#124 Mixing Culture and Technology with Todd Weyandt

#124 Mixing Culture and Technology with Todd Weyandt

Hello, and welcome to another episode of the construction corner podcast. I'm Dylan, I'm your host joined by my blue collar. Bad-ass Matt. What's going on, man.

[00:00:12] Another great day, man. It's continuing to warm up here in Michigan. Had a nice long holiday weekend. How about yourself?

[00:00:19] Yeah, the weather is coming for a change.

[00:00:21] And like, it's funny, right? We always talk about the weather, but in construction it matters so much what the weather is doing and what, you know, we can get out. And actually, like

[00:00:33] I checked the weather channel so many times a day. It's insane.

[00:00:39] Well, guys, we have an awesome guests today. Todd Wyant. And I probably butchered your name, Todd, but you're the correct?

[00:00:49] You just crushed it. That was, that was impressive.

[00:00:52] Is the director of marketing at applied software and host of bridging the gap podcast, which was the winner of the 2020 best construction podcast, which I had the honor to be on.

[00:01:02] And Eric here shortly, and a champion of industry dialogue to support construction companies, as they try new things, advance and thrive right up our alley here on the construction corner. And, Todd has a deep and extensive knowledge of how to increase awareness of a brand communication strategy and plays a major role in elevating corporate culture, which is what we're going to dive in, thoroughly today.

[00:01:25] So Todd, welcome to the show. Yeah, thanks for having me. I'm really looking forward to the conversation. Yeah. Ours was so good that you had to, you had to come on here and, we had to go a little further and that's very well. We had finished the. Meat of the recording. And then we we'd dive into to culture just as maybe we'll release it as a little bonus feature or something.

[00:01:48] And I was like, Oh, this is great. There's so much here to, to talk about and unpack. I mean, it's a culture and construction is a kind of a taboo, hot button topic, but it's so important to dive in and figure out how we can really make some strides and improvement. Yeah. I think I went on a 15 minute diatribe on a core values.

[00:02:11] It was good. You're good stuff. Need it. Before we, we dive into that. We, which we'll cover it extensively here, but how did you get your start and, what made you stay in construction? Yeah. quite by accident, I stumbled into construction. so my whole background is in marketing and brand strategies.

[00:02:35] And so I came to applied software seven years ago, having. Never really touched the AEC industry in any real practical way. and came in on the marketing side, but really fell in love with the, all the nuances of AC and really got a passion for construction because of the people that are in construction.

[00:03:00] I think it. Bar none has some of the best quality people. and so for my, at this point, getting to talk with them on the podcast and learn even more about them and the nuances and there's, there's so many different complexities there on, on the people's side, not alone on once you get to process and technology side that opens up, you know, 20,000 different cans of worms of complexities there.

[00:03:24] But, the, the, the people made me, made me stay. and so I have really. Developed a, a passion and a love for seeing this industry kind of transformed because I think looking at the, from my vantage point, you know, the next 10 years of construction, you're really going to see this radical change and that's the processes and how things are going about is.

[00:03:50] Gonna look very different in 10 years than how it has the last 50 years. This is the moment where construction is at this precipice for this just exciting growth of innovation. And so I think being able to help give voice to champion that of like, Hey, this is you guys can do it. Like there's we all can band together and we can make strides here is, that that's, that's the fun part for me.

[00:04:18] that's a great answer, Todd. That's a fantastic answer really. And it it's, it's so cool. It really is so much about the people. you know, it's, it's an industry that from top to bottom and side to side, you know, there's, there's, there's different, sub-industries all wrapped up in construction, right.

[00:04:35] Obviously, you know, you guys are both kind of on the software and design side, I'm on the field and construction side, but. There there's a people element and that human element to it that you can't get rid of, you can't ignore it. and at the very, very root of construction, it, you know, it starts with people who are still out there working with their hands.

[00:04:54] Right. And so what, what you guys are, frankly, both doing to, to help further the industry, but, but also increase the, the livelihoods and the enjoyment of all of the people that are still out doing the. The handiwork. It's just huge for the industry as a whole. Yeah, absolutely. I think one of the fascinating things for me and focusing in on construction is that you have all these incredibly talented people, incredibly smart people, no matter where they are in the industry.

[00:05:28] And they're all willing to help and to share in the kind of undercurrent that goes through. The, the people in construction is just get the job done, whatever that entails. Let's figure it out and problem solve, get it done. But all too often, they are kind of talking past each other, the, the field and the arm.

[00:05:48] They're trying to, it's the same goal in the end of the day, but how they talk, how they phrase things and how their, their lens they're looking at it is, is very different. And so they, they just are talking past each other. So I think having, Somebody had to come in and be like, all right. Here's like the translation between what you guys are trying to do.

[00:06:11] We're all on the same team here. This is the end goal that we're trying to accomplish. Now let's figure out where we go about that. And problem solve. Neither side is wrong. You're just looking at it from different sides of the same coin. and I think putting that out on the table is, is really important.

[00:06:28] You, you're never going to build trust unless you're able to state clearly, this is where I'm coming from. I'm going to really seek to understand where you coming from. Even if I think you're an idiot coming from that direction, it's still good to know. This is the direction that you're coming from.

[00:06:51] All right, I'll go, in there. Right. It's, it's important to have empathy for, for the other guy. And I think that's the core message that we're we're getting at is understanding where people come from. having a little bit of empathy, right? Not, not so much that like you give into their, their side, but just having that understanding and.

[00:07:13] For you. And one of the big points, in here is really like core values and how you communicate to your team. how has core values really helped you internally as well as externally communicate to clients, customers, advocates across the industry? Yeah, I mean, it's a great question. I think that B don't have your values defined, then you don't have values.

[00:07:42] And if you don't know them, you don't have them. and so taking that intentional time to really do some soul searching, whether it's on the personal side or the company side, is, is critical. And while it may seem to some of that's just like fluff that's it's flowery stuff. Yeah. I don't have time.

[00:08:04] We're trying, we're working already on tight margins and. Way behind schedule. Well, I don't have time to sit and think about how I feel and the values that I want to portray to people. But if you don't take that time on the front side, really in the long run, you are wasting so much more time because you are going to be going into the same problems over and over and over and over again.

[00:08:27] And the people side of it is going to keep on tripping you up. So as an example of the values that applied a few years ago, the, the whole company really did a really intensive soul searching on what are we, what do we value? What do we want to value? What do we want to be known for putting together?

[00:08:47] Not just the, mission statement of what the entire company believes in the direction, but what are the values that we have to have in place in order to accomplish that mission statement? And so we had, it was a several month process of. Us doing different focus groups. And I got the, the, the honor of being able to lead those focus groups and have those conversations with all the people across the company.

[00:09:15] And so whether they were on the sales side or the development side or on the technical side or the admin and marketing side, everybody had a voice in it. no matter their position in the company too. And. Hearing all the kind of commonalities that are coming up with, like, this is what we value. This is what we want to be known for it.

[00:09:36] So, we came up with six integrity, authenticity, creative problem, solving foster leaders, supportive and teamwork. And then we had, you know, definitions of what all those really mean, what we mean by all those, and that built out our mission statement that we hammer back on all the time of empower clients, transform industries, champion innovation.

[00:09:57] And so if. Those are kind of our North stars. If we're about ready to do a new initiative or a new launch or a new policy or whatever, and it doesn't line up with one of those aspects, then we cut it. We're we're not gonna do it. It's not worth our time. So it's a really big efficiency driver in the end because we have those campuses that we can say, yeah, this is great.

[00:10:24] This is. You know, helping to champion innovation. Great. We got it. This is gonna help transform industries. I know that these are all kind of vague, but, it helps kind of guide that, that North star, I don't know how you run a company without a North star. I think you're spot on man. how many employees roughly are at applied software?

[00:10:49] we're just over 150 is so quite a few. Yeah. So, so when you, when you all took on this undertaking to, to really structure the, the culture side, did you just do it quote unquote, blindly by yourself? Or did you use one of the, you know, EOS system or something similar? Yeah. initially we started blindly by ourselves.

[00:11:15] There was a kind of a committee at applied that. Was, kind of driving it forward. And we had top leadership buy-in they were part of the committee as well, too, which is obviously critical. If you don't have the top buy-in, then you can have all the values represented that you want and it's not going to go anywhere.

[00:11:36] cause it's not your North star. as we got more sophisticated with it, we built out. Different things that need to be brought on software platforms to help with that. But really at the end of the day, it's still the I'm going to go back to the people aspect. And it's the people that are consistently representing that because you can have it, but if you're not encouraging that, if you're not rewarding that I would argue, you probably don't really have those values.

[00:12:04] Anyway. so we on my team every single week, somebody gets called out for. Representing the value, whatever value that may be really well. And so it's like, well, this person, you get the supportive award this week, and this is how we think you've represented, supportive. And then at the end of the year, we always have a big kind of award ceremony where people get submitted into nomination for representing all of these values.

[00:12:34] And then the management team actually votes on. Who they think best represented that throughout the entire year. And they get a big award and it's a really exciting event for all of applied. so yeah, I think being able to call them out and reward those specific use case examples is critical to having those values.

[00:12:58] Go ahead. Go ahead. I was just going to say, I couldn't agree more, you know, Shaffer construction, my company, we're small, there's only five of us, including myself. So, it would get a little redundant to keep awarding a that you know, weekly, but, but we certainly try and point it out, at least at least quarterly, you know, kind of the same idea if we have a guy in the field or in the office, that is really, I mean, all of us embody our, our core values.

[00:13:23] That's, that's part of our hiring and firing process. But. You get the people that, that you find start shining, you know, more on one value than maybe another. And it's been very powerful for us as well to, to kind of spotlight that and put it on social media, let the whole world know what you're doing. And it's just helpful.

[00:13:40] Yeah, absolutely. You know, I think you bring up an interesting point there too with the. A hiring process and it needs to become part of your onboarding process of this is who we are. This is what we represent, and this is where our North stars are. Because if you're not telling them, they're not just going to pick up on it necessarily, you know, or, or they'll create their own definition.

[00:14:03] Hopefully they they're able to pick up on that. You have some of these values or else you're not representing them well, but, I think you need to clearly define what. You mean by those, I'm a big believer in defining the terms, because, you know, we go through just the applied values. You can create a lot of different definitions for integrity or authenticity.

[00:14:26] That, that means something different to anybody that wants to put their own spin on it. and so we have specific meanings of what each of, one of those really means to us. Yeah. And through those two, it's important to. Reinforce behaviors. Right? So if you're not living them and your team is seeing your example, then you know, those behaviors get embedded into them.

[00:14:54] So it's important for core values that. When you're creating these, no matter the size of the company, like your leadership team needs to already embody these, because if they don't, then you're going to reinforce the wrong things or they'll see that, Hey, these things don't actually matter because your leadership team doesn't care about them.

[00:15:13] They don't do them and nothing ever sticks. And that's the problem I've had for when I was in. Are there any firms we'd always do this strategic planning, these big visions and no, like nothing would ever get followed through on because core leadership didn't embody or really care. They weren't involved from the start on a lot of these topics.

[00:15:38] They didn't lead the charge for anything. So when everyone saw that core leadership was not, you know, championing these movements, these changes. It all got thrown out the window because nobody cared at the end of the day because they knew it wasn't taken seriously. So for everything that you're saying, right.

[00:15:55] Leadership, showing examples, having awards, you know, commending people on doing a great job and reinforcing behaviors when it's not done correctly or up to core values is a big, big deal. Yeah, for sure. Well, that goes back to the trust aspect of it. If, you know, you can say that you have, Supportiveness or something as one of your values, but if your, your top leaders are screaming at each other and meetings, well, then that just shows the example that then the next line down can start screaming at each other.

[00:16:31] And then that trickles down to the next line down, and then they're screaming at each other. And then you wonder why you in the construction world, you go out to the field and stuff, and they're just having this totally toxic environment of. Nobody respecting each other, nobody trusts each other. And you're like, well, where'd this come from?

[00:16:49] And point the finger back at you. Cause you started it. Yeah. Sometimes it helps to take a deep look in that mirror. We even go as far with our core values as we base our quarterly quarterly reviews on those core values. That's about a third of our entire review process. And so we, we try to. To embody it ourselves all the time.

[00:17:12] But then we also show, you know, very frequently, at least four times a year that, you know, this is very important. This, these are the five items that will make or break your success here. And, I mean, they're not negotiables and it, it almost as a, as a leader, it makes it, it makes it easier, not easy, but easier to make those hard decisions.

[00:17:32] Because look, this is it. Non-negotiables, these are our core values. If you break these, I don't have to think twice will you're gone, but you know, anything else you can fail fast and learn from it. But, but we, we hold those values very dear and that's, that's kind of our are written in stone rules. Yeah, absolutely.

[00:17:53] I mean, it, that's critical on building that trust because then people can have the confidence that. They're not going to get, if they are in a situation where they ha they are put in a tough call, that they know where to go, and then they know what to do. They have the expectations clearly laid out. I think when it's murky and they don't know what to do next, that's where problems arise.

[00:18:18] In any situation you have, the rules clearly laid out and defined. Not that you're not going to have problems, but they're hopefully going to be a lot less than not as disruptive.

[00:18:35] Yeah, and I mean, this all comes down to repetition, right? You've got to constantly beat that drum of core values, examples, and just repeat it until you're blue in the face and then do it again. without that repetition, nothing good. Kind of comes of it. Right. It's not ingrained. It's not embedded. And again, if you can't rattle off your core values, you don't know them.

[00:18:58] Yeah. Yeah, absolutely. Consistency is the key. I, I have three kids, five and under, and so I often equate it to parenting, but if I can't tell my, my three-year-old to do something and expect it to be done at the first time, it would be awesome if it was done on the first time. But, No, it's not going to be, so I have to keep on saying it, put your shoes on now, go put your shoes out, go put your shoes out.

[00:19:28] Then eventually she's going to go put her shoes on. But, yeah, sorry. That was a little rabbit trail. the consistency is huge. I like it. And, and do me a favor if you ever figure out that, that tell him one time thing. Let me know. Cause I also have three. My oldest is 14. It still takes more than one time with him.

[00:19:49] It would be an amazing trick. Yes.

[00:19:54] Shifting gears a little bit with, you know, technology and construction. Ultimately it still comes down to the people. Right. And that's never really going away, but what are, some of the ways that you guys look to help integrate technology into construction in the workflows? And just helping people with that process.

[00:20:17] Yeah. I think it's a great question. It's something that we, we talk a lot about on bridging the gap and I think you almost have to take a couple steps back when you're thinking through. Successful technology adoption. And it's, it's really what are those foundational kind of building block elements that are needed to have in place before you can even really think about technology and a huge building block of that is the culture element that we were just talking about.

[00:20:46] I think another aspect is, you know, having good leadership that is embracing the it's okay to fail. Mindset. and that's something that is doesn't come naturally to anybody, but especially it doesn't come naturally. I think to construction, failures, it's a very bad four letter word in construction.

[00:21:09] So, kind of having that leadership de-stigmatize that because no software is gonna roll out without a kink or, you know, something that you have to work through it and that you didn't really. Think through it and prepare it. Even the best implementation plans have something that come up in the real world that is going to throw you for a loop.

[00:21:31] and so having that mindset of fail fast, but it's okay to fail, fail fast, and then learn from it and grow and adapt. and then that growth mindset is huge as well, too. So I think without kind of those big building blocks, You can have the best technology in the world. You're not going to go anywhere with it.

[00:21:56] and then when you get to the implementation phase, really think through your plan, what is, what's the goal that you are trying to accomplish and then work backwards from that? What are the, the behind, you know, KPIs that you can put in place to, to measure that it's successful or hopefully have some early warning, KPIs in there as well, too, that this is.

[00:22:20] Not going the exact way that we thought so that you can adjust and readapt, and maybe it was that your expectation was wrong. Maybe it's that you have to, you didn't have the right expectation in there, or you didn't have the right KPI that you're measuring. And so you have to tweak and adapt. and so being agile enough that you can, you know, move quickly, but kind of trust, but verify mentality.

[00:22:47] through that. And we talked about it too. The, having a growth mindset, you know, in construction is a lot of the kind of embedded hard coding over, you know, a lot of years, a lot of gray hairs, and this is the way we've always done it mentality. We didn't get sued on this one, nothing went wrong. you know, how do you overcome like that, that mentality from.

[00:23:12] Especially from leadership. That's been in the industry for 20, 30, 50 years. Yeah. I think you got to tread carefully for sure. the, my, my initial reaction is I absolutely despise what somebody says. This is the way we've always done it because you're, you're just totally closed up. that's a, that's a me thing, but, I think.

[00:23:39] I'm going to circle back to empathy. So, eh, you have to wean in with that empathy because you're not changing that mentality of the person that is using the line. This is the way we've always done it. They're using that kind of as a smokescreen, almost of their. You know, maybe apprehensive to look at something new.

[00:24:02] Maybe they're, they're worried that if they roll it out there, that's a lot of risk it, what if it doesn't work? And so I think being able to have the conversation in the way of, okay, well, what are you at the end of the day? What are you trying to accomplish? You know, what are your real goals that you want to do?

[00:24:20] What was success look like for you instead of saying, well, You're an idiot. Like you got to adapt or die. This is, this is the new innovative workflow. This is where it's going. Whether you like it or not, that's just going to lead people to dig in their heels. And so by framing the conversation in, well, let's back up, what are you trying to get?

[00:24:39] What's your goal? What are you trying to accomplish? I think it allows them to kind of lower their guard down and you can start picking up clues of what they're really interested in because. A lot of times when people say that this is the way we've always done it. It's not a hard, no on, I will never change something, but they're scared to change.

[00:25:04] And so you got to walk slower, it's a sign that you need to take your time, take a breath and really walk through it, talk through it with them, make them feel comfortable with it. And then. He's the change it slowly, and they'll start coming around as they start building that trust in it. if you try to go too fast with it, then it is going to be that hard now.

[00:25:27] And you know, you guys service the full AEC industry, but I got to imagine that the construction side of that, that they, you know, that triad there is the hardest to sell to because I don't know how you'd do it, to be honest with you, especially, you know, in your role as director of creative marketing. To go and market software to a group of individuals that historically has done everything they can to avoid software and avoid innovation.

[00:25:55] It's gotta be nearly impossible sometimes. I, I think it's a fun challenge. it definitely construction does take a very different approach to it than the and side of AEC. But at the end of the day it's it's it's people. And so you're going to have those, people that are resistant to it. But what I see in constructionists kind of this, reawakening almost, that there's a lot more people out there that are ready and excited to embrace new workflows and bring in technology and it's already happening.

[00:26:38] It's just that those stories don't get told. I think that there's, there's more, and maybe this is my vantage point, I'm biased, but I think that there's a marketing problem in construction and that construction does a bad job of telling their stories of technology and innovation. And so, and then the stories that do get out there are on these, you know, ridiculously huge projects that make you're like, okay, that's cool.

[00:27:06] They, you know, assembled. This building like Legos in four days. No normal average project. Yeah. I was going to use that. Yeah. So it's just not relevant. And so I think construction as a whole and the people that are willing to embrace technology and willing to change up workflows, the onus is on them to do a better job of telling the stories on how you can do that on everyday projects and create those efficiencies and create that effectiveness that you get in those, Yeah, sexy or big project stories that are shared.

[00:27:43] That's a great answer. And I think that the construction industry as a whole is terrible about telling any stories other than, you know, the, the, Oh shit, big failure stories. And I think, you know, we could all stand to get better from that. And I, I'm a construction guy. I've been in the industry for 23 years.

[00:28:02] I'm on the embracing technology side of it. otherwise I don't think dealing would have me around anymore, but, but there's so much of it that. You know, we don't tell our stories about our wins regardless. It's just finished project. Alright. You can celebrate for 15 minutes tomorrow morning, get back in here and start the next one.

[00:28:21] And we've got to keep churning and burning. And I think if we took time to start telling stories all across the board, we'd all be better off for it. And maybe it would help you also on your side, if, if we all kind of embrace that, that storytelling culture environment a little bit more. Yeah, I agree. I also think it, it plays into the skilled labor shortage that, you know, everybody's sick of hearing, but it's still still thing.

[00:28:51] because if you know the average high school or coming out of high school, you ask them what they think of the construction industry and they are going to paint. I think, Radically different picture of what construction is than what it really is in reality, because I think all too often, construction is viewed as it's a job.

[00:29:13] There's no real career path there. Uh we're we all know that's not the case. You can do so many different things in the construction industry, whether it's on, you know, out in the field, you can do. Really cool things working on, leveraging, amazing tools in drones and scanners and all this stuff. Or you can go into the software side, you can go either.

[00:29:35] There's a plethora of things that you can, can dive into. and there's cool stuff that, that would really appeal to high schoolers, but they don't know it. Brother you're on the right show. We could probably railroad this thing and go on for hours. On, on that last two minutes. You just, you just let loose because Dylan and I have talked about that exact same thing.

[00:30:00] I don't know every episode that I've recorded with him. it's a huge problem. Right. And it doesn't get solved without us, at least talking about it. You know, that's the first step is, is, is back to storytelling, getting people to see the culture and see the opportunity out there. And, you know, construction is not just banging nails all day.

[00:30:22] It's just not, there's, there's a huge, huge world out there that doesn't get explored too often. Yeah, absolutely. I, you know, the, the first step is admitting you have a problem saying, you know, hi, I'm construction industry. We have a marketing problem. We need to do a better job of bringing people in. yeah, I think we got to do that as an industry.

[00:30:45] Yeah. One of the things in there too is. And it's like, so coming from the design side is, is a reluctance to share the projects that we work on, right. A reluctance to anything that's not, or a finished rendering to put out. and then a lot of it is like, you can put out projects without putting a name to it.

[00:31:06] Cause that's really what the like, fear is in design that, you know, if somebody sees this, that we're working on, like, and they tie this image to whatever they were going to have a huge problem. So on the like architecture and design side, it's like a fear of putting things out that aren't finished products or approved or anything like that.

[00:31:26] So I think if we get over some of the. The fear of the reluctance of sharing images. Like you can strip away all the, like telling details of a, of a building of a project. Again, it's not reality yet. Hey, this is just a cool thing that we designed then by sharing more, you know, sharing things that are on job sites.

