During a February 2026 marketing review, Lincoln Durham (Quarra Stone) identified a significant misalignment between Quarra's marketing presence and its actual business mix. The company's content and sales materials had over-indexed on complex, high-profile fabrication projects — creating a perception problem where prospective clients assumed Quarra was out of scope for conventional stone work.
The strategic response is a deliberate pivot to foreground traditional flatwork capabilities: rectangular panels, wall cladding, and flooring installation. This is not a change in what Quarra does, but a change in how it presents itself.
"We've over-marketed our ability to produce complex projects and under-marketed the fact that we do a ton of plating — just rectangular panels, building walls, setting flooring."
— Lincoln Durham, Feb 2026 call
Quarra's existing marketing portfolio emphasizes sculptural, technically complex, and artistically distinctive projects. While these showcase capability, they create a perception gap:
Lincoln noted this directly after a sales trip: an architect focused on traditional buildings was "fascinated by the presentation" but saw nothing in it that reflected their own project type.
Marketing content — project pages, photography, email campaigns, and sales decks — should be rebalanced to include a substantial proportion of traditional flatwork examples:
A key constraint is the lack of photography for simple projects. Quarra's internal process has not prioritized capturing images of conventional jobs. The action item is for Quarra to begin systematically photographing straightforward projects as they are completed.
The pivot applies not just to digital content but to in-person sales materials. Presentations should include "here's a building we did" examples alongside the more complex showcase work.
This pivot directly informs the [1]. The Vals Quartzite shingle launch is the first campaign expression of this shift — pairing new product samples with professional project photography to reach architects, landscape architects, GCs, Masons, and developers who work on conventional residential and commercial projects.
The three-pillar messaging framework (Head: precision & engineering / Heart: ethos & longevity / Conscience: sustainability & service life) applies to traditional flatwork content just as it does to complex projects, but the visual and case-study evidence needs to match the audience's frame of reference.
This pattern — a technically sophisticated firm over-marketing its most impressive work at the expense of its most accessible work — is common in B2B professional services and manufacturing. The fix is not to hide the complex work, but to ensure the portfolio breadth is visible. Prospects need to see themselves in the content before they inquire.
Applicable when: A client's win rate on inbound leads is lower than expected, or when sales conversations reveal that prospects had pre-disqualified themselves based on perceived fit.