. Build a protocol where every warranty request gets a personal call to acknowledge the issue, explain the process and set a realistic expectation. Someone who feels seen is a different customer entirely. They feel looked after, which triggers a reciprocal urge to refer someone to your company, say something positive publicly or simply become the neighbor who defends your reputation without being asked.

    If you tell a customer their home has an R-38 insulation rating, their eyes will glaze over. However, if you tell them their furnace and insulation will keep their family warm through the coldest week of February, they will repeat that line on every tour they give. This is story bias,  human brains remember stories more than raw data.

    Feature-heavy updates feel transactional and are immediately forgotten. Train every team member to add one emotional beat per update. “We poured your foundation today. That’s the moment it stopped being a drawing.” Customers become narrators of their own build story.

    A customer describing their homebuilding experience rarely mentions the time spent picking cabinet pulls. They will describe move-in day. Psychologists call this the peak-end rule; people remember the emotional peak and the final moment of an experience far more vividly than everything in between. Eight months of smooth communication can be undone by one rushed, disorganized walk-through. Work with your team to script a closing ritual. Show up with a framed watercolor of their home, ready to hang. Hand them keys in a small box, not a loose pile. Make it feel like a moment, because it is. That ritual becomes the story they tell. 

    By Eric Mitchell. He is the founder and CEO of See Your Side, the homebuilding experience platform. He can be reached at eric@seeyourside.com

    This column is featured in May issue of B&D, read the print version

  • Housing market shows signs of stabilization

    Housing market shows signs of stabilization

    According to a recent Redfin analysis, the housing market is beginning to show signs of stabilization. Approximately 35.4% of U.S. home sellers cut their asking price in April 2026 as an incentive to attract homebuyers. This marks a slight decrease from 35.6% in March and down from a record high of 36.6% in August 2025.

    Price cuts have become slightly less common due to the housing market beginning to stabilize. Homebuyer demand is rising, which is helping sellers regain negotiating power. In response to an improving job market, homebuyers are beginning to return. Although buyers are still slightly outnumbered by sellers, which prompted sellers to lean more into incentives, they are less so than before, indicating a shift in the power balance.

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  • Q1 2026 Homebuilding Permit Overview

    Q1 2026 Homebuilding Permit Overview

    Over the first three months of 2026, there were 214,655 permits issued nationwide to construct new single-family homes. This was down 7.6% from the first quarter of 2025. However, multifamily permits grew 7.1% to 121,404 total units over the first quarter of the year.

    At a state level, 12 states recorded year-over-year increases in single-family permits in March, with gains ranging from 18.6% in Alabama to 0.2% in Minnesota. Ten states issued the highest number of single-family permits, which accounted for 63.7% of all single-family permits issued nationwide. Texas led the country with 35,231 single-family home permits issued at the end of Q1 2026.

    Elevated financing costs, ongoing affordability challenges and softer builder sentiment continued to weigh on single-family construction activity, while multifamily permitting remained supported by demand for rental housing.

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  • What Builders Should Expect from a Designer

    What Builders Should Expect from a Designer

    Every builder has a story about a designer who made their job harder. The selections that showed up three weeks late. The specification that didn’t account for the framing already in the wall. The finish schedule that reads like a mood board instead of a set of construction documents. I’ve heard more than a few of these stories because I’ve spent my career trying not to be in them.

    A skilled interior designer should make a builder’s life measurably easier, not more complicated. When the relationship works, the project runs more smoothly, the client stays calmer and the finished product reflects the kind of quality that earns referrals for everyone at the table. That kind of partnership only happens when the designer understands what their role actually demands on a construction project, not just what it demands on a Pinterest board.

    Here’s what I believe builders should be able to expect from any designer they bring onto a project and what they shouldn’t have to compensate for when the design side falls short.

    A designer’s job isn’t finished when the drawings look beautiful.

    Selections should arrive fully resolved, with lead times confirmed, substrates specified and installation requirements documented. If a tile selection calls for a specific setting material or a particular joint width, that information needs to be in the spec before it becomes a field question. If a fixture requires non-standard rough-in dimensions or reinforced backing, the plumber and framer shouldn’t be the ones discovering it during installation.

    This is where designers earn their fee or lose their credibility. The standard I hold myself to is straightforward: No detail should land on a superintendent’s desk as an open question if I had the opportunity to close it first. That means doing the research, calling the manufacturer and confirming the detail; not hoping it works out in the field.

    Renderings and material boards communicate vision. They serve the client, but the people actually building the project need information they can act on, like dimensions, sequences, clearances and tolerances.

    A designer who understands construction sequencing can coordinate selections around the project schedule rather than against it.

    They know that a large-format porcelain slab has different structural and logistical requirements than standard tile. They understand that specifying a flush-mount detail in a ceiling means coordinating with the electrician, not just the finisher.

    This isn’t about a designer trying to be a builder. It’s about respecting the build process enough to learn how design decisions actually land inside of it. We are communicating in terms that translate directly to execution.

    The best designers are quick to defer to the structural engineer, the MEP consultant and the general contractor’s field experience. They bring those voices into the conversation early rather than designing around them. When I pursued my CAPS certification for aging-in-place design, it wasn’t to add letters after my name. It was because decisions around blocking, clearances and threshold transitions directly affect framing and rough-in and I needed to understand how those choices land in the field before I put them on paper. Even through ASID’s vast offering of resources, including the Impact of Design Briefs and Adaptive Living Guide, designers like me are able to stay up-to-date and informed on the necessary processes to keep projects moving smoothly. That mindset, learning the downstream impact of every design decision, applies to every specialty a designer touches.

    If a builder is chasing selections, interpreting vague specifications or serving as a translator between the client’s expectations and the designer’s intent, something has broken down on the design side.

    Builders shouldn’t have to manage the gaps in someone else’s scope. Their energy and expertise should be directed at building. When the designer is doing their job well, the builder barely notices the design process at all. They just see the right materials arriving at the right time, with clear instructions and no ambiguity attached.

    The projects I’m proudest of aren’t the ones where the design stole the spotlight. They’re the ones where the builder and I operated as a single team. The ones where the handoffs were clean, the communication was direct and the client never had to wonder who was steering the ship. That’s the standard worth building toward. I believe it starts with designers raising the bar for what our side of the partnership delivers.

    By Amber Clore Morales, ASID, CAPS. She is the principal designer and owner of A.Clore Interiors, a full-service interior design firm. She can be reached at amber@acloreinteriors.com 

    This column is featured in May issue of B&D, read the print version

  • Controlling The Build Narrative

    Controlling The Build Narrative

    Homebuyers are creating a narrative about your company from every interaction, intentional or not. Smart builders use psychological principles to…

    by

    Read Full Article →