Builder’s Show Field Report: What Stood Out at IBS 2026

Beth PopNikolov
CEO, Venveo
The International Builders’ Show sets the tone for the year ahead in building materials. And when it’s in Orlando, the question always comes up: does it feel different than Vegas? The answer this year was clear. The energy was high. Booths were packed. Aisles were full. Conversations were strong. In this special field report episode of Smarter Building Materials Marketing, Beth shares on-the-ground observations from IBS 2026. Instead of a traditional interview, this episode breaks down what brands did well on the show floor, where they missed opportunities, and what it means for manufacturers designing their own trade show strategies. The biggest takeaway: it was not about the biggest booth. It was about who made decision-making easier.
episode 287
Builder’s Show Field Report: What Stood Out at IBS 2026

When the kickoff trade show of the year is crowded, engaged, and high energy, it matters. IBS 2026 did not feel cautious. It felt confident.
Manufacturers showed up with full booths, ambitious builds, and clear messaging. For an industry watching interest rates, supply chains, and housing demand closely, that energy is not trivial.
But what stood out was not scale alone. It was intention.
One of the most common questions manufacturers ask is how to showcase products that are typically hidden once installed.
Bison provided a strong example. Their booth displayed deck pedestal systems in layers: a top-down finished surface, a plexiglass-covered cross-section revealing the install beneath, and a rooftop application showing the full context.
Instead of asking builders to imagine how it works, they made it visible. Pros could stand on it, inspect it, and understand it immediately.
It was thoughtful and practical. And it removed friction.
At Hearth & Home Technologies, the booth experience started with contrast.
Right at the entrance, they positioned two dramatically different fireplace solutions side by side. One engineered to stay cool to the touch. Another radiating heat at a distance.
Immediately, visitors understood capability.
From there, the booth angled inward, guiding attendees naturally through the rest of the product story. It was not just visually impressive. It was structured for movement and comprehension.
In the QXO booth, the question was simple: how do you ensure visitors experience everything you have to offer?
The answer was bingo.
Attendees completed a bingo-style card by visiting different stations. Each station scanned leads. Completion earned a prize. Messaging was bilingual. Engagement was trackable.
This was not a gimmick. It was segmentation. QXO could differentiate between partial engagement and full immersion and assign follow-up accordingly.
If you are investing heavily in trade shows, this is how you protect ROI.
The Home Depot and SRS strategy was a subtle but important signal.
Instead of competing for attention, their booths were positioned side by side. The message was clear: these brands complement each other.
Rather than forcing attendees to choose, they reinforced alignment. For builders, clarity matters. This positioning eliminated confusion and strengthened both brands simultaneously.
Sherwin-Williams took a different approach than many paint brands.
Instead of leading with a singular color trend, their theme centered on partnership. One partner for every surface. One partner for every specification.
Builders are not at IBS to debate color palettes. They are solving performance and coordination challenges across projects.
By leaning into completeness rather than trend, Sherwin-Williams simplified the decision and expanded the conversation.
Caliber’s booth blended aesthetic appeal with technical clarity.
Feature walls communicated design possibilities. Product displays integrated dimensions, options, and performance details seamlessly into the presentation.
Nothing felt disconnected. Digital screens supported the physical display rather than distracting from it.
The message, “Precision at every degree,” was not decorative. It reinforced the brand’s positioning while answering practical questions.
In the slab and countertop section, visual overload is common. Large, beautiful slabs can quickly blend together.
Regal Luxe Marble broke that pattern with a thin-profile showcase that was visually distinct from surrounding booths.
The display made the product difference obvious.
One critique: branding visibility. While the installation stood out, the company name appeared in only a few places, making it possible to admire the booth without retaining the brand.
Even strong differentiation benefits from clear identification.
If there was one thread connecting the best booths at IBS 2026, it was this: they were built to help buyers decide.
Not just admire. Not just browse. Decide.
The strongest brands:
Trade shows are expensive. Attention is limited. Decision-making is the real goal.
This field report is a reminder that presence alone is not strategy. Design is.
The Smarter Building Materials Marketing podcast helps sales and marketing professionals find better ways to grow leads, sales and outperform the competition. It gives insights, examples and shares stories about how to create a results-driven digital marketing strategy for building products and construction companies of any size. SBMM is co-hosted by Venveo’s Founder, Zach Williams and Venveo’s CEO, Beth PopNikolov.
Thanks for tuning in! If you enjoyed this episode and want to catch future insights, be sure to like and subscribe to the Smarter Building Materials Marketing podcast wherever you listen. Got questions or suggestions about today’s episode? Drop us a line at podcast@venveo.com — we’d love to hear from you!