[00:31:49] I think that there's a big reluctance in doing a lot of that. For various reasons, but if we can get over that or at least talk to owners about, Hey, what can we share when can't we share, what are you okay with? Then we can get more out, you know, as we go to job sites, do. Project walks, design things do review sessions, right?

[00:32:10] Like all those types of things become part now of that projects, life cycle that can be used to bring people into the industry to, in some cases could be used, even highlight a project for an owner, right. To show like the design processes and things that. You go through to create a building to market, whatever that building is, again, we're in construction.

[00:32:33] Most of it, the things we do are public spaces. So people are going to want to show up to that office building or convention center or school, right. Whatever it might be to, to help share that process and putting this big thing into a community, right? Whether that's attracting, tenants for a multi-use project or.

[00:32:56] Residents, you know, for that same project. So I think you're, you're spot on in the marketing thing and it's one having these conversations, but also to find ways to do a little more and to share a little more with keeping in the bounds of that, you know, owner, contractor, design, architect relationship.

[00:33:18] Yeah. I th I think you bring up an interesting dynamic there as well to Dylan in that. You got to get the owners on board and seeing the value of sharing all that information, because realistically, without them on board, it's going to come to a screeching halt. So, but there's an incredible amount of value that they would gain by kind of loosening the grip on that summon.

[00:33:46] I think a lot would be open for and wanting to share it. They just don't. I don't think about it. you know, they're, they got other things to sit around and do with their time besides thinking about this. So we, as an industry, you have to come up and say, Hey, this is where we should be going. This is what we should be doing.

[00:34:04] And this is why it's of importance to you. It's if we are sitting around, waiting for the owners to come up and go, no, it would be a great idea. Let's do this. It's probably not going to happen at least in, in,  the timeline that it should happen. Yeah. So a great example of this Gensler largest architecture firm in the world, their pre architecture and branding, is there two main things that they do?

[00:34:33] So their architecture, interior design firm branding firm, and they do a considerable amount of their revenue and branding. They do a billion dollars a year in revenue. It's insane. And Gensler's not even that old. So one of the things that they've done really, really well is. Right. Architecture is about branding and space.

[00:34:53] So like, think of any project that you do, whether it's a school hospital office, doesn't matter, there's going to be a marketing aspect of that. And for as Todd, as you know, every piece of marketing needs, an image needs, a video needs some sort of creative collateral and who better to do that than the design team for that building, for that project.

[00:35:15] And. It's something that we don't think about as an industry. You don't think about marketing project other than to the owner, not to the public. but that is a big service that can be rendered by design firms. Gensler does it better than anybody and is the largest in the world and shows for that, you know, and it's extremely,

[00:35:44] I, I wish I could get my, my common architects to start marketing projects like that, along with us, you know, it's, it's, it's just not something that they typically do. I don't really understand why, because I mean, we do it. Oh, it looks like we lost our guests. We, we do it. I do it, you know, on our current projects and there's always this air.

[00:36:10] This air of secretiveness in our industry too, because, you know, especially from the design build side, there's a level of how much can I talk about without risking somebody else coming in and trying to, you know, grab my prize. obviously once you get contracted and start a project, it's all bets are off we'll, we'll plaster it all over our media channels.

[00:36:34] But, but even before that, you know, we have. Like we've talked about, we have sales cycles that could run a year before we put a shovel in the ground. And there's a lot of cool, interesting things that happen during that time. It's not just sitting in front of a computer, you know, on an Excel spreadsheet.

[00:36:51] There's, there's a lot of design, there's a lot of collaboration. there's all kinds of back and forth communication. So to find a way that we can kind of share some of that without revealing too much, I think it would be, it would be really useful for us. I think a lot of that comes to stripping the names off of that project, because that's, I think one of the biggest fears for projects is that, you know, for like your community center, that you gave it a name, you put a design to it and then it doesn't turn out like that.

[00:37:26] That's like the biggest fear that I think people are. And then two is, you know, not having that, Branded named for that project. You know, it was a big fear that people run into. So there's, there's definitely some secretiveness, but you can put out a lot of material, a lot of content and just say, look at this community center design, look at this project type, look at this, whatever.

[00:37:53] Right. It doesn't ever have to be built. There's no name to it. There's no like location. So people don't tie anything to it. It's just like, Oh, that's cool. Right. And I think that goes a heck of a long way in just again, showcasing what we can do in construction, both on the, you know, from the design side, as well as like the phases and, you know, everything that's behind a ceiling and a wall in a project that nobody ever sees, right.

[00:38:22] For a, or a mechanical penthouse or any of those spaces that get covered up, they get lost, they get, you know, Never to be seen again. I like that. And I never had really thought about it this way until you just said that, but that alone could be a great way to start attracting youth to the industry, whether it's through the design or construction side, you know, kind of showing the step-by-step, you know, from, from concept through completion, but all the nitty gritty in between, you know, that that could be a really.

[00:38:56] a good marketing ploy, I think, especially to get, you know, young kids is coming into high school, more interested in what it is we do. Yeah. I mean, again, it's a, it's a marketing problem, but I think just sharing, beating that drum of there's a lot of, a lot of cool things in construction, a lot of, you know, cool things that we do is, is definitely a big deal.

[00:39:27] Welcome back, Todd, this is ironic. They're doing construction around me and knocked out my wifi. Sorry about that nails damn contractors. They do it every time. Yeah, it's a big fun of live. Well, welcome back. We were just, Kind of re-engaging on kind of the secretiveness of our, especially the construction side and then the almost scared, nervous, or, or unwillingness to share much of anything until you have a contract signed.

[00:40:05] And Dylan was kind of touching on, on some strategies to, you know, strip all the pertinent, sensitive information off, but, but still showing, you know, the parts and pieces because you know, the, the pre-construction side of what we do or what I do and what. You know, the AEC industry does is, is so full of interesting stuff.

[00:40:25] It's not just staring at a screen, so trying to find ways to show that off and, and hopefully use it to attract new talent.

[00:40:52] I think I'm back now on unreal wifi stuff, right? Sorry about this. No worries, your honor. I was here at it. You just got to tell those guys that call before they dig boats. Yeah. Get it marked up. Come on. Basic stuff, right.

[00:41:15] We're we're kind of coming up on time, I think. But, Todd, I wanted to ask you non-construction related. I spent a little time kind of digging through your LinkedIn profile, you know, just doing some show prep. What can you tell me about the thunderbolts swim team? Yeah. Part of that for a long time, it looks like long time.

[00:41:33] Yeah. Yeah. So swimming's been a huge part of my life for, basically my entire life. I'm I'm the youngest of three. and so I got thrown onto the swim team when I was three years old because my sisters were there and my parents were like, Oh, You're already here. So might as well join the swim team. and that sort of thing actually joined up with the thunderbolts when I was seven or eight.

[00:41:57] So I have been a part of that my whole life growing up and then started coaching. When I was, I helped out with 1600 when I was like 13, 12 or 13 and got the coaching bug for it and have been there ever since. So, I am. Yeah. A long time, but 30 plus years or something with, with the bolts. And so every single summer I, I come back and put on my, my purple and, Don my, my Thunderbolt.

[00:42:28] And yeah, I love it. It's a, it's a big passion. That's very cool. Are your kids swimmers yet? yeah, so this is the first year that my oldest is going to be on the team. He's five this year. And so he's coming on. I swore that I would not be a intense swim dad. and I wouldn't be one of those coaches that I was like, you're going to be the, the greatest thing in the world and you're gonna be on it as soon as you can start moving.

[00:42:57] so he's a little. Is often my, my path at three coming on at five, but I guess the jury is still out. If I'm going to be that it's super intense coaching, swim dad. Cause this will be my first season with it, which will be fun. That should be fun. No.

[00:43:18] So one of the other things that we talk about in construction is, or people might have that fear of is technology coming for your job. And, you know, as being in software, being in technology, how has, how do you guys rebut that or deal with it in your marketing messages and just in conversation to, to the industry?

[00:43:42] Yeah. I don't see it as a threat. I know this. I'm supposed to say that, but I really don't. I don't see it as a threat because it. to me, it allows people to do what they wanted to do in the first place. It gives you the ability to do the creative aspects of the job and can get more strategic with it.

[00:44:01] Instead of having to worry about all the mundane tasks that nobody likes to do anyway, that you have to just, you know, point and click in and do it a hundred times. Well, why not automate that and streamline that process so that you're not just having to, you know, point and click that you can, it, it allows you the freedom to.

[00:44:20] Do things that are more fun and more creative. So why would you not want to take that up? I get all the other arguments too, that it's I get how it seems threatening and scary. I'm not trying to minimize that, but I think it's a perspective change that you have to go through that it's it's not coming for your job.

[00:44:41] It is going to take some aspects of your job away, but it should be the mundane parts that you didn't like doing anyway. So. Don't complain too loud, I guess.

[00:44:54] Yeah. I mean, how I view that is, you know, we talk about it a little bit is ultimately you can't get projects done as it is today, right? You can't, you can't find the people, you can't get the projects done. There's no other way. Right? Historically, it's been, people were easy to find, to bring into the industry.

[00:45:13] Plenty of people came into construction and now we don't have that big influx of. Talent skilled labor, you know, on both sides, design and construction. So the only way to ultimately get projects without working 80 hour weeks is technology. That's the only way that I've seen it for awhile is people are working so hard.

[00:45:35] And then heaven forbid like I was talking to an architect friend heaven forbid if somebody is out on vacation or two people are out on vacation for spring break and you have deadlines. You know, like, like, contemplating life changes. Yeah. I think that's spot on. I agree

[00:45:58] with this and you know, we can talk about technology. We could talk about core values. All these are huge things, but what is maybe the biggest thing that you see? Facing construction, you know, outside of our marketing problem and maybe that's it, but, you know, what else do you see is one of the biggest problems that we have within the industry?

[00:46:22] Yeah, I really do think it is that, that marketing problem of comparing or

[00:46:31] tying that to the willingness to try something and get over the failure of what we've already talked about. I think. We are our own worst enemies in construction right now. We're our biggest impediment where the biggest stumbling block, the people are the biggest, source of potential in construction, but it's also, you know, the, the blessing and the curse is it's the biggest stumbling block right now is getting over, you know, head trash of what used to be versus what is, and then.

[00:47:06] Circling back to something that I brought up earlier of the talking past each other and not taking the time to really sit and understand where the other person's coming from. I think that's the, to me, that's the biggest stumbling block. All the other ingredients are, are there in construction right now to really take off and do some really cool things.

[00:47:26] And I think really be the, the tip of the spear in a lot of cases on, You know, not just the innovation, but on the tech side as well, too. I think that you see all the new people coming into the content space all the time.  and I think in the next few years, one of the powerhouse tech companies is going to be in the construction industry.

[00:47:50] Maybe that's a decade away, but I think you're going to start seeing that, if people can get out of their own way,

[00:48:01] I couldn't have said it better. Yeah. Just gotta stop tripping over ourselves.

[00:48:10] We totally agree, Todd. where can they find you? Yeah, LinkedIn I'm on there all the time. It's I. Slight not slight addiction to LinkedIn. So that's a great place to, to find me. Bridget pod.com is the website for the podcast. And then, aspi.com is applied software. Awesome. Awesome. And, here at the end too, I'd love you to, to pitch a little bit on MEP force.

[00:48:43] Yeah. so MEP for us is, the. Premiere, conference for the MEP space. So everything about it is geared to MEP and whether that's on the technology side or the workflow side, or even some of this cultural stuff, we're going to have some round tables on how do we, as an MVP industry help move forward.

[00:49:08] And how do we embrace some of that growth mindset, but there's a ton of classes that are just incredible amount of training. As well on all the different softwares that are out there. and then one of the, the, the biggest aspect of it is the networking part. It's we have, we're aiming for over 2000 people come into MEP force this year.

[00:49:30] And so it's a incredible opportunity to interact with the movers and shakers and, and learn from peers in the industry of what they're doing, how they're adapting to new things, how are they handling the software? How are they handling, you know, W w w all the craziness of the last year, how are, how are they embracing that growth mindset?

[00:49:51] And so there's ton of opportunities to interact with all those people. And that's something that we take really seriously and really build a lot of intentionality around it, of how we can connect those people. It's going to be virtual again this year. Maybe some in-person elements, fingers crossed on, on how everything goes.

[00:50:09] But, yeah, there's. There's a lot of personal touch outside of what you typically think of for even on the virtual conference space and hopefully next year we can all be back in person together for the whole thing. Yeah. We're, we're both definitely hoping on that. And the reason I want to have you talk about it is guys like on the design side, especially we.

[00:50:38] Maybe don't always go to conferences, reprise, probably the lacking one in there. The, our construction partners typically go more often than we do. And it's something that, you know, I want to encourage whether it's , whether it's, a you, whether, you know, there's plenty of other conferences out there to go to, but, you know, continue to education, right?

[00:50:58] This is the whole, whole basis of a growth mindset is to go and learn from others to connect within the industry and not be always so. close knit, so minded and to go and, you know, experience other things, get exposed to different technologies and workflows and people right across the industry. that's what these conferences are for if you've never been to any, any conference at all.

[00:51:23] They're, they're typically a great time. You know, you make as many friends at the bar as you do at the showroom floor, and the conference floor. So I encourage people to go to conferences, obviously this year. Last with most being virtual, it's not as, you know, maybe interactive, but, to still find ways to connect with other people across the industry, share some best practices.

[00:51:47] Again, if you're across the country more than likely you're not competitors anyway. So, it's, it's good to just share those best practices and you'll be surprised you're going to learn. Amen. Couldn't agree more, man. Any closing words, Matt. Todd, I just want to thank you for coming on. I, I thoroughly enjoyed the conversation and, hopefully we can continue it again sometime.

[00:52:18] Yeah. Likewise. Thanks for having me any, a closing, parting words, Todd. no thanks. Thanks for having me. I really, really appreciate it. This is there's so many different. Rabbit trails that we could continue to go down first year on this topic. Definitely. Yeah. Guys, Todd, thank you so much for coming on.

[00:52:41] We love talking about core values. We love talking about this industry. We love, you know, sharing what we've learned, what we can do better and how, and at the end of the day, for everybody out there. Guys to just talk about the industry. Talk about the cool things. Talk about all of the things that are behind closed doors, close walls, close ceilings, and, you know, share the cool things about construction and what's going on.

[00:53:04] it's really the biggest message that we can continue to impart, upon everybody is to share this message, share the message. That construction is a great industry. You know, check out, bridging the gap, with Todd, they do a great job over there. And again, Thank you all for listening until next time.

 

BIM, Pre-Fab, and More!

Hello, and welcome to another episode of the construction corner podcast. I'm Dylan, I'm your host. And I'm joined now as always with my blue collar. Bad-ass with cohost, Matt. How's it going, man? How's Michigan.

 

Michigan's good, man. We got a little warm up this week. So the the maple SAP is flowing rapidly. We are, we are busy cooking down syrup as we speak. So things are good.

 

Yeah. Yeah. You got to wait another 12 days to eat that though.

 

Yeah, I, I won't be having that anytime soon. I'm trying to finish up phase one first, but we'll get there. Yeah.

 

And guys I don't have like the greatest intro for this guy, James Hillegas.

 

If you are in construction whatsoever, you know them we're going to go beyond them. He is. The man who comes to prefab, BIM, all that kind of stuff, which is kind of the world that I live in these days. But James, welcome to the show.

 

Thank you for having me appreciate it.

 

Looking forward to it, man.

 

There's, there's so many ways to, to start this off, right? Like I think he probably one of the best places to start. So we were talking about seventy-five heart and something. That's not glamorous before we went live here. But to, to talk about, you know, the, you know, construction in and of itself, right.

 

Isn't necessarily the most glamorous of industries, most glamorous of professions. There's a lot of very, very cool aspects that we talk about a lot in here. But maybe just give a little bit of Background one on like 75 hard. Cause we talk about that on here quite a bit, but just your experience with it first, I think is probably a good place to start.

 

Yeah. So I did 75 hard last year. Shortly after I moved to Georgia, I started like the week before Memorial day and finished just towards the end of August. And I want to cash out a couple of things. One is we waste a lot of time. Me personally, I, I mean, because when you have to do safe at Hardy, you can get a lot of things done.

 

Pretty early. I got the early workout was always first thing in the morning, the progress photo, eventually after I missed a couple of times, it kind of set up a system for like Susan, another workout and we get this done. I would do the reading before I went to the gym and then it was just matter of got a water.

 

And that second workout in the second workout would always be like, for me, it was always the hardest to not necessarily get in, but it was always typically at night and it was dark and, you know, doing whatever. But just the biggest thing was just how much time we wasted, or I wasted. Because he, I still event towards the end of the program.

 

I was still getting the powerless done. And then obviously keeping up with doing 75 hard. But biggest thing was the time management, which I think is a huge thing in construction, because I think a lot of things are just poorly ran meetings are pointless, or just not to the point that we kind of like beat around the Bush.

 

Like I'm going to standard project meeting for construction. It's like, we're talking about the same five issues, five weeks in a row, and then nothing ever happens. Or we talked about five topics and the number one answer to all those topics is I got to check on that and then we check on it for the next five weeks.

 

And it's the same thing. So biggest thing is a source of you start to not put up with a lot of crap. He's like, dude, I got to get, I guess, still done.

 

Absolutely man. And, and I mentioned, I'm doing phase one, so we take 75 hearts tasks, and then you add three more critical tasks for the day you add bastard, cold shower every day and you add some, some visualization stuff and.

 

You're right. You nailed it. You, you stop putting up with the bullshit because you just don't have time in the day, and you have enough time to do all this and to pack it in and get done what you need to get done. But if you're messing around in, in meetings or on worthless phone calls or playing on Facebook, you're going to be starting over real soon.

 

And, and nobody wants to do that because as a program itself, it's not fun, you know, but, but you touched on meetings. I think meetings have gone construction wise. I'm a, I'm a contractor. You know, we're all kind of doing the remote thing still. I'm in my new home office here. And for a while, the zoom meetings, when we first kind of kicked them off, they were more efficient.

 

It seemed cause they were quick. Cause people were still uncomfortable. But now we've sunk right back into where we were when we sat in front of each other, everybody's used to it. And these meetings will drone on for, you know, a construction weekly meeting that goes for two hours is about an hour and a half too much, at least.

 

I, I don't know how we fix it, but it's, it's a huge time suck.

 

Well, I mean, I think one of the biggest things is a couple of things, like for like the BIM meetings, like most then people are not necessarily like a type personality. I mean, I'm generalizing. I don't know. I'm not a psychologist, but, but not like the construction superintendent, you kind of have like the two dichotomous.

 

So you have like one construction superintendent, the old guy that everybody always talks about. It's like, just up people down people's throats and like, we need to get this done. We need to get this done. Then you have like the BIM nerds and I am one, so I really don't care. And then they're like, Oh, it's okay.

 

You know, we can kinda know, maybe we'll get it done maybe next week. Oh, you didn't get it to us. We got it's okay. And it's like, we drone on for hours and hours and hours. So you kind of need, I caught off in the tube. And then another thing is like, most people would come product managers who would because of a degree or some form of piece of paper and they don't teach you anything of like real value in college.

 

So no one's really taught any, any leadership principles or putting any situations where like, you have to say, no, you have to, you know, call people out and not, and being like, don't be an ass about it. But you know, I mean, Jordan, wasn't exactly light when, by his teammates, but they all like to win. So you have to be able to call people out on what needs to be said.

 

And you know, obviously when you're younger, it's a little bit harder cause you don't know as much. And then construction is a huge experience-based industry. You know, it's hard to know what you don't know and unless you've either seen somebody mess it up or mess it up yourself or had someone tell you what to look for, you really just don't know if that makes sense.

 

Yeah,

 

this is this is a great, great topic. Cause there's, there's two sides of this, right? There's the side of people coming out of school and they don't know anything which I'll agree to. Right. I've got the degrees and I didn't pick up most of the stuff that I know from school. Right. But it put me in positions that opened doors to.

 

Put me in the seat to move forward. And then it's a lot of learning, reading books, doing the powerless, doing things to make you uncomfortable outside of that. But the other thing that I've experienced and seen it really throughout the industry, right? My experience is on the design side and there's no real training programs, right?

 

It's follow this guy around and learn this right. And this is what historically the union has been great at is here's the plan. Here's how you progress, right? From an apprentice to a master of whatever, right. Electrician plumber. And you go all the way through fall. This guy take these exams, that test your actual knowledge of things that you should know on the job site.

 

And you know, that's a great program to have a level of mastery of your, your skill, your trade, but for a lot of construction, right? For project management, You could say that like the PMP has that, but if you've ever taken like a PMP exam, they don't test your actual level of like running a meeting. It's can you, do you understand all these phrases and words and terminologies not?

 

Can you actually run an effective meeting? So there's a lot of training lack throughout the industry on like, this is how we run meetings. This is, have you ever heard of Robert's rules of order, right? This is how you run a meeting. This is a to B, do we have a quorum? You know, are we doing anything on quorums, majority rule or is this a dictatorship?

 

Right? What this person says goes, and that's it. But we sometimes rule by majority not, and we need to have those decision thresholds throughout a project, which are never established. No one's ever talked about them. And I think it brings up just a great point in, in the continuing education that needs to go on for everybody through the industry, right?

 

Whether, and getting that seat coming out of school and being a PM. That's great that you were able to secure that position, but there also needs to be a training program for you to understand what the hell you actually need to do to get a project from start to

 

finish. I mean, a hundred percent, I don't think personally, I don't think I've gone through college.

 

I have a graduate degree and I told them on the way out, I said, this is a joke. And I had the same professor for six years, not for the same class, but he taught like more freshman level stuff. And then on the way up through, into grad school, and I told him, I said, this is a joke. This is a complete joke.

 

And there needs to be something that's a mix between what the trades do with vocational school and what college does because college now it's like we have the internet. Everything is online. Like your you're everything's in theory. And it's pretty easy to solve things in theory, when it's like, okay, yeah, this cute little circuit and we have one load here and one load here, you need to balance out like your teeter-totter, but then in reality, that's not how it even works.

