How to Complete a Branded Worksection for a Designer

When using your Branded Worksection as a marketing tool, it is important to show your client how they can use it to specify your product.

As a Product Partner, your company’s Branded Worksection has the same clear and concise format as a generic NATSPEC worksection. The key difference, of course, is your product.

The majority of your Branded Worksection has already been pre-filled with your product’s information. However, designers will make customisations to produce a project-specific worksection. The designer uses each of the Branded Worksection’s four sections to make their decision and document it.

Section 1 includes your company profile, including performance objectives. This is also the section where the designer can find links to the manufacturer’s documents, such as installation manuals, and details about submissions for certification.

Your product is front and centre in Section 2, which goes into detail about any product varieties and options, such as colour, material, and finish. Australian Standards are included where relevant, as are links back to your company website where the designer can find further information. In this section, the designer learns more about your product and what it can do, and then makes a choice about how to include it in their project.

Section 3 provides guidance on what to do before, during and after product installation. This includes recommendations for periodic inspections.

Having read through Sections 1, 2 and 3, the designer documents their decision for your product in Section 4, editing the Branded Worksection as necessary to ensure it is specific to their own project. Guidance text printed in green throughout the document provides extra assistance for customising the Branded Worksection.

Your Branded Worksection becomes the easiest way for a designer to include your product in project documentation. Collaborate with your client as they specify your product today.