No, not really.
A constitutive blessing creates a canonical distinction changing something from profane to sacred (ie, reserved for religious use).
It changes the ecclesiastical status of the object to consecrated for divine service. Only a priest, as an ordained representative of Church authority, may do this type of blessing.
An invocative blessing is simply a prayer asking God to pour his favor on a given person, place, thing, etc. Like any prayer, it does not work ex opere operato, but can be the source of Actual Graces. Such a prayer can be said by anyone (like a parent blessing their children) though certain formulas are reserved for priests, like the official “blessing of a house” which does not make the house sacred [too many chances for desecration] but simply invokes God’s favor. Most blessings of people are like this too, except those constituting people as part of the clergy or members of consecrated religious life (which truly do set aside those people as sacred)…
An excorcism blessing (or “minor excorcism”) is a sub-type prayed to specifically protect something from evil spirits. Some are reserved to clerics, but others are simply prayers (like the prayer of st. michael the archangel) that people can use to invoke God’s or the angels’ help against evil spirits…