 

So it needs to be something, and you learn best with hands-on by actually doing something. So you need to understand the concepts of whatever the case might be, but then learn through actual experience and just figuring it out. And like I said, they're like homework problems with textbooks. It's gotta be like a physical project.

 

Like maybe it's not okay, we're going to design, you know, the Eiffel tower, but maybe they give you 50% of it solved and you have to figure out the other 50 program or whatever the case might be. But I don't think college is designed to serve people anymore. To be completely honest. I'm kind of pretty jaded horses.

 

I would tend to agree with you. I mean, I think it's designed to rake in a whole lot of cash and create a whole lot of debt. It's got its place right there. There are definitely professions where. I don't want my brain surgeon coming out and telling me that he's, you know, he spent two years in the field cutting up heads and I watched you too.

 

All right. But, but for a lot of stuff, you know, you can get that right. Specialized training that you get in, that you should get in school. You can get it after the fact, you know, go and hang your feet over the fire and learn what you want to do, or figure it out for that matter. You can learn in the field or learn in the office, whatever you're doing.

 

And then, then you can go back and get specialized degrees, specialized training for whatever you want to focus in. That that seems to make a little, a little more sense in my mind anyways, but you know, I, I, we don't have to get into it, but I did the school thing. I have a bachelor's degree. Do I use it? No, you know, I'm in construction.

 

I paid a lot of money for it. I've got three boys. My oldest is going to be in high school next year. So this is a big topic going around our house right now. And you know, what, what the hell are you going to do? And. You know, we have different conversations. He's mentioned trade school because he listens to this show and he's like, well, dad, you're always talking about trade school and voc-tech, and I said, do it, what do you know, what do you want to do?

 

Let's find what you're interested in. And granted he's, you know, he's not even 14 yet, so it's hard to gauge, but you know, the, the machine of college is, is kind of getting to the expiration date. I think.

 

No, I agree. I think one of my favorite arguments is like, you would rather pick a person with passion than a personal piece of paper.

 

Like if someone really likes something like art history or some degree that they have to get, what'd you Rachael hire the guy that like, just liked our history, and spent all this time, YouTube it and Googling it and trying to learn on, I mean, I don't know, no prepping a heart Paso and you know Michael and I don't know, but would you rather have the guy, that guy, as a curator of your museum who just knew everything was, was passionate and outwardly passionate?

 

What spoke about it with passion? And people wanted to like, listen to him talk because he was such a good tour guide give her of the museum, or does it have someone just like, yeah, I got a piece of paper now I'm six figures of debt and I have to be here because you know, essentially it's a weight tied around you until you get paid off.

 

If he ever get paid off. I mean, it's pretty, pretty obvious. I mean, look at the same thing with like Tom Brady, like, would you rather have the first round pick who was like highly touted or really have you guys won seven super bowls? Look, I'm not a Michigan fan, but I was put to get off when seven super balls and he's not number one pick, but he had passion to learn the game.

 

I mean, it's the same thing. It's the same thing with college, where they have the guy that has a piece of paper, who's like highly touted and, you know, valedictorian or the guy that's passionate about it and willing to figure out whatever needs done to get it done.

 

Yeah. Passion, heart, and willingness to learn.

 

That's why you can't grow that. You've got to have it inside.

 

Yeah, which so I'm gonna, I'm going to transition topics a little bit here. Cause we, we definitely hit on this, you know, every episode I think it's worth mentioning and, and everybody brings a, a slightly different viewpoint to the whole point of view college and then trades and in construction in general.

 

But the kind of pivot that I want to make here is to really productivity. So we, we start off talking about meetings and how unproductive. A lot of this becomes and you know, recently James, you've had some, some posts and talked about productivity and things like that. I'd like you to give your, your take on productivity in construction.

 

I've got a few points that just recently it's been grinding on me on how people approach productivity and construction and really tech in general for it to, they want the flashy thing to your point, not things that actually do the work, which is you know, just a, a sore spot for me. But if you want to give your, your take on tech productivity, all that kind of stuff.

 

Yeah. So I think there's a couple of things. One is, I mean, just using technology for the sake of using it, if you don't have a good process for it, which I get, it gets doll. Cause people are as a process. But if you suck at driving a Prius, giving you a Porsche is not going to make you any better drivers finding make you crash faster.

 

So when it comes to technology, I don't think it's, it's a tool at the end of the day, just like anything else. So it's how you use it. Not necessarily what it is. And I think for one thing, like would get bad with, nobody can focus. Like nobody can sit down and truly focus on a problem and try and figure it out.

 

And construction's complicated. And the best way I like to explain to people is just stand here. This is an empty field. And in this in two years or three years or one year, there's going to be a building here that defies gravity devise mother nature provides in the case of a hospital life-saving systems, oxygen, all the other ones that go in there, medical gas, it's going to keep the building falling down and fire and all this is going to happen in 3d space.

 

And we have to figure out how to make it all, not run into each other. Then it's not, it's not that simple and straightforward. So no one can get a chance to focus. Cause emails are open. You know, phones are always open. There's a pavilion apps that send notifications, playing all of them, send notifications.

 

I'm not even going to name them because they all do it. And they all say, Oh, we'll get rid of email, but they email you notifications. So you can have like, especially if you're a stub and have like multiple GS, excuse me, multiple projects with multiple GCs and some use playing group and some are on pro core and some are in Bluebeam and we get notifications from all and you never get a chance to focus.

 

So I found an author name. I could be butchering his last name, but Steven Kotler has written a lot of books on like flow in the art of human performance and like how to get the best out of it yourself. I, one of the things I, this is the first week doing it insights. So with our senior leadership and I was like, Hey, I get a lot more modeling done when it's quiet.

 

So if I can start the first, like two or three hours of the day at home, And then I'll come into the office, I'll have my phone in case there's like some crazy production issue that I need to come in for, because no, it happens. And if I need to shift that time around to where, you know, maybe I'll leave early and go home and do modeling that we can do that just for whatever works for production.

 

But if I get like two or three hours a day of just like silence, like no emails open, my phone is off and just focus. The output is ridiculous because you're focused on it. And if you're getting no noise in the office or people coming in and ask you things, and everything's always an urgency, you can't get anything done.

 

And then you look at the end of the day, like, damn, I didn't do anything. And so, you know, it's kind of one of those things and all the other apps are designed to be addictive. I mean, all of the apps are, that's why like you look on LinkedIn and you get a notification you're so excited, you know, like, Oh yeah, you gotta like, and they're all designed to be addictive.

 

I mean, they're specifically designed to be addictive. So you have to control that. Otherwise you're not going to get anything done today.

 

Yeah, they all, they all hit that, that little dopamine hit and it started with outlook, right. Everybody points at Facecrook and all the other ones, but I think outlook started it, right.

 

Because all of a sudden you have this, this little thing, little thing, a little ding, and there's numbers, racking up. So they, they, they channel you to focus on that. I I'm with you. I don't do it nearly often enough, but you know, when I'm working on estimates or proposals, I will try and do what you just said, and I'll shut my email off completely.

 

I'll shut my phone off. I'll lock the doors and when I can actually force myself to do it, it's fantastic. You get so much more done. You're so much more productive, but the second it all comes back on it's right back into the chaos.

 

So in productivity and like semen collar stuff deep work by counting parts.

 

Another good book to read in this, when you, when you're in a flow state or in a deep work state where you don't have any distractions, you're actually focused on the thing that you're doing. And in that moment, the productivity rates are like 10 X. What you normally would be, it's something insane. So if you're, and most people get like 15 minutes of flow, like a week, it's, it's something extremely small.

 

If that, if they're lucky to get into like a peak flow state for 15 minutes, like the timeframes, and I'm probably butchering like what it actually is, but it's something a busily small. So if you're able to get two, three, four hours a week, It's like a, it's a huge productivity bump, right? It's basically that four hours of flow can cover what most people do in 40.

 

Now, if you stack that to where you're getting two or three days a week now, right. And you're doing a month's worth of work for most people in those same two to three days. And then, but this is also the shift that most people have to make is, and it's a hard one to make is from, I'm getting paid to be here too.

 

I'm getting paid to produce results. And those are two very different. And I mean, the gap is very wide on those two different mindsets, right? I'm getting paid to be here versus paid to produce results. And the more that you can shift to I'm paid to produce results. Not immediately, this is not instant gratification.

 

This is not you know, leveling up in a game, but it is over time, you will be paid more for what you do, because you're able to produce results. You're going to be wanted on teams, but it's a shift. Most people have to make from a I'm paid to be here and sit in the office, regardless of what I do to I'm here to

 

produce results.

 

So if I can jump in James, I, I spent some time on your LinkedIn yesterday and today. Just kind of doing some prep. You do a whole lot of stuff, man. Can you for those of us that are not as familiar with you as, as some, can you kind of give me the cursory overview of what you're doing these days?

 

Because you got a big list on your, on your resume there, man.

 

Yeah, so I guess the best way to do it. So I like, like we talked about with the college thing, I got a graduate degree in engineering and then engineering was kind of, I just didn't like it. I liked the office space, right. I worked through grad school as an engineer and just went back to construction.

 

And then it worked as a PE and superintendent was the first job out of school. And I honestly shouldn't have been in the superintendent role, but I learned a lot of stuff the hard way. And I learned really good about how to get people's trust because when I first came in, you were one of the glazers at the end of the job.

 

HomeAway was like two, when you first got college job site, I thought you were an asshole. And he was like, and the guy was, I mean, I don't know. He probably was right. I mean, he was had experience. I didn't have, he was 40. I was 24 at the time. So what did I know? And there was a, it was a huge job as a, $170 billion hospital in Akron, Ohio.

 

I mean, it's not, that's a lot of money in Akron, Ohio. This isn't LA, this isn't in Las Vegas or some other major city. I mean, it's Akron. So. Worked through the field and this kind of the way I got in technology. And it's kind of a roundabout way, which I guess will streamline some of the conversation. I wasn't a tech kid.

 

I didn't get a computer science degree. I really didn't do anything with technology growing up. But the way I saw it was when I worked as an engineer, it was mid 2015 ish and drones kind of were starting to become relatively popular at the time when DGI still had a huge problem with drones flying away.

 

I think they're on the Maverick one or two, maybe at the time. And I was doing bridge inspections. So how it turned like, and I remember making these schematic sketches of what the issues were. And I just like, this is stupid. This doesn't seem very viable. I'm kind of estimating really where things are.

 

And I Googled do drones and bridge inspections, some phrase like that. And I found this report, it was done by Collins engineers out of Minnesota. And they did a study of using drones for bridge inspections. This was a couple years after they had that crazy collapse in Minneapolis. I think it was over the river.

 

So they, they Minnesota, Minnesota department of transportation, this engineering firm located in Minnesota and then a drone company out of Colorado Springs. I read the report, it was 300 pages, three 50, something like that. And I called the guy who kind of led the drone flight stuff. His name was Kevin. He was a former Royal air force pilot for great Britain.

 

And because at the time when people really flying drones were either people ate illegally because there was no rules at the time. So I guess it wasn't really illegal if there was no rules or you had to have like a commercial pilots license. And most of the commercial pilots were obviously being commercial pilots.

 

And so the other guys doing that were basically, you know, former military air force, Royal air force, whatever the case might be. I ended up working for these two guys like remote, like doing inspections with drones and I was still in college at the time. Like I was, we were testing all the software and all this stuff because nothing existed, nothing existed.

 

Like what does now? And we were testing software, they have sent me Dropbox files of photos, still have a lot of them. And we just kind of worked through the process. And before I knew it, I was like talking to CEOs and presidents within the Cleveland Akron area of Ohio about drones and bird inspections.

 

And I, and I was still at 20, 20, 20, 21. Maybe I didn't think he even had a, my undergrad yet. And I was like, this is kind of, you know, kind of interesting. They're obviously well more seasoned than I am. And they're asking me these questions and I was going into their board meetings and presenting. So I kind of picked it up and always kept that in my back pocket as like, I'll just use technology as my way to kind of accelerate my career and then kind of, you know, leverage the internet for what it's good for and kind of wrote it the rest of the way.

 

And you know, we started working towards prefab and BIM and all the other stuff that, you know, I guess I posted it on LinkedIn.

 

Wow. Very cool, man. So are you still, are you still active in the drone space?

 

So, yeah, I, so in 2016 we was like a friend, two of us. One guy was a GE aerospace engineer, and it was located in Cincinnati where GE has a huge aerospace presence. And then one was an asset engineer and we started building drones.

 

A company still exists. There's a lot of actually has a lot of contracts. I'm not as involved with it since I don't live in Ohio anymore, but I'm still kind of involved from a behind the scenes standpoint, if that makes sense and built a couple of things. And there's a couple of partnerships that we've established over the years with that.

 

So I'm still involved, just not as much as I was when I lived in Ohio. Gotcha.

 

Which I guess brings us to prefab. Right. That's probably the thing that you're, you're best known for. Obviously, breadth of knowledge and experience as far past that, but prefab is probably the big thing. And the thing that you spend a lot of your time doing so prefab for in pre-con have a lot of definitions by a lot of people.

 

So if you want to give us your definition of prefab pre-con and kinda how you, what your take on it is.

 

So prefab to me is taking anything that's good. Go onsite and build it, not on that site and then ship it there through some method. That's what I, I mean, there's all a name come like I could talk about earlier, like just names for everything DFMA and prefab and modular, and people just need an acronym so they can market it.

 

It's all the same crap to me. I mean, people debate, I'm not an English major, so I'm not gonna debate the words for us. So, yeah, I mean, prefab has, I mean, I'm only, I mean, I'm only good with one trade. I mean, I've only done drywall and framing. I'm involved with other people doing prefab and other trades just for the coordination processes and stuff like that. And a few multi trade things here and there, but I've never, and I mean, I've toured other, other trades shops, but I've never fully delved into their work.

 

So I'm pretty focused on one specific trade, which is framing more specifically metal studs. I have detailed wood models in the past, but I'm just not as familiar with it. And drywall.

 

And so this is the, or go ahead, Matt.

 

No, you're up. Ma'am you're

 

good. So take it from there. And really going a little deeper on the prefab side of things and the tech side, since this is your, your big area of expertise is. You know, what do you, what do you see coming what's in existence today on the prefab side.

 

And I guess you could talk about BIM as a whole, which I know there's, that's a whole can of worms which we can open. I'm fine to go there too.

 

Yeah. So I think you can certainly do prefab without BIM. I don't think it's necessarily a requirement. I think it's definitely helpful, but there are certain things I think you can prefab without it.

 

And then I think there are certain things, I mean, I think you can even prefab payments without it. You don't technically need it. I just think it's a lot easier to do, especially with coordination. And one of the things that I didn't know when I first started prefab that I kind of learned just through experience later on is like now, I mean, now we're getting the point where like the entire job is being ran to the shop.

 

Like every, every piece of it almost. And so that's a lot of responsibility. But I didn't really understand when I first started, like I'm making all the, not all, but I'm making most of the decisions at the end of the day around how a job's going to go, but this can either go really well. Or it can really suck because I mean, I'm setting like I'm, I'm dictating stud layout.

 

So guys hanging drywall, they're kind of like you do, they're going to be a really good drywall hanging experience or they're going to hate their life for the next two or three weeks where they hang that drone. So there's a lot of those decisions that get made and by myself in not necessarily an asylum, I mean, I'm involved with other people, but at the end of the day, they're going to be like, who the hell drew this or who designed this?

 

And that's my ass, if it's messed up. That's the only thing is I didn't really understand when I first started, prefab was like, you're taking out a lot. It's a lot of responsibility. I mean, you can really sink a job quickly by messing it up. So it's hard to do because you don't have a lot of experience.

 

If that makes sense. I mean, over the course of time, I've definitely have built a wealth of checklist of like, this is everything I've seen, I've messed up or just have come across. And I, it's a checklist I'll go through on every project and make sure, like, not everything might apply, but it's something I want to make sure that we've all thought about and agreed that as either an issue that we need to be addressed or is not an issue.

 

And so like when it comes to BIM, I mean, I'll go over the top with them. We have a job in Alabama where I'm the only one modeling GCs, not doing coordination. And I had modeled the steel guys stuff because I'm not sending out stuff. That's not going to fit or it's not going to be right. I even modeled some ducks to show the GC, like you got to drop us the Siemens, aren't going to fit where the architect and interior designer have.

 

It's not my responsibility, but again, at the end of the day, if we're going to send out our entire package prefabbed, it's gotta be right. It can't be wrong. So that's one of the things I really didn't understand first starting. And the best way I gained is, like I said, I didn't come up with the field as I just spent an extensive period of time in the shop, like with, I had a great, at the last place I worked in Cleveland OCP, there was a great foreman named Matt.

 

I still have his phone number. We still talk pretty often. And he taught me everything I know about carpentry. You would, you know, we would, I would stay in the shop with him and ask questions if you would answer. I mean, I still talk to my phone. Sometimes I call stupid ideas and I was talking to him because he's always at least open and wants to do his, he wanted to do his job better and I want to do mine better.

 

So we had a great team and I really, I really enjoyed it a lot. I really did, as far as that's, I guess, in the prefab the piece. And they usually have been to its fullest capability. No, I think you can shortcut it a lot. You know, we try to make everything easier. Let me take shortcuts that kind of defeat the purpose.

 

Like we, or people don't use know it's kind of a touchy subject with people, but it's a tool at the end of the day. And there's a lot of information that's in there and we can drive a lot of processes from it essentially. So one of the biggest things I'm referring out right now is kind of how to it's still really early.

 

I'll probably take me until the end of the year to have some valuable data, but one is building dashboards for our PM's out of the model. And then two is kind of productizing our panels in a way so I can streamline some processes in terms of one cost and estimating two detailing and then three driving, a few more robotic processes in the shop.

 

So we have a study, we have started ordering equipment. And so that part's taken care of, of like manufacturing, the studs onsite, we're buying master coils, you know, the big 40,000 pound poles you see. On the highway and they get slit down to a slit with the slit with varies, depending on the size of the stud, like I was T3 and five's done the smaller slit with than like a six inch stud.

 

So if you take a stud and flatten it all the way out, take a lips, take a flat and just flatten everything out. Like you're slit with essentially there's honestly elongation in there. It's not a one-to-one relationship. So, but now the process, the problem is everything. After, you know, manufacturing, the studs is slow because no one no process after he keep up with the machine.

 

So it's like, well, how do we start getting everything else? Like start to speed up the subsequent steps. And how do we start to add another trades? I mean, I'm going to start, I'm going to start adding another trades in our walls, whether they're going to do it or not. I mean, that's essential constructions.

 

It's kind of going back to everyone, one or two major players versus 50,000 other players. And. One of the things in the Southeast that's different from Ohio. My main experience in the Midwest was Ohio was heavy. You like, it was always, Oh, I ever knew it was union work down here in the South East. So it's not like that.

 

There's like substance, substance, substance subs of subs of subs. And it's, it's crazy. And so, especially with jobs getting as complicated as they are, you have all this scoping broken out across multiple people. It becomes very hard to manage all of that information. It's a lot easier to go to one guy or two companies and say like, figure this out versus like, you know, this, this trade stops here.

 

And then he comes in here and then this connects to that. And this left over that, we got to make sure there's not compatibility issues here. And it becomes pretty confusing to think about. So I think prefab gives you the ability to kind of set yourself apart because everybody's doing it essentially at this point.

 

And then you can start to add another trades and kind of. Gain will work for yourself. Just kind of what it's going towards. You know, you see more and more GCs performing trades and more and more single trade contractors performing multiple trades, just because everything's getting compressed in the middle of getting squeezed out of pretty much everything.

 

So in your shop. So you're rolling out studs with the machine, obviously. And then are you, or are your guys there, are they assembling by manpower or do you have machines doing that? Or how does that process

 

look? So right now it is what manpower. Okay. You have a few, this is one of the things I started researching this week and I won't talk about it yet.

 

Maybe we have a follow-up show or like later in the year, once I figured some things out, there are a few things that I have goes back to the product conversation of that'll help us with some more machines in the shop. As far as you know, assembling the panels and then she, you know, And doing that kind of stuff.

 

Some of the things I'm just trying to think through is a lot of the robots that exist today. And there, I mean, there's some that are phenomenal, but they're just taking human held devices and putting them on like a robot. Which, I mean, I don't know if that's necessarily the best answer. I mean, I'm not trying to knock anybody and it's a lot of work to figure out how to, you know, get robotics to work.

 

But at the end of the day, I mean, drywall is drywall because it's four by eight. And if you gave me a sheet that's like five feet wide. I don't think I can hold it. So isn't necessarily, I think there's a lot of things I think, and I learned this through grad school was we 3d printed concrete, which is a lot harder in person than it is on YouTube.

 

I learned are pretty friendly. Concrete is hard, but what I learned, what I, that the end of my thesis basically concluded on was like, are we really solving the right problem? I was on the right problem. Concrete's been around for, I don't know, 2000 years in some form or fashion hasn't changed drastically, much me I've got admixtures.

 

And our chemical engineering is definitely a lot better than what like the Romans had, but a majority of its weight is still the same water, sand, and aggregate of some kind. We just had came up with, you know, figured out the chemical reactions, a little bit added admixtures to, you know, make it cure faster or slower, you know, whatever we needed it to do.

 

But it's still essentially the same, whereas 3d printing. I mean, if you go back, I think we're starting the seventies ish was the first like quote unquote 3d printer. Not that not that 3d print in the seventies is what it is today, but it's still relatively new. And so we're taking a very old technology concrete and trying to put it in a 3d printer really will all we want because we want the performance of concrete, not necessarily concrete itself.

 

You want someone just has really good compressive strength. And maybe some of the better intention, just concrete sucks intention, you know, that's why you have rebar. And, you know, it's kind of taken up a modern engine, like take up engine out reports or put in a model T you're going to axles are going, gonna fall off the wheel to try fall off.

 

Nothing's gonna go handle the power. So it's the same, it's the same kind of concept. Why are we taking concrete? It's been around for 2000 years trying to run it through modern technology. All you wants to performance. If I told you spinning on your head and spit in quarters was going to give you a compressor strength of 10,000 PSI.

