Dear Growth Guru,
We’ve spent the last eighteen months perfecting our latest technical shift. Our R&D is solid, and the team behind our manufacturing business knows the product inside out.
But, as we head into the main event season, I have a nagging fear: we’re going to walk into a hall filled with competitors saying the exact same thing.
In a room full of ‘innovative,’ ‘market-leading’ engineering, how do we actually make a prospect stop and listen? I don’t want to be just another grey machine in a grey hall.
Blurring in Birmingham
Dear Blurring,
The “Sea of Sameness” is the single biggest threat to manufacturing business growth in 2026. Most firms believe that if they build a better mouse-trap, the world will beat a path to their door.
However, in a mature market, technical specs are often the baseline, not the differentiator.
When everyone is shouting about “precision” and “efficiency,” those words lose their meaning. They become background hum. To break through, you have to stop selling the commodity and start selling the consequence.
Specifically, your prospects aren’t looking for a machine; they are looking for the resolution of a headache. They are looking for the “Quicksilver” moments, where data actually meets the shop floor to solve a specific, painful problem.
Notably, our latest State of Sales research shows that buyers are now doing 57% of their vetting before they even speak to you. If your public-facing story is just a list of features, you are essentially asking the buyer to do the hard work of figuring out why you matter.
So, how do you sharpen the signal?
Ultimately, you need to humanise the engineering. People don’t buy from brochures; they buy from experts who “get” their world. You need to leverage voices that carry weight and tell stories that resonate beyond the technical manual.
Therefore, if you are looking for a way to sharpen that signal, I’d suggest a visit to MACH. Specifically, Stand 18-411 at the NEC next week. In fact, that is where the Manufacturing Revenue Growth Summit and Engineering Media teams will be stationed. What’s more, they will be joined by global industry advocate Tony Gunn (The WorldWide Machinist).
They aren’t there to talk about specs; they are there to help manufacturers tell the “real stories” that actually cut through the noise.
If you want to move from being “just another stand” to being the talk of the floor, that’s where the conversation starts.
I’ll see you at the NEC.
*NEC image background credit: N-allen /Wikimedia / licensed via creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/4.0/