 

And that's what you did. You didn't care how we got there. That's just the result you want. So as far as the tech goes, I think, you know, comes to prefab. Why are we taking tools designed for humans or things are designed for humans and just using them for the robots where we can gain a lot more efficiency by just removing some of the limitations that humans just have, because you know, we don't have all of us, don't have eight foot wingspan.

 

I like it. And we'll, we will definitely follow up with you in a few months or towards the end of the year. Cause I want to hear more about that.

 

I'm trying to post videos, one side things out. All right. I gotta keep thinking.

 

Yeah. Which, which step exit a really good question in that. When you, when you start to do these processes where a person necessarily doesn't have to be involved or is involved in like operating crane or driving the semi right now, your dimension with, or limitations are or that right. Of something go down the highway.

 

So now you're looking at 10, 15 feet wide by 50 plus feet long to. Set in place, you know, what, what can you do at that point? Then you gotta worry about lifts and other things like that, right? You're not going to lift a single, you know, 10 by 50 sheet of drywall without it busting somewhere. You know, so those are the limitations that you end up with, which creates a whole different set of problems to solve for.

 

But your, your limitation now, isn't the person it's, you know, the, all the other equipment that you're using to set it in

 

place. What made to your point? Like one of the things that I mentioned at one of our PMs was the, the biggest issue now with everyone doing prefab is buck hoist and cranes. I mean, with everyone, prefabbing, you know, buck boys time is like it's worth gold because everybody's trying to get crap onto the floor from their shop.

 

And it's multiple trades. I mean, everyone's trying to get crap when we had, when I did that hospital job in Akron, to me, the, you know, the mechanical contractor would show up like, well into the early hours of the morning, Just so he could have a, can ask the black voice and B could just start, you know, cause you can only fit so much duct on a buck hoist and especially in a hospital when the duct is like huge, like I mentioned, the hospital type duck Creek crawl through it, you know, like four or five pieces on the thing, plus the operator.

 

And especially, you know, you've got travel time with going up to the floor and that job was a six story. You know, some of the jobs are going to Atlanta or 30 stories. I mean, you're looking at a lot of time of like, you know, crane time becomes a pricey or very valuable as it as buck waste time. And with everybody prefab and those are like the two pinch points for everybody.

 

And so we need to come up with better ways to get stuff onto the floors or into the building with everybody building things off site. Those are two limitations that we just, you know, currently have that prefab has created that I don't think anybody's necessarily solve yet because you only put on one buck hoist.

 

It's not, you can't just like put a bunch of buck hoist on because now you've got a bunch of holes in the building. You got to repatch. Right. The same would put in mass climbers for some other, like, you know, up and movable scaffolding. Can we use mass climbers as a crane? Quote, unquote, you know, we can put like stuff on them and then like dry the mass climber up, but it's slow.

 

And then now you got to go repatch, all those holes in the building, which are now possible water penetrations in the future, because you left giant holes and building, so you can tie the mass Klenner off suit. So yeah, prefab opened up a whole nother set of problems, I guess, for it to be figured out because yeah, people are having to show up at, you know, early hours in the morning or stay late or coming on weekends to load floors.

 

That's getting written to like a lot more contracts of like, you know, you can only look, we can only do, you know, loading or unloading during these hours or during these times during these days you have to sign up for it or, you know, whatever the, the GC dictates for that project or owner. Hmm.

 

Yeah. And one of the, so one of the questions that we got here was about feeling conditions and prefab.

 

And I think some of this goes to, you know, BIM as well as like laser scanning, right. To where you can, you can go through and you can scan, there's a bunch of laser scanners out there where you can scan a building, you know, super accurate use total stations throughout the year, pinpoint accuracy and survey within the buildings to get those existing conditions, to then be able to prefab some stuff.

 

But I guess, how, how have you approached some of the field conditions or do you prefab only on like new projects versus, you know,

 

re remodels? So I haven't prefab on renovate. Let's see the last renovation. I just, I haven't done any renovations in Atlanta. I do quite a few in Cleveland just because the city, I think is much older than Atlanta, relatively speaking to infrastructure and.

 

We did not do a whole lot of pre-fab on renovations. There are probably multiple reasons. One, we just had new construction going on. So it's easy to pretty fast. We just focused on that. You can do laser scanning. You can also, there's certain like you can do like telescoping studs. Like there's certain like things that you can get kind of get around it.

 

One of the things that, that teaches us, it teaches you how to get really creative with tolerances or like creating tolerances for herself that may or may not be there. So, you know, we might use slot interactive cases or a deep relay track to allow us to, you know slide the track up or down to account for floor issues or sealing issues, depending on what we're doing.

 

Or we might use angles pieces of angle, maybe with a longer leg than what we normally would to give us issues of, you know, again, tolerance, if we're making brackets or stuff like that. And then in some cases it's, I mean, it's just not enough, so worth it to, to prefab an existing project because you have to think about the other issue is.

 

It was an existing building, whatever you're prefabbing. So I'll have to get to that spot. I knew construction is a little bit easier because it's typically more open up an area. You're your constraints are not as great in terms of logistics. As the project goes on, the building gets more and more closed up and prefab becomes not necessarily impossible.

 

It just becomes sometimes more difficult to get stuff onto the floor. You either have to break into smaller pieces or, you know, come up with different ways of doing it per se, to get it there, like prefab in of itself. Isn't hard when you're taking, you know, instead of donating this jig onsite, you're putting in a shop.

 

The part that gets a little bit hard harden might not be the right word, but it gets you in trouble as all the logistical pieces of how to get on the floor. And I say logistical, I mean like every single step and how you're going to get it from here to there, because we did stuff like we, we. Just just dose stuff and you just mess it up now, you know what not to do, like we did tops for a two story or 2 billion apartments in downtown Cleveland one time.

 

And we pre-read these tops when we stack the pallets to heavy to wear, like they exceeded the load limitations provided by a structural engineer for that floor. So the guys in the field had to break down these pallets into smaller pallets so they can get them up onto the floor. Just stuff like that.

 

And like, you know, how are you going to get there? Is it going to be a cart? No. Or what turning races do you have with doors? You're trying to go through, how big is the buck hoist? How big is the trailer using a wall using a crane? How are you going to pick it and all that? And just all that stuff comes into play.

 

And again, either make a checklist of what to look for, or you end up messing up once you two times get a few calls of, Hey, what the F,

 

because I definitely got a few of those phone calls.

 

I think that brings up a good question too, is, you know, construction is, is everything right? Like you, so one of the things is like productivity, right? And pairing it to manufacturing. I like comparing it to cars. Cause that's probably the most straight forward everybody understands, but in, you know, a car, right.

 

It's manufactured in one place and then it's shipped to a dealer we've got highways and everything in a car trailer, car semi, right. That these go on where construction, right? It's some of this is prefabbed right from a shop to the job site, but everything is built there. So when you look at all of this it's how do you get material or whatever from this place to here.

 

And then you start talking. And getting all the trades involved to coordinate all of those pieces. Construction is Mo as much of a logistics problem, which you typically, when you take a logistics class or talk logistics, it's, you know, I want to ship this thing from, from where I am to you right in Atlanta.

 

So how do I get from California to Atlanta is usually the problem, not how do I get out of my house, take the steps down, you know, go to the distribution facility, take a plane or train or bus or not immobile or something, try hallway to Atlanta or fly or whatever, get out of there. And then the last mile delivery, which is the problem that like everybody has from Amazon all the way up or down.

 

However you want to look at that pyramid, but in last mile, right. To get it to your actual doorstep is the problem. And then you take it for, for construction. It's from the, from the front door to the 12th floor in the back hallway. And there's only, you know, stairs for the last two floors to get to the place.

 

We don't always think of it was last logistical steps in there. So you'd have a better education on logistics doing construction than I think most people with logistics degree.

 

No. The funny thing you bring in with Amazon logistics was what time it was a joke. One time as a joke, we were going to make an online, like Amazon store.

 

We were going to like sell our prefab assemblies back to herself, like a dollar. So that way Amazon had to deal with shipping. Yeah.

 

I would love to see that. That'd be awesome.

 

Know what we were doing? Oh, I think we were doing like one of the crazy ideas we had was like, we were going to build concrete countertops for project and like, there was such a pain to work with and I think that's what we were, there were so heavy. We didn't want to deal with it.

 

And they were so fragile that we were going to like, that's what we were going to do. We're going to put them on Amazon for a dollar let's PM buy and then let Amazon figure out how to ship them to the, the job.

 

Yeah. And they cover insurance and shipping and all yeah. Abilities and returns

 

returns.

 

I so this is funny. I one point we were doing, I did an arc flash and electrical safety for a big chunk of my career. So we got to go into all sorts of different facilities, but one of them was a. Like off-brand, you'd never know the name of the company, but they, they solely took Walmart returns.

 

That was the only thing these warehouses did. And they were in the Southwest. So we were like South Carolina, but people get creative, man. They'll they'll stuff up TV box full of bricks. So that the weight is exactly the same. Cause people aren't opening the boxes, but the way so the way it was like to the, you know, 10th of an ounce, so they put them on the scale and it, it weighs out and it fills to where like nothing moved in it, but the way it was the same to, to move through.

 

So when you're talking about weight and shipping stuff people get creative. When they try to rip

 

off Walmart, I have to get a new career.

 

I can tell you personal experience, my wife and I had this idea a few years back that we were going to buy that shit. You can, you can find the companies that all the Amazon returns go to a certain warehouse.

 

Well, and these guys will then put it on pallets and they'll sell it for next to nothing. And so we had this great idea that we're going to, and you can see the bill of ladings for what's on your pallet and you pay a thousand bucks or whatever. And I come home from work one day and there's this, there's this freaking palette in the driveway.

 

And we start tearing through it. And it's just junk. I mean, it's, it's like 3000 iPhone cords that are all missing the plugins, you know, and just, just boxes of crap. We didn't get boxes of bricks, but it might as well have been it, it was a learning experience, but I'll chalk it up to keeping me humble.

 

Also, we didn't get rich off it

 

thousand bucks and a bunch of time

 

wasted. Yes. In a pallet of junk.

 

Jay's before we have any more questions, if if there's somebody in our audience, which I would, I would doubt, but where, where can they find you?

 

LinkedIn? Probably. I mean, I have a Facebook, but it's only for like one or two groups. I have an Instagram, but I deleted an Allianz vault to say something.

 

Then I deleted it again. Now I talk about value to add. I'm not just posting just to post and I try and stay off social media because it's just not very good. I don't like it. I liked it. It's a tool at the end of the day. Right? I mean, it got me to where I am. I ended up in Georgia because of it, ironically of all things.

 

So I think it's definitely a tool. That's one of the biggest things I'll kind of distress to people. It's just a tool. I learned them off of the internet and just by doing it and messing it up. So like the first projects I did in Revvit were terrible. I mean, God awful. And then each project, did you learn a couple of new things and you just kinda make tweaks and you keep improving it and you keep improving it and keep improving it and getting better.

 

But the first, I mean, I did not, I wouldn't drive it on the job when I worked as a structural engineer. So we were doing, went back to the co-op thing. When I was a co-op I was working for an engineering firm at the time I was born engineering and they were kind of going through, it was like 2014 or 2015.

 

And they were going through the AutoCAD rev, the transition phase. So like one of my jobs as an intern was to convert or work with some of the other engineers and detailers on convert. And a lot of the CAD details into like rabbit families, because they were kind of going through that transition process.

 

And that's when I first get experienced to rev it. And the rest was just YouTube and Google and forums and videos and watching and learning. And there's a lot, I mean, I have a job where I've learned that all off the internet per se. I mean, it definitely the engineering degree. I'm not gonna say it doesn't come into handy.

 

I mean, yet it helps to design load bearing structures and you understand. Know, some fundamentals of structural engineering. I I'd be lying if I said it wasn't useful, but I mean, the tools I'm in most of the day, aren't necessarily things I learned through college. I went into the same way. I mean, it's a tool.

 

I started posting videos in my bedroom at my parents' house with bunk beds in the background that people always gave you crap about, like, which one does he sleep in the top one, the bottom. And I was wearing a hoodie and they weren't professional any means they definitely weren't scripted and they definitely weren't edited.

 

I mean, I would just, I would see when I started doing is I would see something on job site and then I would try and come up with something hacked together, quasi solution, a step above saying, I have an idea. I was something somewhat tangible. Then I would just film it. And I would say just how it could work or should work or this or that, or I would tell stories of, you know, there's things you saw on the job site and, you know, that's kind of how I started using LinkedIn.

 

And that's kinda how it grew from there. That's how I ended up in Georgia. So. Ironically, I worked for a startup last year when COVID first started in, in Atlanta, just on the North North East side and Alpharetta. So it was working for them at the time. And COVID started when the stock market first collapsed around this time.

 

Last year, it was in February and they laid everybody off because they were private equity backed. I was like, Oh crap. Like at the time I already you know, left the employer in Ohio. I didn't have a lease yet in Georgia, but I already was like the week before I was supposed to move, they like laid everybody off.

 

And I really liked Georgia. Like I I've been to the South before Fran vacations, but when I tell people, like when you come to the South and it's the winter in the Midwest and like you leave Cleveland and it's snowing, I lived right off like URI. So like we got crapped on with no, and you know, it's snowing, everything's gray, it's covered in salt.

 

And then you come to the South and you're wearing shorts and it's 50 and it's sunny and everything's clean. That's two different things like, yeah. When you come to the South in the summer and it's somewhere in the Midwest, it's like, Oh, it's just hotter, more human version of summer when you come to the South in the winter and it's clean and there's not salt all over everything and there's no snow.

 

And like, this is kind of nice. And so I knew the company I worked for now, Jackie, the president, I spoke with her through LinkedIn. She messaged me and she was like, we're trying to do prefab. We have some questions. Would you mind talking to us? And I talked on the phone for like, you know, one November in like 2019.

 

And I reached out to her like four or five months later saying like, Hey, I want to come to Georgia and I have a job. And then that's kind of how I ended up. So, I mean, that's just the power of LinkedIn. I think, you know, putting stuff out there that provides value. Yeah. To answer your question.

 

No, I'll get an yeah.

 

So guys, obviously James is tagged in all the groups here and all the posts, so go go follow him. Great videos that you put out, man. They're always thought provoking and all that kind of good stuff. So, and, you know, I know all of our mutual friends, aren't really one mutual friend who you help out quite a bit you know, speaks highly of you and you know, other people, man, it's we're, we're glad to have you on here.

 

Definitely from the conversations we've had, you know, you know what you're talking about, you're, you know, exuding all the, the core values that abandon IBOs stand for and, you know, do the right thing, stand up for construction. You know, and constantly improving yourself, which, you know, I've seen from obviously distance, but you know, it's, it's something that we love to see and we love to talk to people that, that are all about improving themselves and getting better.

 

You know, and everything that you do, so definitely a pleasure to have you on. And I love how you've used LinkedIn for, for that type of a use.

 

I appreciate it. It means a lot. I think going back to our point about conversation of like earlier with college versus the trades or whatever, just pick something and then just work to get better at like, at the end of the day, like just, it's not necessarily what you do, that's gonna make you successful.

 

It's just how you do it. And I mean, I think one of the, one of the things I don't like about the trade verse, college conversations, people always talk about, you know, how much money you can make. Like you can make a lot of money doing anything. Cause you know, like you have to, even if you get drafted the NFL, let's go back to the Tom Brady example.

 

You get drafted NFL, maybe you're in for a year and you may, I don't know what the, what the actually mean. I get the marketing of like what ESPN says like, Oh, they can make. $200 million if like you alarm for lands on the moon and they throw 50 touchdowns in the same game, that's the marketing. That's what they tell you on TV.

 

But that's 500 is probably the low guy, I think, from what I've seen. So if you're like 52nd on the roster, you're making path to a mil, something like that a year. And you might have a one to two year contract. So the low end it's, you're making half a million.

 

Exactly. So like you, if you're, and if you don't stay around, like you got an NFL for one year and now you're out and it's not, even if you were the best picker, highest pig, and look at Tom Brady, the guys it's not necessarily where you got what you do.

 

It's just how, how you do it, how you perform, you can make good money doing anything if you're good at it or work to get better at it. So I think that's one of the, one of the points I don't like about the trade conversations. Like if you're a sucky, plumber, new create leaky pipes, you're not going to get paid a lot of money just because you're pulling up.

 

It's kind of a dumb conversation to have, like, I get it. I understand where you're coming from. Like yeah, you can make good money without going into debt. But I mean, if you're a really good doctor, then you're probably gonna pay that off pretty quick, you know, go to a different school that you don't have to pay six figures for and live on a dorm or some crazy crap.

 

Yeah. Just working hard, no matter what you're doing, you got to put the effort in. You've gotta put the time in. I agree with you a hundred percent, man. It's cool to follow your journey. You've come a long way from the the bunk bed studio. And I appreciate you coming on and telling

 

us the story.

 

Thanks man.

 

Appreciate it. I'll forgive you for rooting for the team up North.

 

I want to date myself, but I may have been at Michigan when Mr. Brady was there. I was, I didn't hang out with him.

 

Yeah, well, and so to, in all honesty, transparency, so my wife went to Michigan but. I went to Louisville, both. So we win championships.

 

We don't blow them.

 

So we championships, we had some issues with our when we first got our suddenly machines, they were just an issue. So there's like a lot of things you just don't know about when you're trying to manufacture studs. And like, we finally got to the point where we're doing production and then like, David who's, the owner was like, you know, stud rolling in production.

 

Those are two words you never hear together. And I was like, it's kind of like Georgia and national titles,

 

but that went over real well. Yeah.

 

Obviously I am the South and college football is very big here and there's not, it's very rare to find a car that does not have some college sticker or bumper on it of some kind and there's schools from all over the place. I got my eyes. They want to, don't worry.

 

Yeah.

 

One of my buddies that I, I worked with, he went to grad school at Louisiana Lafayette, and you'd go to two games down there and, you know, it's, it's the South and especially it's Louisiana. So, you know, you'd have a 41 court thing, a gumbo, right. For all the tailgates. And he was like, people would yell you if you're wearing the other team's gear to like the game.

 

Right. You're, you're going to a Louisiana state game and there's like some Bama fan right. Are coming through and they would berate you and yell at you and then be like, Hey man, gumbo.

 

So it was like that kind of like, you know, cursing at you to your face, but then, Hey, I got, I can't eat all this. Like you want some,

 

that was pretty good, man. I liked that stuff.

 

I, I think the the Wolverine Buckeye relationship is not quite as cordial. No.

 

Speaking of plumbers, my uncle built a man-cave.

 

And before we feel like the toilet with the hooked up to the water, you put the Michigan decal in the bottom of it.

 

I love it.

 

Yeah. That's my last note for the day on that

 

one. And we won't burn any couches today. So now James, it's been a real pleasure having you on man. I know there's, there's tons of nuggets that people picked up in this show on, you know, anything for prefab to problems to, you know, you can make in whatever you try.

 

And I think that's really the biggest message that we always put out is look, you can make it whatever you want. Right. Matt is on the GC side, James you're on a subside, I'm from the design side, right? You can all make it and whatever you choose, as long as you choose to be great. And I think that's the biggest message here to pass along.

 

And then there's, you know, everything else to, to figure out there's, there's definitely problems in construction, but there's, there's always a solution. If you if you look hard enough, Would that guys that is this episode of the construction corner podcast until next time.

The Modern Day Tradesman  

All right. Hello and welcome to another episode of the construction corner podcast. I'm Dylan, I'm your host. And on today's episode, we're hopefully going to have a special guest. So we did this live, but the thing is like, everybody that we bring on is actually in construction actually runs construction companies.

 

So bear with us, right. For all of you out there, you know, that life happens, uh, projects happen and all that kind of stuff. But first before we, uh, get too much into this, Matt, my blue collar badass of a cohost, how are you doing, man?

 

I am doing great. Dylan. It's a warming up here in Michigan, which is nice.

 

Uh, the last couple of days have been kind of a sloppy mess, but we're, we're getting through that. The sun starting to shine a little bit more and. And my pipes that were frozen last week that prevented me from being on the show a have thawed out nicely without bursting. So things are good.

 

Yeah, man.

 

It's, uh, it's been like in the fifties here and then yeah, I mean, again, being in the mountains. So I'm at this interesting elevation. Right. I go 10 minutes down the Hill and it's like, it was 70 yesterday, right? 75 sunny, like beautiful blue skies go 10 minutes up the Hill. Like it's, you know, ski weather, right.

 

You're in it's, you know, 35. It's perfect for, for skiing. And, um, I think last week they got like another foot of snow.

 

Oh, wow. Yeah, we've been, we've been pretty darn cold for the last few weeks. We, we spiked up to. I think we hit 45 on Tuesday last night though, we got down to negative 17. Um, today we're back up in the, in the mid to high thirties.

 

So it's enough to get rid of some of the ice dams on my roof, which is helpful. I keep waiting for my gutters fall off.

 

It's that time of year though.

 

Yeah. I mean, this is, uh, like the beauty of, you know, construction, right. And, uh, just being across the country, everybody deals with weather in different ways. Um, and one thing like while we're talking about weather, so again, my background in electrical engineering, I did.

 

Power classes like power is my deal. What I was in school for knew that kind of going in, like lived off the grid, uh, in high school. So I, I totally understand like renewable, sustainable energy, even though the majority of our, uh, power still came from a diesel generator. Like that was, that was the backup.

 

That was the real charge. But we had, we had a windmill. We had hydro in the winter. Uh, living in Oregon, you know, we got 120 inches of rain a year, which really happened in like six months. Um, and it's being on the Oregon coast. It's you get there's really two seasons wet and dry cause you're in like a temperate rainforest effectively is what it is.

 

So with that, like we, hydro is great in the winter. You had a pretty, pretty good stream of, uh, of water and then wind was the other thing. But the other thing with wind is we got very high wind gusts. So it was not uncommon to get a hundred mile an hour winds with gusts up to like one 30. So with that, like wind can be like problematic.

 

It actually, like we had, um, the blades on our windmill weren't like huge, right. They were like three-foot blades would, they would actually, they bend, uh, Enough to where they would hit the pole and then like they snap a while or you'd get speeds high enough, where it would, you, you need to put like the brake on, um, to, to pause it.

 

What would that you would end up, uh, like they blame break the sound barrier, but all that stuff to be said, and like, Within the last couple of weeks, right? You had Texas that has like one, they have all these windmills, they got frozen up. Uh, so they had to get dis and everything. And then with Texas is power grid.

 

The other thing that most people don't know is Texas. So there's three big interconnects in North America. There's a West coast, East coast and Texas is kind of on its own like grid system. So in like when Texas has problems for power, that kind of stuff, it, uh, it isn't easy to, to connect everybody. So with like this extreme weather, it's always important to like kind of note how that happens.

 

So you had a big, uh, production problem with like windmills and all that kind of stuff. And then you had like, You know, Texas is kind of on its own grid. So then you had interconnects, which means power then has to come through these, these other big systems. So then you can have power outages, um, you know, because Texas is kind of its own Island, a lot of that's to do with like the Rockies coming through and stuff too.

 

Um, and just where Texas lays. So like geographically, it's a little different than everybody, but that's like one of the other things not only is Texas like power by a ton of windmills. Um, but also. Like there's these other kind of grid and larger like electrical system things in play. Um, so anyway, just on another topic, I wanted to bring that up.

 

Uh, since that's been in the, in the news here lately, it was really quite the perfect storm down there. It's glad, or I'm glad to see. They're finally a thought out a little bit. We, uh, you know, up here in Michigan, we, it seems like since I was a little kid, we, we haven't. Received a whole ton of snowfall annually this year.

 

However, so usually what we get is we'll get a couple inches, but then two days later it melts. And then a week later we'll get a couple inches. W well, this year we haven't had that melting. So we actually have been building and building. And, um, there was a day last week we had snowdrifts at a project of mine that we're up to the door knobs.

 

So we couldn't even get in without shoveling. And what that did. It's, it's a pre-engineered metal roof building. So on. On Tuesday when it got so warm, we had basically, what, what looks like an avalanche coming off of the roof of this, you know, 30-foot-tall structure. And we quickly found that there were some areas in our masonry control joints where the caulk didn't go all the way down to grade.

 

And I don't know if you've been following along, but we're, we're installing 15, 20,000 square feet of high-end Maplewood. Basketball court right now. And we had water literally gushing in through the control joints and it got within a foot of our brand-new unfinished maple floor. But my superintendent got it.

 

He was running around with shop vacs and it could have been a big mess, but we avoided it. Luckily,

 

Hey, Hey. Uh, our Modern Day Tradesmen and all right, so guys, we just, uh, for everyone listening on the audio here later, that's not a tune in live with us. I want to intro our Modern Day Tradesman. So Andy Aranda has been in the construction industry for 24 years, which is awesome. We've got a, a veteran of the industry and a is the CEO and owner of pure Pauling out of Las Vegas.

 

Uh, which you know, totally different weather, uh, we're dealing with here, uh, across the country and a father of three and runs his business, uh, pure plumbing again with his wife, Alexis, uh, He's also launched the brand, the modern day tradesmen that bring awareness to the trades, which you guys know that we're totally all about that thing in the trades, but you know, blue collar badass is a wonderful thing and more and more people should at least consider it.

 

The trades as a career path, as it's a great opportunity for so many people, um, you know, everyone can have a shot at the American dream by being in the trades, um, and they just need to find their purpose, their why, what they're going to do. Um, so we're super excited, Andy, to have you here on the show and, uh, and welcome man.

 

Man. Good to be here, guys. Thanks for having me on. I had to have the little complications with my computer this morning. So bear with me, but, uh, yet, uh, you know, as I listen, you guys a little, a little earlier, talk about everything going on in Texas. And you know, the funny thing is, is we've been looking and kind of following everything that's going on in Texas.

 

And I've had a lot of people call me this week, just ask me, Hey, look, man, you got crews. You can send down to Texas. We're an Austin. I can't seem to find plumbers anywhere. And so long story short, you know, we're looking into everything and licensing in Texas and it turns out right now, they're basically saying, Hey, come into Texas.

 

If you're a journeyman master plumber, or you have a business, uh, we will give you a temporary license just to get things done. So it's just interesting to see what their what's going on down there right now.

 

Wow. That's incredible, man. So are you going to send some crews down there?

 

I mean, you know, we got our license down there today, you've got to take advantage of the opportunity and you know, what we could possibly put to put together a crew to go down there.  It just, depending on the needs and stuff, I think I'm going to touch base with a few people that I know down there to see, uh, what the demand is. And of course, like moving anything or setting something up like that. I mean, it's just, it's, it's a fast. You have to move fast, right?

 

Definitely. You got to get to figure out some logistics very quickly too.

 

Yeah, definitely man. And, and, uh, one crazy thing that, uh, one crazy thing that people don't think about is right now, like, well, I mean, things were frozen in, you know, in, in, in the plumbing industry. Uh, you have to worry about when it's frozen, you gotta worry about what happens when it falls out. Because that's when you start to see, you know, versus pipes, you know, drywall, you know, you start seeing drywall damages, you were talking about the wood, the wood floors you were putting in, or, you know, for that court.

 

I mean, you're going to start to find a bunch of things once the snow melts, you know, but, uh, you know, I I've spent, yeah. I spent some time in Chicago, so, you know, I know what this snow can do in the cold weather. So, you know, something that's, uh, that I'm familiar with.

 

But I'm glad you brought that up. I actually had that jotted down in my notes.  I was poking around on one of your profiles the other day and notice you're a big cubbies fan. And I was going to ask you how, uh, how a guy from Las Vegas becomes a Cubs fan, but now it kind of makes sense.

 

Well, you know, it's, it's crazy, man. I was born in Henderson, Nevada, my mom's family is from Henderson.  And I'm not talking about the nice part of Henderson.  And for anybody who's been in Vegas, it's the older part of Henderson. And, uh, you know, not, not the most desirable place at the time, but since then, Henderson has grown into a big, beautiful place. But, uh, lived here till about five. Uh, my mother got married and we moved to Santa Fe, New Mexico. Um, you know, so I grew up, uh, you know, for five years old to about 21 years old there. And from there, that's when I moved to Chicago and you talk about change a culture change, big city life, you know, small time guy is small town guy moving to a city like that. It was, it was a, it was a big shock, but I wouldn't trade the experience for anything because that's.

 

What really developed me into the trades? Um, not only just in, in, in plumbing itself because you know, my, my family, my background and my family, uh, you know, we're a family business in Santa Fe that I, that I learned from. So I grew up in the plumbing trade, but you know, out there in Chicago, we were building houses.

 

I mean, we were, you know, working in the big boat or in the Bucktown, Wicker park area. Sorry about that. Um, and we were, uh, knocking buildings down, building a back up, you know, friend of mine out, there's a developer, you know, back then we were young and we were young guys with, uh, with a contractor's license, you know, so it was crazy.  Cause I out there in Chicago. The application for the, for the license out there was, well, if anybody's willing to insure you, you can have a license. Right. So, I mean, it kinda makes sense. Right. So, I mean, the insurance company is going to do their due diligence to make sure they got the right guy, because obviously they don't want to take a hit, we know with somebody who's inexperienced.

 

Right. Right. So, uh, You know, we, we started doing a lot of stuff out there started with like kind of small projects, started getting into bigger projects and, uh, through all this process, man, Um, I really did learn a lot, um, you know, knocking buildings down, building a backup, you know, you're dealing with a brick and mortar, you know, you're dealing with footings, basements.

 

Um, anyone, anybody wants to know, like, you know, the importance of making sure a basement is sealed properly from the outside. Uh it's you're not having problems with like snow and moisture and water and stuff like that. That's a perfect place to learn that. So, uh, you know, my experience out there was great because I didn't know what it was like to live, obviously in a big city, um, you know, to build around structures that were so close to each other.

 

Um, and also man, everything out there has to be deep. You know, you're talking about a water line out. There is like five feet, you know? Uh, we're out here. I think we're like, 12 to 18 inches.

 

That's why I've never thought of it. That way. I actually grew up right outside of Chicago. Um, I've been in Michigan since I was in school, in middle school, but, but yeah, you know, deep foundations to me are when we have to drive piles, you know, 30 feet.

 

The four foot frost footings, and five foot water mains. It's just, it's just normal on, on this side.

 

Yeah, it's crazy. You know, there's just a lot of, a lot of different types of plumbing out there. What I, when I got out there, gosh, we were, you know, you had never even really thought about using plastic pipe anywhere.  It was all, you know, cast iron. Um, and it was all copper work. Uh, even some of the drain work was copper work. So, you know, the transition from being out there to coming to Vegas at the time I did, uh, getting back into plumbing out here, you know, in 2009, You know, um, it was completely different. I was like, man, this is so much easier out here than it is, you know, back East, you know, and, and for anybody, you know, who has ambitions moving back East, you know, that's great.

 

It's cool. You know you get a taste of the big city life. But if you're from the West coast, you will come back. You will come back, you'll come back to the nice dry hot weather.

 

Sure, sure. I don't know why I'm here sometimes when it's, you know, last night was 17 below with the wind chill.

 

Yeah. Yeah. In where exactly are you at?

 

So I'm in Southeast Michigan where the office is in Brighton. We're about 30, 40 minutes North of Detroit.

 

Oh man. So yeah, you know that, you know, you know, you, you get that Lake effect too.

 

We don't get so much Lake effect, but we just get cold. I was telling Dylan before you popped on, we, we typically get that couple inch snowstorm every, every week or so, but it melts in between everything just goes to ice.

 

Whereas this year we've actually had snow on the ground for two months now. Oh, wow. It's finally starting to melt up a bit, but that, that comes with its own challenges too.

 

Yeah. You know, I, I think the, that was the hardest. You know, and I would say, you know, the experiences, you know, when you're going in and when you're in the trades, right.

 

Uh, different facets of the trades and you go to a different region, you're learning different codes, uh, how people do things. So I always, you know, I always encourage people, go get as many experiences under your belt as you possibly can. And that was my twenties for me. My twenties for me was, you know, I knew plumbing, experience, plumbing, all my life, uh, got into construction.

 

Um, Larry construction building spec house in Santa Fe, long story behind that, but, uh, yeah, built my first spec home and, uh, me in the, in the partner I had that were building, um, the spec house. Um, I told them, Hey, you know what, we could build a spec house, but you know what? I want to work for the contractor that we hire.

 

Um, that's going to build a spec house. And then I'll hire myself and my family as the plumbing company, so I could do the plumbing in it. So my goal was, well, I could get the plumbing done cheap, cause I'm going to do it. I could also learn how to deploy my first house solo and get that experience. And then, um, I can also get the experience, uh, laying out houses, footings, um, building structurally.

 

And it's funny because the, the builder was like a very old school guy. So. Um, you know, they have like power nailers. Now we are using power nailers, man. We're hammering nails. So, uh, how many guys, you know, these days that are, uh, you know, anxious to build a house with a hammer and nails, it's much, much different, different type of experience.

 

Um, so yeah, so that's kind of a little bit of my background doing that. That's kinda how I got into construction, but I've always loved it. I don't know about you guys, man, but. Uh, in the construction field, there are a lot of facets and avenues to get into that are really fun. Um, you know, there's just so many avenues you can get into.

 

And I think, you know, with my brand, the modern day tradesmen, um, what I, what I want to do is I just want to highlight different areas, you know? Well, gosh, not even just to show everybody, but for my own personal interest, as well as just to highlight like what guys are doing out there, you know, If you're going on a job site and you're seeing some crazy spiral staircase, and you're wondering, man, how do these guys do that?

 

And you guys ever wonder that you go on a job and you're like, how did this guy, how did, how did they accomplish this? Especially

 

wood? What is always the thing that gets me like metal, I can like, see how that gets formed the wood, like, and those like big spiral banisters or anything like that. I'm just, I'm always amazed.

 

Yeah, it's wild. And the, the, the beauty of the further you go East, the more you find like really intricate woodwork and in true craftsmen. And, you know, through my experience, uh, going to Chicago, uh, you know, I met this old Irish guy and, you know, he kind of taught me like a lot about carpentry and woodwork and, uh, you know, I really learned a lot, so.

 

You know, you ever want to give her one to learn, uh, uh, woodwork or anything that's really complex, uh, being on the East coast is, is where you want to learn it, uh, because you, you don't see that stuff anymore, especially here in Vegas. You know, you see a lot of spec homes, a lot of homes that are built for profit, I call it.

 

And, uh, you know, you don't really see it unless you go into like super custom homes, but man, out there you see it everywhere.

 

You see it a ton, especially up in new England. Um, but actually one of my steel guys recently sent me a link. There is a, a college or university, I think it's in South Carolina and it's called, the American school for the building arts.  I'm butchering the name. It's something similar to that. And they're actually teaching kids, teaching people, old school building techniques, so that there's videos on there on their website of kids doing plaster work and, and, you know, welding and wood carving and stone carving. And it's. It's pretty neat to watch, man.

 

I got to look that up. If you, if you get the name of that, look that up. Let me know about it because that's something I want to share because you know, I think a lot of, uh, you know, we gotta start getting, like, we gotta start getting kids out of high school, learning some of these really intricate trades, right.

 

In order to elevate like the, the, you know, the trades itself. I mean, uh, home-building stuff because. I mean out here, if somebody wanted to, to, to mimic a house from the East coast out here, uh, you're probably shipping dudes yet, you know, you're, you're shipping dudes in, you know what I mean? But yeah, interesting stuff out there.

 

And that's, that's one of the big things too, is that, you know, you've hit on a few times is knowing that with a trade, right. With a skillset you can travel. Right. Just like traveling Texas, or if you have a very unique project that you can bring people in for it. Right. Or if you have a high enough skillset, right.

 

Carpentry and masonry and stone carving, right. That you're now able to travel to do these super unique projects for having that type of skillset. So it's something I think that often gets overlooked and like how often people travel like linemen for, you know, electricians, right. They travel all the time.

 

And in so many other fields, you have so many people that do continue to travel for work. Right. You're never going to be without it. And you might be. You know, gone for two months, but then you can always come back home to, you know, continue working wherever it's kind of a, you know, as the seasons change.

 

Yeah, no, totally. For anybody who's, you know, for anybody who needs like a variety. Right. And for anybody who requires a variety of different things like being aligned is probably the best thing. Right. I it's funny. Cause I just, uh, you know, I was just on a podcast with a buddy of mine, uh, in Santa Fe, New Mexico.

 

And this guy was alignment and you know, long story short, his wife had gotten sick. He had to stop doing it because he had to be present home with his kids. So now he, he has a podcast dedicated to helping tradesmen become better fathers because what he recognizes, man, he spent a lot of days out, didn't get to spend a lot of time with his kids.

 

When he came home, the kids didn't know what to do with him, uh, because you know, they, they had never, they were never, yeah, it has been traveling. So it was kind of. It's really weird. So he kind of breaks down how a lot of a tradesman, not only Lineman, but a lot of tradesmen have that problem because you're working long hours, you may be traveling.

 

I think it's good that more people are getting out there and, and, uh, talking about this because I think it's things that tradesmen, um, you know, do have to deal with man, because, you know, I know in the service industry and, and, and what we do in the service end of the trades, Um, we don't stop to the call to the phone stopped ringing.

 

And so now, right. Plumbers probably electricians in Texas and, and even contractors like these guys are, um, they're probably working 24 seven to, to restore power, um, to restore water to homes, um, and to restore products please. Right. So, you know, it's, it's just what comes with the job, right.

 

It is, and, and there's a give and take, um, what's the name of your buddy's podcasts? I'd like to check it out.

 

So his podcast is the show up dad. Okay. Yeah. The show up dad podcast. So yeah, it's pretty good. He's, you know, he's got a real lot of really good speakers. He's interviewing a lot of people and for anybody watching this man, you guys should go check it out because. I'll tell you, like all of a sudden out of the blue, he contacts me.

 

He's like, Hey, what's happening, dude? You know, he's like, man, I got this know thing going and, and I haven't seen him since we were like in our twenties and the gosh, the last time we saw each other, it was kind of weird. We're partying, having fun. You know, I was in school. You know, he had just gotten back into town and stuff.

 

So, you know, reconnecting with him has been great because, um, he alone has helped me realize a lot of things about myself and with business because you know, with business, you know, we get so focused on what we have to do to support the family that we figured yet that what the family actually needs most.

 

Right. And that's our attention. So how do you leave the work home? Uh, and, and be a hundred percent available to your kids, uh, to give them the attention and what they require. Right. Cause we just can't buy their love, you know? And I think a lot of times we're like, Oh, I'm going to make the ultimate sacrifice for my family.

 

I'm going to go out there. I'm going to make as much money as I possibly can. I'm going to set my family up so they can do whatever they can. But then years go by your kids are teenagers and they're like, dad was never home. What, what is it for? You know, so I think a lot. I'll go for it.

 

I guess this is a, it's a good question too, because you know, like in your, in your twenties, in, you know, really anything learning, uh, learning the skill is what you need to do.

 

Right? You can work so many hours. You're typically not, uh, tied down, right? Most of us, you know, at least these days, right. Don't get married till our late twenties, but you can really, you can grind through your twenties, learn a skill, pick up. All of those things that you need to be great at what you do.

 

And then it's, uh, you know, as kids, as a family and like, I just got married last year. So kids aren't quite on the horizon. Yeah. Thank you. Uh, on the horizon yet, but for that it's. Setting yourself up to, to be in a place where you can be home, you know, that might be coming into the office or being in different roles to where you're not having to answer are those service calls at 10 o'clock at night, two in the morning.

 

Um, so I guess, how have you. Uh, maybe you looked at your guys, looked at your team into, to elevating guys into those positions, you know, as they come through or at least making them aware of like, Hey, I, you know, I did this thing, right. I was just like you, I grinded, I worked, you know, 18-hour days or more, you know, as many guys are doing right now.

 

To, to, like you said, restore power, you know, clean up everything, but how do you look to, to kind of elevate your team and, or at least show them like, hey guys, you don't have to like work that hard. Um, you know, your entire career, there are other things that are important as well. Um, I think it really, what it comes down to is I think it is at a young age, you need to find, you know, young man at a young age and need to get it.

 

You need to get them trained. Right. So really, we've got to be effective as business owners of identifying who wants to be in the trade. Who's committed. You have to let them know how important it is, whatever they do, find out what they want to do, stick to it, and commit to it. Right. That's one thing my grandfather told me, he's like, Hey, look, you need to spend a lot of time trying to figure out what you want to do.

 

Next thing you know, you lose 10 years in whatever is you decide you want to do. You're 10 years behind. Well, those first 10 years were probably your most productive, a physical trade. So what's the goal? Well, goal from business owner is to get kids in from high school that identify their, they don't want to go to college, right?

 

Give them a career, a career that they make six figures at, uh, train them how to do their job. Well, once they learn how to do their job well and how to perform the plumbing tasks, or, um, tasks as electrician alignment or whatever it need be. Once they have that solid foundation, they can start building on those skills.

 

Well, there's two different, you know, there's many different parts of the trade, right? You got the residential end, you got commercial end. Um, you got the service then, and those are three very, very different, um, facets of the trades itself. Right? So you get identify, you know, what is it that I'm good at? Am I an introvert?

 

Well, if you're a little bit of an introvert, but you love to, you know, the hard work, you know, the, the, the working into the trade, right? You could be a craftsman who just doesn't like to talk to people. Well, there's a place for those people, right? Those people just, you can't put them in front of a customer selling a job.

 

You know, you've got to get a guy who's really good at one talking to the customer, identifying the customer's needs, and then understanding the trade enough to know what they're talking about. To line the job up and set the guy who likes to do the work up on the job. So if I could recommend anything, you got to add in identify where it is, you fit in the trades and you got to roll with it.

 

Well as business owners, right? We need to discover our talents within our team. So if we're discovering the talents within our team, then we can better forecast the vision of where we see them going within our organization. And of course, you know, you guys know this best, right? You've got to. Grow the team large enough, so they can all fit inside the dream.

 

Right. I think we've heard that from ed and Andy, you know, plenty of times. Yeah, definitely. So you've got, you know, you gotta, you gotta raise the ceiling. So these guys see themselves growing within the organism organization, because if you don't cast that vision well, you know, you're gonna have a hard time growing it in, in, in getting better.

 

But, you know, I think you just gotta make the best of your years at a young age. And learn as much as he possibly can and get as much experiences in as you possibly can. Um, another thing I think that people need to think about too, is you can't be scared to try new things. You know, I think a lot of people say, Oh, I don't know how to do that.

 

Well, I can remember countless times where I didn't know how to do something, but I knew how to get the resources of how to figure it out. You know, like we're in the information age where you can look it up on Google, YouTube, you could pretty much find any resource anywhere, or you could find somebody to ask them how to get it done.

 

Right. So as long as you know where to find those resources, I think you can grow yourself, um, enough into a position of leadership. You know, if you do it right, and you won't be having to run calls at 40, 50 years old, um, you know, working 24 hours. But I think you're going to have those people to that that are comfortable doing that.

 

Like they want, you know, my dad is like, gosh, he's almost, that'd be almost like late fifties, 60 maybe. Um, and he's still plumbing. You know, he's still plumbing, man, but that's, he, he's a simple guy, you know, he can, he knows his plumbing. I mean, he's not able to do the stuff that you guys do, but you know, you can be a senior plumber and you could be showing these guys and training these guys how to be good.

 

And you can make a huge impact in doing that. Um, by just showing that these, showing these guys how to, you know, make the money they can be making in the trades.

 

Absolutely. And then you're the mentor, right? And so many young, young men and women coming into the trades. They, they need that mentor relationship because you know, it's competitive as hell out there.

 

And especially in the trades, most people don't know what they're doing. They don't know how to do what they're looking at. So you've gotta learn, you've gotta learn fast. And some of it's going to be trial by fire, you know, Daniel and your feet over the flames. But. Some of it comes from that mentor relationship.

 

And when you can find the old guy or, you know, the guy has been doing plumbing or carpentry or whatever it is for his entire career, you got to figure out how to extract that knowledge from them. But once you can do that, you can, you can set yourself up for a world of possibilities.

 

Oh yeah. A hundred percent.

 

Yeah. I think you just got to, you know, I think we, uh, we, as, uh, as leaders in our industry, right. We need to identify what it is this next generation needs. And we've got to mentor these guys in, into, uh, into areas that they're going to be successful. So, you know, I just like, just like a high school has, you know, a guidance counselor, right.

 

That's going to kind of set them up, you know, where they're going to go after high school. Um, I think you almost need to be like a construction counselor and be able to see where these guys' talents are and then guide them or the right way. So, you know, if, if, if you're a young guy getting into the trades first, you gotta identify what makes you happy, why you're doing it.

 

I mean, I, I never realized why I loved being in the trade so much. I just love talking to the people. Right? Sure. I love talking to people. I love the different scenery change. You know, that you're in a different house every day, you're meeting new people and you know, what the best part was that I loved about it was the fact that I was, I had a sense of purpose.

 

Like, you know, these people were relying on me to go in and fix. Uh, a very, you know, a problem that was, that was bad. So whether it was leaking, you know, whether it was like sewer water, all over the house, you know, drains, failing, you know, I felt like the hero coming in to save the day.

 

Sure. And you're bettering people's lives because of it.

 

You know, I, I started off building houses and you know, it wasn't an emergency situation usually, but you know, when you build something like that and you can hand over the keys to a family or to whoever, like you just built this person a home, you know, that that's, that's some powerful shit to get up in the head.  When you just made this person the place they're going to live and call home for the next 20, 30, however many years. And, and even now I've switched in the last couple of decades to the commercial side, I get the same feeling building buildings, right? Like now I'm building the place where these guys and these ladies are going to work and they're going to earn a living to provide for their families.  And, you know, it just keeps going and going and going there. And it's just, I think it goes back to what we've been hitting on. There's so many opportunities out there in, in our collective industry that it's just a world of possibilities, but it leads to a question that. You know, Dylan and I have talked about a lot.  I'm going to ask you Andy, your take on it, but what do you think is the, or what do you see as the biggest issue facing our I'm going to call it our industry, you know, so, so Dylan's on the design side, I'm on the commercial side, you're on the service side, but at the end of the day, we're all construction.  Right?  So what do you see as the biggest issue facing our industry today?

 

Well, I think it's the stigma that comes behind blue collar work. I think it's a stigma. I mean, I can remember as a kid and I talk about this in, in, in some brands for reasons like that, you know, I was a kid that the kid in the shop, you know, at work with my parents, watching these plumbers, you know, come in to this warehouse and buy stuff.

 

And I was looking at him and I was like, man, I don't want that. I don't want to look like this guy, you know, I don't want to look like this guy. He smells like I'd been drinking. He looks like crap. He looks like he's beaten up and worn down. Um, and even my dad, man, the guy would be working until like nine or 10 o'clock at night.

 

And, you know, because he was working to try to provide for us, you know, we we're a big family of five, uh, because he was trying to give us the best life possible. You know, he started getting into drinking, you know, and you know, that's a whole other, other topic, man. And you know, there's only. Uh, a couple of reasons people drink and drink a lot is they're trying to kind of drown away their sorrows and their pain man.

 

And, you know, I think we've got to get rid of that stigma, but also we got to, you know, as, as leaders and as business owners, we have got to understand that there is a limit to what we can put our guys through, you know, Um, I am a firm believer, you know, I still, to this day, I tell my team all the time, look, I want my guys not getting a call past this time, you know, and I'm not sure how you're going to have to figure it out, but you need to figure out how to make this happen, because I don't want my guys burnt out.

 

I want them to have a life outside of work, you know, and it's a very fine line. Like, especially when you're in the service businesses. You know, a lot of times you don't stop till those calls stop, but we've got to figure out how to, how to make sure that we're taking the right volume of calls to make sure that our team goes, goes home at a decent time.

 

So in turn, you know, going back to the question you're asking me is how do we change that stigma? Well, we, as leaders become better leaders recognize what's tearing people apart and we do our best to try to change that stigma in our industry. And. You know, that's the number one thing behind the brand too, is like, we're trying to bring respect back to the trades, but what is it that, that, that, uh, um, you know, what is it that, that brings respect you ever see those, uh, that, that famous picture of the guy sitting on the piece of steel, maybe it's the empire state building and it's a black and white photo.

 

The guys aren't strapped in. They're just wearing t-shirts dude. It looks just like, man, these guys were like a hundred stories up in the air. That OSHA probably didn't exist, but these dudes are just badass as up there, dude, just making it happen, you know? Um, you know, where's the sense of pride. I, I think people were so happy back then to be in a new country, you know?

 

Um, that they're willing to do whatever it took to, to, to make a career for themselves. And they really took pride in like creating what is now what the greatest nation in the world. Right. But see, now America is in a whole different stage. We're in a stage now where the top power. Right. But all of, you know, once you hit the top, what's the hardest thing to do, stay on top.

 

Right. So what is it, man? I think, I think really right now, and even in the trades, you know, we need to face the reality. And the reality is this is not enough young people are getting into the trades and right now, um, if you're, you know, what supply and demand is, is if there's a demand for people in the trades, what's going to happen, you're going to get paid.

 

Right. So I, so I think we just need to create awareness behind that if we can create awareness behind it. I, I think, uh, I think that would be a. You know, something that, that we could do to, to change it.

 

I, that's a, that's a beautiful answer. So when Dylan and I talk about this problem constantly, I kind of have this, this vision of this, this effort I'm coming up with that.

 

We're calling blue collar bad-ass and it's, but it's the very same ideal, right? It's the same thing as modern-day tradesman and actually through doing the podcast. Now I've met, um, a couple of guys who unbeknownst to me before this are kind of going down similar, but separate paths and. I think awareness is it, you know, college just isn't for everybody.

 

The trades offer a ton of fantastic opportunity where you can, you can make not just a reasonable living scraping by you can make a killing and you nailed it, especially right now. If, if you come in and you put your nose to the grindstone and you, and you learn and you work, you can set your own price tag pretty easily across the board right now.

 

Especially, if you start, if you start learning any of the specialized skills, like we touched on earlier, I mean, my God, if you, if you knew how to do plaster work right now. Oh

 

man. Forget it. And isn't that the truth because you know, in my place, well, you know, I, I grew up in Santa Fe, New Mexico. They have this, uh, you know, they have this plaster style called diamond hard trial plastering.

 

Right? You guys ever heard of it? No, I haven't. It's like a Venetian plaster, but it's like thick. You know, it's not just, you know, real thin. Right. But you could literally see your reflection in the plaster. That's how this is like glass. Right. And it's funny because you know, out here in, uh, in Vegas, you know, everybody's doing the Venetian plaster and, you know, guys are charging like, you know, 25 to $50 a square foot to do this stuff.

 

Right. So, I mean, there’s a lot of opportunity to make money there. And if you're an artist, you know, if you're a bummed out artist, who's not selling artwork struggling to survive. Well, how are you going to, you know, what are creative outlets that you could do in the trade to help you fuel your passion?

 

Right. So, I mean, some people might like to make artwork with their plumbing. I mean, if you get online, I think now I've been more, I've been noticing more and more of what trades men are doing. So electricians like to make their line work perfect with their pipe bending. Right. And that's an art format and I've been seeing it more and more, you know, with, with, uh, you know, with what I'm doing right now.

 

And same with plumbing. I mean, I follow this plumber outside of Austin in Australia, and he's literally building, like bending his copper pipe perfectly on his tankless installations. And I'm like, man, we don't do that out here, but it looks so beautiful, man. But what's holding us back from doing it that way.

 

Like this guy, obviously he created his, you know, he, he created his artwork within his trade, right? So like the trades can be for artists for creative people, man. Um, you just got to find out what it is you have to do to make your installations unique because people pay for unique things all the time.

 

And, and if, if somebody goes into the garage and sees this bad tankless water heater, right. And this thing looks like a piece of art, you know, if somebody is interested in it, what are they going to say? They're going to be like that. Who did that work? I've never seen anything like it. You know, so there, there are ways you can express yourself in the trade.

 

So, you know, that's one, that's one other thing that I think we need to highlight here, man, is like, if you like to express yourself in a creative way, join the trades man. Perfect opportunity.

 

Yeah. That's a great answer. And it's not one we've touched on before. Um, I'm glad you brought that up. That's a good viewpoint.

 

But, you know, and another thing too is like you get a lot of iron workers out there who can weld at the, the, the, the, the most perfect welded joint. Right. They've got all kinds of different ways to, well, these joints, right. And, uh, gosh, I see that more and more now. Cause I, my, my eyes are on every single trade now.

 

So you see all these creative ways that doing these things well, man, why aren't you doing sculptures and stung pieces of work for 150 grand, a pop. You know, you already know how to master your craft and if you're creative and you like to build things, weren't you building like works of art, but there's no reason why you can't take this thing to the next level.

 

You know, people pay for that stuff. You know,

 

it's a great point. And really, to, to your point about the guys on the empire state building, right? Like I've seen some recently where they were like playing golf, right. A hundred stories or something crazy. Yeah. But it's, it's the sharing of images, right. Of, of people on a job site of sharing the beauty, the rugged, the, you know, man's man images and getting them out there.

 

Right. Everybody's familiar with the 10 iron workers sitting on an I-beam up a hundred stories having lunch. Right. That's a very iconic photo. I think that probably got a lot of people into construction. For a long time and we just need more of that. I think over the past 30 years, people have been gun shy on pictures, on images for liability and a plethora of other reasons, you know, can we share this?

 

Can we put this out there? You know, is this owner going to get mad about sharing their, their buildings? Should we get a find me? I mean, a bunch of stuff, but I think the being. And trusting your, your people that are, that are doing the right thing that are showing a good installation, not, you know, guys goofing around or whatever, but showing and not to say that you can't show and share people having fun, but you know what I mean?

 

Right. Doing it in a, in a safe, responsible manner, not, not anything crazy, but getting more awareness to your point out there of people. Actually working right. Actually showing, you know, what people do on a day-to-day basis and putting buildings together is, is a huge part of it. And making not only the guys on that job site and girls feel good about what they're doing, but knowing that Hey, like this matters, right? It's going to get seen, we're getting seen outside side of the people on the job site, right. We're bringing notoriety to what we do, bringing awareness to our, our trade, our, this project. Right. Whatever it might be. And that they have some ownership, not just to say that they did it, but like, look here, here's actually me on a job site, right.

 

Here's me actually. Doing something versus just like, yeah, I worked on that and you know, some people look at it kind of sideways and like really did you,

 

did you actually, I don't know about you guys, but you know, I'll tell you, man. I mean, every project that I've done, you know, is like a notch on my belt, the sense of pride purpose.

 

And, uh, I think that's the one thing you could get from being in the trades man is how, how, how good do you think those guys felt right. You know, those 10 guys sit on that post, you know, what do you think they told their kids, you know, that original photo, if you could say that was my dad on there without bullshit, you know, guaranteed, you know, that's something to be proud of man.

 

And every, everybody needs to feel a sense of purpose and, you know, a sense of heart being a part of something. That's great. And if you're one of those dudes sitting on top of there building the empire state building, I think that's probably the pinnacle of like coolness, you know what I mean? Look, I was up here.

 

Yeah, man. And you know, there are heroes in the trade and I think we need to highlight some of these heroes in the trade and, you know, give them the recognition, man. I don't know about you guys, but if you're on you ever see the guy with the tattoos, you know, on, on, uh, he's a, he's an iron worker, the wrench face official guy.  You ever seen him?  I know, and he's a skier. He's looks scary as hell, man. I don't know, trying to, trying to connect with that guy, but I mean, Oh, he looks scary too, but this guy's doing some bad-ass stuff, dude. And he's on there posting this stuff, man. And he takes pride in his trade. You know, obviously, I mean, he's working on these big towers, he knows his stuff, but I mean, this guy is really getting a lot of attention out there and he's doing it for the right reasons and uh, You know, it's just, it's cool to see, you know, guys out there, uh, showing that type of work, because I don't know about you, man, but I don't know what it's like to be 50 stories up in the air doing iron work.

 

But I do know if you do post those videos, man, you're going to get some like special ops Navy seal dude is getting out of the military. Who's like, dude, I'm on it. You know what I mean? Or like, or, Hey, maybe I'm going to be a, you know, Uh, getting, you know, coming out of helicopters, working on a fricking tower out in the middle of fricking nowhere, you know, to revive power to a town in the, out, in the middle of nowhere, you know, you know, there there's jobs for, for people that are, there are people that are crazy enough to do that kind of stuff.

 

So I, so I think, I didn't even know that line that I had no idea how in-depth or how hard a line job was until I talked to my buddy. Have you seen him do the helicopter work? For, yeah.

 

So for everybody out there, like if you never seen it, just like Google or YouTube, like utility lineman, a helicopter. So what they do, they're wearing a full mesh, uh, suit, right? It's all mesh metal. It's basically a Faraday cage. Realistically what it is. And they sit on this little, there's a little stand next to the helicopter. It's a little platform that the guys sit on and it's electrically isolated from the rest of the helicopter.

 

And then when they're up there, because they do live it's, it's all live. So you're working on a transmission line. That's 345,000 volts. Right? It's what it's most of those are. Some of them are like 500,000 half a million volts, seven 50, like these big, big transmission lines. And you, you have to do that work live.

 

And a lot of it's inspections, a lot of it's just like insulator work, whatever, but they have to do that live because you're on those transmission lines. Like you'd take down a state, like it's, you know, you're, you're taking down a big swath of the grid if something fails. So they have to do that work live, but in doing it.

 

So you're on this little platform on the side of a helicopter, you know, at a transmission line and then they have a little rod. That they like shoot over and it brings them up to the potential of the line. And then they, uh, again, because you have two or three like parallel conductors. So you're one arm on each you clip in to the line and then you literally like hand crawl, uh, along the conductors in this Faraday cage.

 

And. Again, you're not, you're not dying cause you're, you're up to the potential of the line, but you're out there walking and then they, they deactivate, you know, bringing the helicopter back up to potential and uh, all that stuff when they, they go back over. But it's yeah, it's totally like crazy what they do, but I mean, there's

 

a job for everybody.

 

Well, it's, what's crazy about it is, you know, imagine like these guys have to be sharp, man. They have to be smart. And that, that's what this is. This is one thing why, you know, being a tradesman doesn't mean you're stupid, man, because these dudes, like every mistake that they make has consequences, man. So these guys have to be extremely aware of their every move, which means these guys probably, I'm not sure if they're coming into work, hung over, man, because that could mean their life.

 

Right. I think there's a lot of credit that, uh, that should be due to guys like that, you know, out there in the tree that are doing that stuff because they do have to be sharpened on their toes, uh, every minute of the day. So are you guys who think that, Hey, construction is construction, is something you get stuck in when you don't go to college or because you're not smart enough.

 

Do these guys are intelligent dudes, man, and we're finding out more and more nowadays, like all these guys coming back from Afghanistan and Iraq after the Wars, you know, these guys are. Um, the perfect candidates to be getting into the trades man. And I think that's what we need to be targeting is we need to be targeted guys coming out of the military reason.

 

Number one is these guys operate on core values. They know what it's like to work in a team environment. And if they know it's like to work in a team environment, man, it's just going to be a bonus for you because that's one less thing you have to, you have to teach, right? So these are good. These guys are going to be coming onto your game, natural as, as, as leaders working under a structured organization, um, they're probably going to fit into your core values.

 

Um, so, well, I think a, a lot of what we need to focus on too, or, you know, how are we gonna get these, these guys coming back from Iraq and Afghanistan? How are we going to get them into the trades? You know, what are we going to do with the guys that are the perfect fit to get back into it, or the perfect fit for a career in the trades?

 

And how can we better educate these guys on what they can do coming out of the trades to make the money that they need to make, you know, number one, to support their families and to grow, you know, their life or their version of the American dream.

 

And what's so important too, in there. And you touched on it earlier is, um, Like the look there's, there's more to life than that.

 

Just being in the trades. Like everyone, you know, we love all this stuff. Everything in construction we'd love everything, but there is, you know, you've got family life and you're doing it to support, uh, others. Right? That's a big piece of why most people are doing this right. Is to provide a great living and life.

 

For, for the rest of your family. And I guess that might be one question to Andy and I don't know how much longer we've got you for here, uh, before we wrap up. But, um, you know, with your, your dad working those, those long hours being gone, um, what lessons really did that, that teach you growing up?

 

Um, man, it I'll tell you, man, it made me, uh, made me realize a lot and it made me one, it made me realize, um, Number one what he did to provide for his family.

 

So, you know, when we're teenagers, we're a little disrespectful, you know, we take things for granted. We don't understand what our parents go through to support us. Well, now, as a father, I know that, right. But it also taught me man, um, you know, going through that makes me hypersensitive towards that in my business.

 

So I'm able to identify when I, when, when guys are going through things. Right. So when I see guys going through that, you know, of course I want to, I want to make sure that they're okay. I mean, um, you know, I like to look at it as this is, my job is, uh, for my team is to help people grow, not only in the trade, but as like better individuals too, you know?

 

And because I saw my dad going through all of these things, like, I don't want to be responsible for. You know, possibly contributing to someone's downfall. Right. So, you know, I think I tried to really, uh, I think I really try to avoid that. And I think, you know, at the time I think my dad was just like, Hey, you know, I've got five kids.

 

I got to support him. I got to put into school. You know, my son wants Jordan’s. I got to buy some fucking Jordan’s. Right. Excuse my language. Um, but you know, these, these are all things that like a father is like, feels the need to do. Right. And that's his sense of purpose is like every man wants to know that they could provide for their family.

 

Right? Like if you can't provide for your family, you're like not a man. Right. I mean, I think I've always felt like that. I'm like I got to provide for my family. I got to make sure my kids have this. I got to make sure my kids have that. Um, you know, I think just being hyper aware of that, um, just maybe really analyze things and that the type of business leader, I want it to be.

 

And it made me realize that I I've, my job is to educate these guys to be efficient at what they do in a certain time. Like if I have a guy from us from this time to this time, I need to figure out how these guys can be more effective at what they do so they can make more money in a shorter period of time to get home to their families and not have to feel like they have to work till nine o'clock at night.

 

And look, guys, I don't, I don't have this thing perfected. You know, trust me, I'm very far from it. Uh, but I'm aware of it and I'm constantly working at things that I could do, you know, to, to better take care of my guys in my team.

 

And that's, that's great, man. That's why I, I suspect you're a pretty damn good leader.

 

Uh, I'm a hundred percent confident. You're a blue collar, badass. You are the Modern Day Tradesman, right? You you've got this thing figured out; perfection is not attainable. Perfection is not attainable. It's the race to keep going and going and reaching as close as you can. That, that we're all striving for.

 

So hats off to you, man.

 

Definitely, man. And I know you guys are too, man. I think we all, you know, uh, you know, thing in life is, you know, we're never gonna reach the pinnacle of where we want to go, but as long as every day, we're striving to get where we want to go and better ourselves and better our teams and, and make the world a better place for it.  Like that's all we can strive for. Right.

 

Absolutely Andy, uh, before we wrap up here, where can everybody find you?

 

So, uh, so you can find me at the, uh, www.thevmoderndaytradesman.com. That's my website. I've got videos. Um, I like to share videos to kind of help people out. Um, that's, you know, way I feel, you know, I kind of contribute.  I'm just sharing what I've learned with people. I just want to make that available to people. Um, I'm going to be sharing more content, uh, more and more content on there. Um, I also have a, uh, a line of apparel, uh, called the modern day tradesman as well. So, you know, the idea behind that is, you know, where can you go buy cool trades gear?

 

That's cool. You know what I mean? So I wanted to make cool trades gear that guys can like wear and be proud of their trade, whatever it is. So if you're a plumber, an electrician, you know, we got this modern day tradesman gear, so you can go out and rock the gear with pride. So go, you know, go check that out.

 

We're always constantly coming up with new things and new ways we can educate and kind of bring awareness around the trade as well. So that's where you can find me. Um, hopefully that kind of answers your question from that website. It'll take you to all the little facets and scenarios. So, you know, I could go with a long list of stuff, but that's the best way to find this.

 

Perfect.

 

Yeah. Guys, go, go check Andy’s stuff out. He's sharing some fantastic content on there. Um, and it's a lot of the stuff that we talk about here too, right? It's core values. It's learning how to communicate. It's learning how to be a better person. That's going to make you a better tradesman, able to communicate with, you know, the owners, the team members, the different trades that you have to work with on a job site, day in and day out.

 

So again, his stuff is fantastic. Uh, highly endorsed and, uh, yeah. Um, keep up, uh, everything that you're doing, but any, any final words that you have and want to share with the audience here?

 

Yeah, guys, you know, just, uh, whatever trade you're in. Just remember, stick with it, give it your all, become the best at your possible that you can possibly at your craft and identify what Avenue you want to go within your trade and, you know, get with a company that's going to invest in you because you know, if you get with a company that's going to invest into growing you, like you'll be able to be, you know what it is that you're striving a hundred percent, a hundred percent agree with you.

 

And ask those questions before you, before you hire on, uh, what they're doing, that's it? Yeah, a hundred, a hundred percent, man. You got to know, you got to know what makes somebody tick. You got to know what's, uh, what drives them to succeed. Uh, you want to, you know, if, if you're going, you're applying for something and somebody asks you what drives you?

 

You better know what drives you, man, because that's what they're looking for. Yep.

 

One last thing before we, before we get outta here, um, another Andrew guests, previous guest of ours, Andrew Eller shot us a note during it. It's American college of the building arts; acba.edu. And they've got a Facebook page now that I've been following, they put out some pretty cool content and they're doing some pretty neat stuff with their students.

 

So ACBA.edu.

Correct.

Awesome. Perfect. Yeah. Thanks for sharing that, Andrew. Appreciate it, man.

 

Awesome guys. Well, that is this episode of The Construction Corner podcast. Again, go out, be the best that you can be. Continue to learn, grow, develop all your skill sets again in the trades in design, in construction, in project management, whatever it is that you do in this industry, go out.

 

Be great. And until next time.

Building Walls to Open Doors  

Hello, and welcome to a, another episode of the construction corner podcast. I'm Dylan, I'm your host. And I am not joined by my co-host today. Matt has some ice and snow problems. He's in Michigan. So unlike Texas he's used to it, but you know, definitely has his own set of cold weather issues today.

 

But today I'm joined by a fantastic guest. Nick Carillo is a construction industry and nonprofit trade association professional. You guys heard them on the round table, but in case you didn't, you can go back and listen to that episode. But Nick's diverse experience in the industry includes going on job sites, working on job sites from selling, building materials and specialty products to job site evaluations and trainings for contractors and technical being a technical sales rep.

 

Currently he is the VP. At Western wall and ceiling contractors association Nick, welcome to the show,

 

Dylan. Thanks for having me appreciate it.

 

So obviously you've done basically everything in construction,

 

Not even close, man, not even close. Thanks for the nod there, but no, I barely scratched the surface as with many of us.

 

Right. We maybe dipped our toe into a good chunk of, of pieces, but bring it back a little bit. And what, and how did you get your start in the construction industry?

 

Sure. Yeah, I'd love to tell the story a little bit. I'll try and make it short and sweet because my construction tenure has been my entire life actually.

 

I like to say I'm a second generation blue collar professional. My father was in the industry as well. Our Carillo  So I was on job sites, following him around. He was a plaster by trade. I was jumping in sand piles, jumping off scaffold when I was young, going to job sites, you know, on the weekends when I was old enough to put your wheelbarrow, that was my job.

 

And I got paid in a Frosties from Wendy's no money when I was little. So I got a sense of walking around a job site. What's the culture, what's it like? And then I started working for my own, my own. It was actually on my birthday that I went full-time I was working summers and went full time right before college.

 

Started working as a plaster. And then I ended up becoming kind of the traveling foreman. So anything that was out of town, I jumped on and then it became like, he's got no kids. He's got no wife sent him on the road, pills start running the jobs. So that's what I did for a while. And that was based out of Albuquerque.

 

New Mexico got to do some really fun projects there. And then in our scope, I did scaffold up to scaffold down is how I describe it. So from, from dirt to finished product, I was kind of there through the whole process. Then I kind of said, you know, I'm sick of breaking down my body. What if I use my mind?

 

So I started sending applications out and I was afforded an opportunity to go to California. And in California, I worked for a material supplier called Cal ply. At the time we ultimately got bought out by L and w supply and they had a technical department. And so my duties were to go to job sites and kind of do evaluations.

 

I would go to architecture offices and give box lunch presentations on specific products. And my scope was wall and ceiling products or plaster hand applied plaster products and a few other specialty products that led me to his funny. I always tell the story. So I was 21 when I went to California and no friends, no family over there.

 

I was chasing a career. And I was told, legitimately told I've been doing this longer than you've been alive. Why should I listen to you? And so that was kind of like the RA, you know, you, you work a little bit, you figure out how to have the conversation and kind of present yourself in a manner that's respected.

 

And then that afforded me an opportunity to take that role to Arizona. And there I met the CEO of FCA international, and I was the national, the vice president of international contractor association there. We had about five major crafts that we worked with and we were a contractor association.

 

And then since then it has evolved and came over to the local WW. That's where I'm at now. So it's a. It's I dunno, it's like condensed career growth. I did a lot in a, what would seem like a short amount of time, but it was it was incredible, but the path has been fun. That's it? That's it Jordan's week.

 

I think that's something that, you know, can often get overlooked in really any field, but especially in construction, that if you. If you get in the right role in the right seat and you really dive all into it, right? You put a lot of time and effort. You read up on trade journals, do all that. You know, the, the YouTube thing, the diving into industry publications, all that kind of stuff.

 

You can really learn a lot in a short period of time. And I think that gets I want to say a bad rap, but you know, kind of looked down upon right from all these guys that are, have been in the industry for, for a long period of time. But maybe their growth stalled after year five, right. Or your 10 they haven't really come across anything new.

 

So it's, it's understanding that you can really learn and grow within any industry but especially construction and do it in a fairly short timeframe again, in the right role where you see, see a lot, you're exposed to a lot. And then can dive in kind of reiterate that process. Okay.

 

That's yeah.

 

So what it like to kind of go on that. So construction, right. We're really good at telling each other how awesome instruction is way we'll tell our peers how good we are, but our, all of our peers are in the construction industry and the message to the public. I think just, we got to work harder telling the public that I know of stories where people are coming out and they go as an apprentice on a job site, but then become a VDC BIM model, you know, professional and this agency, and, or maybe there was a computer gaming expert who came into the construction industry and is writing code for the construction industry.

 

These stories, we all know them in our world, but the public doesn't and it's, we got to figure out a way to get the students to know. Don't believe it to be a ladder where it's just so linear. If the lattice you can go anywhere and do anything. And if you've like, you know, swinging a hammer or pulling wire all day, that's fun because at the end of the day, you're building your city.

 

But if you want to go further and push and challenge the industry and its entirety, that could be done too. And yeah, man, you're touching on something. That's like a huge passion point for me because we got to figure out how to break out of our echo chamber and kind of talk to the, to the industry.

 

Like I use big tech as an example, everyone knows you can get a hundred thousand dollar job at Google or at Facebook, it's kind of the known, but they don't know that that's also possible in construction and like

 

easily possible,

 

easily, easily possible. Yeah. Yeah.

 

And that's, I mean, from tradesmen right there, there's plenty of trans women out there that are making.

 

You know, over well over six figures being a, you know, master electrician, right. Being a journeyman plumber, you know, would you name it up and down the chain? There are plenty of people making easily six figures as a, as a trade. And then, so you touched on gaming and really coming into the, the VDC side of things.

 

So for everybody out there, VDCs virtual design and construction, and there have been plenty of examples of firms, whether that's, I think Hensel Phelps has it Gabane there's a bunch of bigger. Construction firms that have hired people that were either went to school for gaming in particular game design.

 

And then what that amounts to is you can now take a revenue model, a BIM model flip it through a gaming engine, like unity, unreal, whatever and then export that either to a single screen walkthrough. So now people are walking through construction sites or buildings really with an X-Box controller or they're doing it through like the Oculus rift.

 

The reason. I know I did a lot of this in like 13, 14 when the rift was like brand new. So I was, did this, like what seems like forever ago, but and at that time, even in, I think, 15 or 16 like Gill, bane had a full department for it where you could walk around like an Orr. They, they put it on like a surgeon's head the Oculus rift, and then they walked through the, or, you know, is everything in the right place for the table or the lights in the right place.

 

And for surgeon that was like mind blown, they usually had no say in that process, it was usually the head nurses that, that did everything for operating rooms. But now you can take, you know, your honorary surgeons and put them into, to a headset and get feedback before it's ever built right before it's super expensive to make changes.

 

You could do that super early in the process.

 

And, and when you talk to these guys and gals that come from the gaming industry, what was being asked in that time was like, Oh yeah, that's easy. Oh yeah. We can do that. Like, no problem. And we're over here, like square peg not fit. Right. So it's just bridging that has just skyrocketed us, I think, into just advancement and an ability to recruit beyond what we're doing.

 

So, yeah. That's, that's awesome. You were diving so deep into that. It was fast. I was blown away at I was introduced to tilt brush on Oculus, or it wasn't Oculus. I think it was ductless, but I was shown tilt brush before it went public. And what like blew my mind is you, you can paint in the, in the air.

 

Right. And then it stays there. To like a one millimeter accuracy and knowing that we can create something in a digital environment that stays to spend it when looking at it virtually, like, what this can do for construction is like unreal. You can basically have your entire project cast onto the land, the site and build to the project.

 

I mean, that's, that's not farfetched.

 

No. And, and the big thing that we talk about and like a lot of this is so like hollow lens is out, which I think is a much better solution than like Oculus is. So HoloLens is the thing for Microsoft where it's really augmented reality, not virtual reality. So you're seeing the real world or the virtual world.

 

So superimposed upon the real world. So now you can walk around the job site, you can now see like where all the duct work should be. Does it match, you know, progress, all that kind of good stuff.

 

One, two, one, two. That's the biggest thing.

 

Yeah. Which is it's huge to end to get scale. Right. As it's superimposed is like crazy.

 

Awesome. And to have it with that accuracy. But the, the thing that we always touch on to here for a technology, like an, I built software, I build revenue, add-ons all that kind of stuff, but it's to know that, like not all technology is going to solve all your problems. It's making sure that you have the right system, the right peg for each technology to fit in and know that over time it might change.

 

Right. You might have evolved from the Oculus to like just using that gaming engine to walk through a building via zoom, right. Or through the computer. And it's still virtual. You're just not putting a headset on. Right. It gives you a different feel of, of the space and everything like that. And then, you know, maybe the whole lens is a different solution.

 

But knowing that technology is your friend, but knowing where to apply it is also important to add into the conversation.

 

And that's a, that's a tough, that's a tough thing for the tech companies. I think when you come into the construction world is honestly, they don't really have the time to try and figure that out.

 

And then if, okay, you're a tech company say, okay, I'll solve that. Well, you have, let's just use round numbers for conversation's sake, a hundred contractors in a market. That's a hundred unique business practices and a hundred unique procurement you know, processes. There is not like a code that you can write that solves process and construction.

 

And so everything is in assembly. It's not a, you know I don't what the word I'm looking for is a kid it's not like a one answer. You got to assemble parts to build what you're living for.

 

Yeah, absolutely. I think ultimately that's why innovation has to come from within the industry. Not, it's not going to come from outside the industry cause frankly, Silicon Valley can't they don't understand, nor they have the temperament to deal with construction.

 

Yeah. And construction has a huge lead time before they're willing to listen to you and this. So there's not a specific person I'm calling out. It's just kind of the culture of the industry. You know, you, when you go into the field, you've, you gotta earn your keep. You gotta, you know, you got to clean up after hours.

 

You've got to learn how to do all the masking. Maybe you're doing some crowd work, then you learn how to do the craft, or you go through apprenticeship and then you become a journeyman and you're let in. And so there's a lead time to get to the responsibility and decision-making, and that's because that responsibility decision-making is massive.

 

You look at a project manager or an estimate or somebody, they might have a hundred million dollars of revenue they're responsible for annually. And they came up as an apprenticeship to journeyman Mark Breslin talks about this a lot. And so we, you can't just kind of come in and assume everything's going to be accepted.

 

Yeah, you're right. You can't come in and just be like, Hey guys, I have this new widget. It's perfect. Cause I promise you; it will get like ridiculed riddled with bullet holes of all the time, things that are going to be wrong with it. And then and then through time though, if you come in and you kind of have a conversation, that's what I'm, that's what I'm finding.

 

So I'm working on an innovation committee through swag. It's portable. It's going to contractors association. They're a national innovation committee, similar to as well. Try to connect contractors in the wallet, sealing industry, especially the subcontractors for this exact reason. We're, we're trying to say, Hey, tech industry, we welcome the innovation.

 

We want the innovation, but we want to be allowable, stay in what we actually need. Don't kind of just try to sell us something and it's proving successful. It's I think it's been helpful. I think the tool manufacturers are looking forward to it. We've had a couple of conversations where the manufacturer is like, Oh, we didn't even know you guys wanted this.

 

We have, we have an old file cabinet full of all of this stuff we have. We're ready. You really want this? We got it. Now let's say, yeah, let's go for it. And we'll find you some contractors we'll pair you up and let's, let's figure out a solution that's marketable. And yeah, it's, it's interesting trying to enter the construction industry.

 

It takes, we talk our own language. We, we do things different and that's not a bad thing. It's just, it just is.

 

Yeah. I mean, so a few important things that you hit on, right. In construction, you're responsible for very large dollar figures, right? Seven, eight, seven is like, you're not really in charge of anything.

 

You know, you've got a mid-tier responsibility. Nine figures is really okay. You're, you're in a decently sized firm and you're dealing with, you know, one to, well, it depends on where you are in the process. Right? So on the design side, you could be doing. 10 projects a year, one a month, and pounding through that much as a design engineer and PE you know, over department or whatever, or you could be you know, a site superintendent and you're doing, you know, one project every 18 months.

 

Right. And going across those few. So it's scale is you're definitely not going to get this type of scale in any other industry or for revenue that you're responsible for what, you know, a product you're responsible for in terms of dollar values. The other thing to, to hit on is that there are long lead times, right?

 

So for those companies, right, if you're on a construction project and said, okay, let's take a normal $20 million building, right. At a hundred thousand square feet, you're looking at a. 16 to 18 month build time. Am I get done? 12 probably is going to get done finished really in 20 realistic, you know, timelines, but you're still looking at over a year projects, right year and a half to get this building done a hundred thousand square feet, $20 million project, and like things take time.

 

And that's it's, you're not going to speed it up dramatically. Right. You're going to shave a few months here or there, which is it's 10%, right? If you talk 18 months and new shaped to off, right. That's it's 10%, but still in all reality. Like, okay. You still had to wait a year to do that next project to try that next thing for the next phase in a project and that's

 

million percent.

 

Yeah. A hundred percent. Yeah. It's not going to be like, Oh, thanks through this. I will, I will adopt this tomorrow and spend $100,000 on this product and overhaul my business. Yeah. There is such a lag that's tough. And I think we all know it and we see it, but it's not often spoken out loud. You look at the specialty stuff.

 

So the general contractor might be a different environment or where I'm working as a specialty subcontractor. I I'm an imaginary contractor and I'm bidding projects and I need to be competitive. So I know I have three or four people that are nipping at my heels to try and capture this project as well.

 

And I know that I need to be more productive and there are things that can help me be more productive, but I have a known. Solution right now. And that's the business that I've been operating in and I know how to make that better. And so I, I utilize that. And so as a business owner, or maybe it's somebody else in the organization it's difficult is automatically say, yeah, let's do it.

 

Let's try this thing because I have a margin that I've never been comfortable with on this project, but you know what, let's go for it. And I think one of the, I mean, I guess to speak to that, to the tech world a little bit, understand that when you're coming in and talking to these organizations, that is, that is one of the biggest concerns because you look at some of those, they're the specialty subcontractor there.

 

They have huge liability, huge, and they got to figure out how to put something in and risk mitigation is very important to them. That doesn't mean they're not willing to try it. And that doesn't mean because of product costs, X amount of dollars. They won't use it. They just have to understand what what's, what's the value.

 

And help me roll this out comfortably. Don't just try to tell it to me and then expect me to use it. And there are some organizations that have done a phenomenal job of coating, adopted phenomenal. So I don't want to make it seem like then people don't do that. There's, there's great companies that are doing.

 

Yeah. And for everybody watching live on LinkedIn or Facebook, you can go ahead and drop any comments, questions that you have, and we'll do our best to get to them. But yeah. Going back a little bit. So in there you'd mentioned so risk mitigation is huge, which the business thing that I always like to bring up, which for.

 

Some listeners, if you're not in a project management, if you're not in the accounting department, responsible for a lot of this is cashflow, especially when you talk subcontractors, right? They're not getting paid for 60, 90 days on a given project. So, and the other thing is with a lot of innovation, you're typically going to be slower at first until you get the hang of whatever that thing that's supposed to speed up really does.

 

So in this, you might lose a little bit upfront, which again, if your cashflow is that tight, if your margins are that thin, which a lot of contractors it is, right, they're operating on a 5% or less margin. So then, you know, to lose a little bit, to lose a percent or two on a project, that's huge. So it's to understand, you know, what.

 

Everybody's going through for implementation and adoption of technology. Not that it won't happen, you just have to have the right project, the right margins. And it might take a year or three to

 

get there, but don't stop calling the contractors to tell you. Yeah, I see the value. That's a huge indicator that yeah, they understand it.

 

It's just not the right time because they're always going to put their money at the most valuable asset, the people. So everything that Wells will go first because you can still be a contractor with people, but you can't be a contractor with no people and machine. There is a pursuit to do that. I'm sure there are people trying to be a machine only construction business, but people matter, the people matter.

 

The most that's relationships are everything,

 

especially in construction,

 

especially. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah.

 

There's so much done on it on a handshake. And this is, this is the other thing too. So, I mean, I grew up on a farm. I grew up in rural communities where, what you said mattered, right. There was no getting by on the internet.

 

Right. I'm at that age to where, you know, I grew up without the internet for most of my life. But what you said mattered, what you did mattered. And you know, you suffered some consequences if you didn't do that. But through that in construction, especially in this still holds, and this is how most people are brought up, you do what you say you're going to do.

 

Right. And that, that goes a long way. If you, they can't trust you, that creates safety issues. There's just a lot of problems that go along with that. So for anybody, I don't, you know, young, old, but I mean, especially younger people coming up in construction, you need to do what you say. You're going to do, be a person of your word.

 

It as much as you may or may not like it, it is an old boys club, meaning that you need to earn your stripes for you to have respect on the job site. It means taking some licks, given as good as you get, probably at some point your, your career, but honesty and integrity goes a long way and people will respect you for it, but it will take time.

 

Yeah. Talking about the respect. So you'll never hear that the, well you'll never get the truth on how successful they are, and you'll never get the truth on how bad it's going. And so it's not my I'm not going to share kind of specific stories, but. We got to look at and respect that some of these generations, I don't know the right word, man, veterans old timers, you know, people who've seen stuff.

 

Yeah. The ones that have paved the way for us to have this opportunity, they went through hell and there were times when business owners were paying payroll out of their own bank account and they would do, they would, you know, eat beans and toast so that they made sure that the men and women in their business kept working.

 

And they I'm sure if you ask the question, you'll hear. Yeah. I remember XYZ years. It was really, really tight and we were worried we weren't gonna make it, but we did. And, and through that trial and tribulation, they knew how to sustain. Further, they had the high highs of the big success, but it wasn't without the low lows.

 

And so when you talk about young people listening, if you know, if you catch this on a recording or read, you're look, you're watching now ask those people. That's an insane brain trust. That's still in this industry right now. I think it might be dying out, but there was a time we had five generations in our industry kind of working simultaneously.

 

Cause you had a lot of people still holding on as business owners, the grandparents of multiple generations or some people sitting in advisory roles. And then you got your gen Z and that brain trust is going to go away. They're going to retire. They're going to go and spend their time outside of the industry.

 

And so sit down, don't never be shy asking the question. That's one thing that's helped me a lot is I'm not scared to ask stupid, stupid questions. I, because it helps me and you know, I'm better for it. And sometimes they are really dumb, you know, I'm sure there was a point when I had to ask what Ben was.

 

And how come we don't see them modeling. Right. You know,

 

and through that too, you know, you might get a smart comment, you know, upfront on those questions, but more than likely 99% of the time, they're, they're going to give you an answer. Right. They'll tell a story, and they love telling stories. You just have to ask.

 

Yeah. Yeah, yeah. Yeah. I like to joke, man. If they're not making fun of you, they might not like you, they're not like talking shit or razzing you a little bit. They just might not like you, so being poked out a little bit is it's good. It's a good thing. It was world.

 

And don't take it personally.

 

Don't take it personally.

 

No, absolutely not. It takes a long time to get there though. It takes off. It took me a long time. Yeah.

 

So it talks about coming up kind of in construction. It's going to take some time. But maybe what's the story on the other side, right? So this is, we've talked a little bit about the hardship, but what's, what's some of the beauty that you've seen in construction.

 

Well, I mean, you can go emotional and just, it just being able to provide for a family. I once heard someone say success is knowing what you want, getting what you wanted and then being happy with what you got. That's pretty profound and various succinct. There's a lot of success in construction I've seen and been part of the development of national or global conferences where they talk specifically about a building material.

 

This one was glass, and it's so fascinating to watch the academic community come together with the private industry where the private industry is. You know, we spend millions of dollars on research. That's proprietary. We don't want to share it. And you've got the academic industry. Who's saying, look, we're here.

 

We're an open book. This is all the research we've done is to the white papers. And then watching everybody converged together on a global landscape, here's what we're doing in Europe. Here's what we're doing in the U S here's what's stopping us and letting it regrets. That was absolutely incredible to be.

 

And then I love. I am. I just, I'm fascinated. I look at stadiums and I think about how big acumen is when you look at the stadium, this is the thing I love the most about construction. It just blows me away that we tiny humans, six foot tall and standing in the middle of those stadiums. You have suspension over that.

 

And we have figured out a way to build a machine, to build a machine, to build a structure, to build something so massive as tiny little human beings. And it just, it it's cool. It's really, really cool. You stand at the top of the biggest towers. You look at radio towers, you look at dams, we've done that.

 

We do that. Then everything that we walk on, we, we get our water from, we take our children to get care for. We humans have built all of that construction is central. It's a key word right now, right? Like, and construction is essential, but imagine construction stops abruptly. All aspects. Where does, where do we go?

 

We stay exactly where we are for a very long time. No more new stadiums, no more new hospitals, things become overcrowded. We're living in the same kind of environment, construction matters. And yeah, that's probably the coolest part for me. VR AR man, I can go all day because construction is, is beads. It's my blood.

 

Yeah. AR and VR is fascinating. Absolutely fascinating to me, AR is probably the coolest that I'm seeing come around. The idea of augmented reality, having basically blueprints suspended midair, and I could walk around any of them where the job site and that item stays in the same spot, just in a, just in a simple.

 

The technology on that is unreal. I'll never understand the code that is required to write something like that, to where it stays in the exact same deal location, but it's, I trust it and it's insanely valuable. I see that being really cool. It's cool robots. Yeah, constructions is bad ass man products, products that look like other products lightweight products, quick construction.

 

Yeah, that's cool. I can, I can go deep on any of those.

 

There's a lot of fodder in there. I guess one of the things to remember and think about to hit on some of the academic pieces that you, you talked about, right. Just like glass in particular like Syncobane has a division that does electronically tinted glass to where you can, you know, it'll based on like how bright it is outside or a time of day schedule it'll dim or dark a glass and provide shading so that you, you don't actually have to have shades or blinds on it.

 

It's like Sage glasses, what's called super awesome. I've done a couple of installations with it, but things like that, right? Just you take one material, glass, and windows, and like there's an extensive array of things that you can talk about in glass. Right? How many panes does it have? What type of gases on the inside can we, you know, tend to, can we do that all electronically?

 

How cool is that to take one product and then go super deep on it, just within the building industry. I mean, walls and ceilings, like that's another, you know, very extensive industry and just materials alone.

 

Just, yeah, I get Eve's product ifs is the experience leading finished systems. You can make that look like metal, wood, stucco, smooth painted, or you look at kind of acoustical controls inside of ceilings.

 

What those can look like suspension, suspended things, plaster applied things. Yeah. It's cool.

 

Which just shows like the kind of the depth of the industry when we talk construction, especially commercial construction, right? Well, you have all these different types of operating environments from an operating room to an office, right.

 

And everything in between that you have in there, you have commercial kitchens, you have just stadiums, right? Like all these different environments that people live, work, operate in you know, in a not COVID world, but you have all these, all these places, all these environments that people are in that are completely different from each other.

 

And there is a real depth and breadth of. Knowledge experience things that you can do within the industry. So like, don't, don't think just digging ditches or putting up walls for any of that. Like, this is, it's a big broad, I mean, it's a trillion plus dollar industry in the U S alone, commercial alone is 800 million or 800 billion a year in the U S so then you start adding in like highways, bridges, and infrastructure.

 

Yeah. All the horizontal construction you know, it just goes up from there. So to like traction is a very big place just in the U S alone, let alone the rest of the world.

 

Hmm.

 

But I guess this, so there's a lot of beauty in construction. There's a lot of places people can go, but I want to hear on kind of what the.

 

Wall and ceiling. And from an association standpoint, you guys are really focused on that. You're seeing across the industry, obviously from a pretty high vantage point to have a bird's eye view of the industry. You're not operating just in one company, but kind of seeing how everybody operates. So from that perspective, what are you guys seeing and really looking forward to as the, as we move forward as an industry,

 

Yeah.

 

So did I describe what we are as an association? It might just make mention yeah. 35 minutes. And, ah, so what we are as an association is we are a collective group of specialty subcontractors, the wall and ceiling industry in the Southwest of the United States. And the common theme of all of our members is that they all employ a union workforce.

 

So there's signatory contractors. So we're that association or that Meeting house for all of those contractors to find value from their associations, negotiate with labor unions, to help with training and education. Whatever it is that community's looking for. So from that, we, we get a good sense of, Oh, I where's the industry tracking, what is the labor industry looking at the trade unions?

 

What are they seeing? What are they planning through or through curriculum? What are we seeing? And then that gives us an opportunity to kind of come together and say, all right, let's, let's work cooperatively to try and create education for these things that we're seeing. So right now, it's we had prefabrication.

 

What started as panelization it's been around for forever, but it's hot. It's a hot word. Everybody's starting a pre-fab company. Everybody's starting a manufacturing company, you know, Kotara paved the way, but it's been around for a long time. So. That's a big one. That's still going to be a big one and it's kind of, we're, we're evolving almost from construction to assembly.

 

What are we doing to, to have a controlled environment, to better give a finished product? And that might be somebody starting their own break-off and they're doing a prefabrication warehouse and they're doing everything. It might be field application. It might be sourcing from an existing pre-fab organization.

 

So defining how that works who represents what is the best thing to do? And then further designing for prefabrication. A lot of the contractors are still getting project scopes and saying, can you figure out how to do this prefab? And so the contract is the specialty subcontractors going?

 

Yes, yes I can. And then they're tasking themselves with a huge burden of work. So can we kind of help. The design process in, in having that in mind. And that's not to say it doesn't exist, but how do we, how do we streamline it? So it happens more frequently augmentation of the human. So that's a simple way to say things that make the body movies here.

 

You got exoskeletons or different tools that are easier to hold. Scaffold, maybe that puts you in a better reach, moving platforms. So anything that's going to protect the individual and help them come home safely. And then also not injure themselves repetitively over time. That's a big one. So a lot of, a lot of the tool manufacturers are, are kind of asking the question.

 

What do you guys care about the most? And I, I got to give them credit. I used to think they. They would just design their own new tools and say, Hey everybody, we've solved it all. They really do. They reach out and say, what's hurting. How can we help eliminate that pain? You know, shoulders and the plastering industry, whatever it might be.

 

So that that's some of it augmented reality is another one that's coming out. That seems to be catching a lot of momentum. James said it on our round table, BIM we might be just like, we use 10% of our brains. We might be using 10% of the capacity of BIM in our industry and just, just unearthing the value BIM provides and diving deeper into that to, for it to be even more of an asset.

 

So it helps everybody, even somebody who's doing, I work on, you know, multilevel construction sites build outs there there's value there. So those are some of the, some of the big things we're seeing safety monitoring. How can we watch and use kind of predictive. Models to help with safety computational design has always been teased.

 

What is that going to, what impact is that going to have on a specialty subcontractor? I like to give the Moneyball example, and I think there's a few of us around this industry who use it. We've done a lot of guessing. So how can we take data and be more sure of our decisions? How can we understand? Hey, your production rate on this element is X on these previous jobs of the same caliber you performed this way.

 

Use that information to create a more competitive bid, hopefully increase some profit margins, send people home safer, maybe work them less. You get eight hours work done in six. All right. Are those things possible? If we start quantifying yeah. Those things are possible. There's a lot of startups that are, that are saying.

 

Yeah, I think we can quantify some of those things. That's some of the stuff we're seeing, it's a big list.

You said, what am I  no, I love it. I love it. I love it. One of the things that I want to really, so I think the data thing in quantifying it is ultimately it's pretty straightforward. You know, go out there with a stopwatch, right?

 

Feed that back into an Excel sheet. You know, it can be that basic. And then update your average time across all projects, all people so that you have a good baseline to work from, right. That it's a moving average. That is maybe your, your workforce gets better. Right? The number improves if things maybe don't get better that.

 

You know, you can adjust accordingly and you're not getting hosed on the next project. But to try to keep a running, running piece of that. And frankly, an average in Excel is it's about as basic as it gets, but as useful as it can be moving forward. Yep. So I think that that data piece is, is awesome.

 

To hear it also hammered on that last week with her doing so much.

 

Yeah. I mean, from Nico's perspective, I mean, they're doing, you know, similar thing, right. Looking at data, trying to make those decisions obviously on the electrician side of things, but you know, it's very similar for ceiling and wall to.

 

You know, Hey, you've got, you've got a labor rate for doing something and be able to put that back through your system for the next this project can be super beneficial, right? If, if rates go up or down a dollar, that that means quite a bit, you know, in a big job. Yep. The other thing that I, I do want to hit on, so this gets hammered a lot is so for years I've been on the design side, right?

 

I'm a professional electrical engineer, stamped and sealed and couple million square feet. And especially now in this world of BIM and pre-fab and taking a BIM model, we want contractors to use it is a, and now I'm on like a. Side table. I'm not, not necessarily designing, but you know, being an assist to the industry really as a whole.

 

And through that, I've had a lot of conversations with contractors and designers, like in, you know, not using the model appropriately. So often I get from, especially on the contractor side that we get a model, we basically just throw it right in the trash and start over. So that's the

 

way it should have gone.

 

This is the way they should have done it. Yeah. Okay. Or,

 

you know, these, this family, this content, this is garbage. We can't use any of it. Which. I see both sides of it, right? From a, an engineering perspective and really the design team as a whole, because this goes for everybody. So, I mean, while I'm stealing, you know, case architects models, the, the MEP subs can't use the design model, right?

 

The design model just gets thrown away for a couple of reasons. One, the design team is getting paid for design and ultimately still a two D set of prints. Right. They're getting pay for PDFs to go through planning to go through permitting and design approval. Right. Plus most jobs are still a design bid build.

 

So they're going for again, Two dimensional plans that everybody can look at, they get the same thing off of it. This is what the contracts get held to. And then plus the 2000 page spec book that gets handed over at the beginning of every, every job. So I can, I can see the design side. They're like, we don't get paid for all this.

 

And then on the contractor side, it's like, okay, we're getting paid, but this is a huge pain in our ass to deal with. And you know, this whole BIM thing supposed to be easier. So there seems to be a break and I think contracts ended up being the place to solve this. But the people that write the contracts, don't understand these little nuances, and shifts to where things just don't align from BIM.

 

I mean, that's what I've, I've seen other than like a contract solution and really, you know, either design firms getting paid more for it, or you bring in design assists, but again, everybody has their own process to work through. I don't have a solution for them for this one, other than I know it's a huge problem for, for the industry.

 

So I just heard about somebody and shame on me and I think what I'll, I'll follow up on this LinkedIn post when I find out who it was. But I know somebody is tackling that exact issue. I remember talking to, so two things, the building, the specs is what I'm focused on right now. I saw somebody that said it so perfectly.

 

I build buildings with words is how they described the specs. That's pretty profound. It's like, yeah, that's. That is like basically where everything kind of fall on is the words of the specs to determine how to build a 3d building. And then another, I gave a CSI presentation in some of the spec writers were like, we would love more than anything to be invited to job sites because we don't know what it looks like.

 

We don't know how things go together and we need that help. We have, we're expected to know the entire construction process from dirt to sky and with our words. And that's why you see a lot of this copy pasta kind of spec writing is because of that reason. And so one thing, one thing we could do immediately is reach over and say, Hey, we'd love to invite you out.

 

And you know, the, the first Tuesday of every month, spec riders, it's six, six spots. Come check out this job site. We'll show you these three crafts. You can't be here more than an hour. Yeah, cause you got to have some limitation, but just, just to, just to give a sense of it. There's efforts happening to of bootcamps for architects, architects, come in, cut some glass do some drywall finishing.

 

That's been super helpful, but one suite of answers, I know there's a lot of effort on it, but I don't ha I don't know that there's an immediate solution, but just take the, take the, the shop drawing, answer, you, you send the model and then it goes to the subs and then they create their own set of shop drawings.

 

And then it goes to the field. And then the guys in the field say, well, that's not what's here. So we're going to, it actually has to be done this way. And then all of that. So that information comes all the way from design all the way down to the person, building the wall, and then the person building the wall.

 

Does it a little bit different. And then that has to go all the way back for approval. That's a lot of gas. That's a lot of gas to try and keep things flowing, and there's a lot of lag. You know what one model, that's a really good idea. As one model.

 

And I think, I mean, Katerra tried to, obviously you're not that successful, but Katerra tried to do everything, and you know, it's a good intent, good way to go about it.

 

There is a lot of money in blue, a lot of money. You know, cause it was constructionists is not easy. Right. It's a lot of bottom moving parts, a lot of supply chain logistics manufacturing, all rolled up into one big building. And it's, it can be a beautiful thing when, you know, prefab jobs go right where you see hotels, you know, getting craned in all the room, pods, everything said like, that's, that's beautiful.

 

But how often that happens you know, you, you see that the 10 buildings that get built a year in the world.

 

Yeah. Try that in New York city, when your trucks are only allowed in, in a 45 minute window, two days a week, Right because you can't shut down the street to pick those pods up. I mean, you know, or any, or any hiccup at all.

 

Yeah. That's tough. As we, we built a national certification. I was part of the committee that kind of got it going. And then it's since got a life of its own. But when we were kind of strategizing about the certification, even I was like, well, what are the categories? Well, let's do X or Y you know, storefront or multistory.

 

And every time we'd ask, well, what's the safety requirements. Well, it depends on the job. What are the procurement request? Depends on the job. What, what is the common practice of QC depends on the job. And it's like, how can we, how can we create a standardization if every job is different and ultimately that you kind of figure out where the overarching kind of consistencies are, but yeah, it's, it's not bad.

 

That's fun. I love it. I love I love being challenged. I love the, I love that no day is the same in construction and that's, to me, that's fun. I love that. I always see me at a desk.

 

Yeah. Yeah. You'll always have a different problem to solve a different whether that, and this is the other thing that I think it's a really often is the people aspect, right?

 

The, the ability to communicate, I mean, we hit on it earlier, right? Your word is your bond. But the ability to communicate on a job site, those soft skills go a long way. Right? You can say something and that come across really badly for everybody, or can get your point across that, Hey, this needs to be done this way.

 

You know, and do that in a nice, nice manner or make everybody mad at you. But either way something, you know, it still needs to get done. Right. It needs to be built correctly. And sometimes that might mean tearing a wall down, but you've got to go through and do that. You were right. Yeah. Do it right.

 

No shortcuts. There's no shortcuts. You said it earlier, everything that this industry does ultimately is for people and we work in the offices we are cared for, or our cancer is treated in the hospitals. Our children are taught in the schools. I, to me, that seems like one of the most important things ever.

 

We don't, don't shortcut that, you know, one, one wrong application sends water. You know, you can just, you can just start thinking of all the horror stories, but you, you said kind of communication and soft skills. So let's, let's dive in on that a little bit and I'll share some of the things I learned the hard way.

 

Right? Okay. No, our generation millennial, I don't want to assume your age, but my generation of millennial, right? We are text savvy emailing email. And so we'll see an email and we'll let it stew cool. We'll chill for a day or two, you know, we'll get back to it cause we don't perceive it as important, but the, the older generations are going to see that communication as critical and they're expecting a response.

 

That's why they communicate it to you. So one tip hot tips. I'm just coming up with these right now off the fly is respond to your emails in a timely manner. I know there's always these, like do it in a block, do it in the same block. That's fine. But always, always be consistent if that's what you've decided and not drop everything and answer right away, but respond in a timely manner.

 

Same day. Be a good practice.

 

That's the one. Time. So we've hit on this in a few episodes. So, but I, I do want to, because this is important, this is hugely important, especially in construction, because more often than not, things are labeled urgent. Like I need this, and I need it right now. That is not always the case.

 

So you end up in this, you know, see, and respond type of scenario where you probably in, I would say like a large majority, 80, 90% of all instances, you probably need to take an hour to figure out how you're going to respond.

 

That's fair. Yeah.

 

That's good for like a couple of reasons. So one is okay, like you have an urgent field problem.

 

You can respond immediately to say, Hey, I received it. Let me look into this. I'll get back to you.

 

That's it.

 

Right? Like I hear you. We're looking into this. It might take a while, right? It could take it. This is an hour solution. This is a two hour solution. This is, this is going to take me a few days. Right?

 

That's but you kind of just rolled on like how to answer it. But I think it merits saying it manage the expectation of response. Say, Hey, I hear you. I expect to respond to you again in X time, because then it's just, it just cools the, it just cools the thing. Yeah. I had to expand on that because it's so important.

 

Yeah, no, this is, this is a super nuance topic because the other thing, so that's an immediate response, but that's it right? You don't say anything else. So a lot of this, and this is the stuff that, unless some old timer sits down with you and tells you is you don't put anything in writing, unless you mean it.

 

Yeah. Yeah. Do not put anything in writing unless you mean it. Right. Do not record a meeting unless you mean it. Do not say anything. So a phone call is different. Onsite is different. If it's in meeting minutes, if it's in any written form of communication that will come back to bite you at some point in the future, it's forever.

 

Yeah. It doesn't go away. That's also including texts. That's including email, anything written Slack teams, you name it. Like don't write it. If you don't mean it, especially in construction, you will get sued at some point in all that is now that's.

 

It just sucks that it's it, you know, cause know the old, the old handshake years, they weren't that nervous.

 

It was just, yeah, I respect you and I understand and let's go for it. And it sucks that we're like he said that he sent that, get the screenshot of the app. You're done, dude. You're done. You're done. I'm still taking you down. It's like, man, that's sucks. It's important. What you're saying is important.

 

It just.

 

Yeah, but this is also why you build rapport with people. You have a good relationship, and you pick up the phone, you pick up the phone, you have a conversation with them. One it's not recorded. Two, you can get like the tonality, the inflection. They're like, yeah, man, I know this sucks, but like, this is the way we have to do it.

 

And then you can follow it up with an email. But have those conversations, build rapport, build trust with people. And then over the course of a job, right? When Mark might start as small flavors or tit for tat like, Hey, you do this for me. I do this for you. It becomes, you know, like, Hey, no, that w we get this taken care of, right.

 

Or go ahead and do that, whatever, you know, and again, I'm coming from the design side where, like I had a lot of pole on a project to where you can build really good rapport with the electrician and the electrical team or whoever your discipline is. Right. So for me, it was the electrical superintendent.

 

But like, Hey man. Yeah, no, just go ahead and do that. I'll Mark it on my side or whatever, we'll deal with change orders or whatever later, I'm not worried about it. I'll sign off like, you know, but by the end of a project, that's how we dealt with a lot of things. Cause we had trust in each other to do the right thing.

 

But it doesn't start that way, but a lot of it was built, you know, phone calls showing up, walking the site, all that kind of stuff. So I it's a nuance in like yes, respond to your emails, but, and you know, yeah, I

 

know it's the, if this, then this kind of thing, and we understand that, but don't let it bake on unresponded to, and then if somebody is another like point to, if someone says, Hey, call Tiffany, Hey, call James, but actually call them.

 

Don't send an email. I sent an email. They didn't reply. It's like, dude, you were told to call them. That's how the relationship is built. So that one is very self-explanatory. If someone says, Hey, give someone a call, actually call them. And then the other one that I liked just grind on is show up early, stay late as it's still a thing.

 

You know what, if you have a 10:00 AM meeting, you're in the parking lot at nine 50 with no question like don't, there is no on time is late and that's not a kind of that’s just it's you gotta be there. You don't want to be the one people are waiting for in a room. It's a very uncomfortable feeling.

 

I've only done that once and it sucks.

 

The other, the other thing too, that is so no matter what side of the table you're on is that's how you're going to win the next job. The next job will come either. I've had this happen on, I dunno how many occasions, but go into a room, right? I'm there early, you know, talk to the owner, you know, or the owner's rep talk to the cm, you know, whatever, just some nice casual, whatever they mentioned, Hey stick around after, after we, you know, go off the site together or whatever, and Hey, by the way, this project's coming up and I've had that both from a cm, a contractor owner, right.

 

All through the chain by you showed up, Hey, can we walk after? Yeah, no problem. Yep. Right. And you push whatever you have to, and you make that happen,

 

then you, and that's not even, let's say you're in the field too. And you're just trying to earn your keep. You're trying to journey out whatever you might your form.

 

It might appreciate the added effort. Hey, man, we're going to go work on this like huge project. I want you on my team. You're I like your work ethic. I like your eye, whatever it is, whatever the craft. Yeah, it it's, it's a whole chain because kind of funny, we were talking about, yeah, you learn those the hard way.

 

Like I told you, I'm not afraid to ask stupid questions. I've also made them it's and it's not necessarily, some of this is like, the hard way is you never got the opportunity, right? It never showed up for you. That's the hard way. And a lot of this, right? You came in, you did your job and you're like, why am I not getting promoted?

 

Why am I not moving up? Why are there new opportunities? You weren't dead your ass.

 

How about that? Oh, man, I didn't get a raise this year. Did you ask. Did you even ask, if you, if you can get a raise, did you ask what it would take to get a raise? That would, that would chap me when they're like, Oh dude, I just wish I could.

 

I just wish he got a raise or I, that should have been my job. It's like, did you ask why, why you didn't get it? Did you maybe do an after action or did you ask, what can I do to get it? No, I didn't. It just, you know, I've been working hard. Well, that's why, because you're working hard at what you do when they value what you're doing, where you are.

 

That's fine. Yeah. We share a lot of a lot of passion for that school.

 

Yeah. And it's, again, guys, there's so much nuance in this stuff. But showing up doing the right thing, asking questions will get you 98% of the way there. And then you'll at some point. The right opportunity at the right time will present itself.

 

You know, when you're ready for it, the right person will come along. Or even again, you just, you get handed, handed the next project because you did such a good job on this one. And this is how the industry works. You know, you do a good job you're and it might not be handed, but you're invited to. Do or participate in RFP for the next one, right out of three companies.

 

So you get shortlisted automatically for doing a good job on this one. And that rolls to the next one to the next one to that owner's rep goes to another company. So now you get this opportunity in that role. So the next thing, so it's, it's a big system with not a lot of people that all know each other.

 

It's

 

crazy how small this industry is nuts.

 

So don't do anything to damage your repetition.

 

Yeah. Don't give people a story to tell yeah.

 

Or make it, make it and finding one, you know, something that like, you're not, not embarrassed to like to have brought up at the barbecue.

 

Yeah. Okay. Do I have one, are you saying, is that what you're saying? No, don't give up the story. Yeah. I started thinking about the old time value we have; we've had a lot of fun on the job sites that made me just start going like of the fun times of the stories because they exist.

 

Thanks. And it's also, you know, it's not just the job sites, right? It's the barbecues that going out to drinks and dinner, like all those things with your team, with the people, you know, as much as some people out there might say that doesn't matter. It does, it matters a whole lot and a whole lot more than, you know yeah.

 

To show up to that type of stuff. I know like we can riff on this topic in particular for, for a long time, but Kind of on the next thing. And, you know, I know you brought it up at the round table and just like you to expand on it, but is, is robotics. Cause I know that's the big thing that you see the industry heading to, and really a lot of the augmentation and other types of robotics where it's not fully autonomous, but maybe semi-autonomous or just a machine to help out.

 

And kind of you hit on with the, the association with soccer that it's, you know, a big thing that people are you're looking to, to augment, to help extend safety, livelihood, longevity, happiness of everybody on the job site. But where do you see robotics and this whole kind of mechanization, if you will go we might see.

 

So I am fortunate. I kind of, I'm just going to describe very generally what I'm seeing not specific projects and I'll give you what my interpretation of everything that's happening. So you see, and you saw everybody saw the viral video of the robot putting up drywall and they're going to replace every worker.

 

So I'll spare everybody the details of that one. Basically it was a four legged thing that puts drywall up and screws it. And then you have simple robotics, like 3d printing, concrete. That would be a robot there's painting robots. There's drones that are painting. There's, there's a lot of solutions using machines to do things that humans previously have done.

 

And I think where we're at right now in robotics is the will at work phase. And you kind of look at that adoption timeline of like the smartphone where it hockey sticks that hockey stick, I don't think is going to, I don't think Dylan is going to replace everybody. I, a human is too important for the construction process.

 

The communication it's, every job is different. The human matters more than anything, but I think where it'll level out and where the dust will settle is supportive. Like you said, the support of the workforce. And I think we'll see maybe robots are picking up heavy things. Maybe robots are driving things to locations.

 

Without a human, maybe robots are kind of designing specific elements of this is kind of AI, but I call it a robot because it's something but designing computational design. Yeah, I think you're going to see robots emerge, but robots to me are a tool, not a replacement. And that's what I think everybody should kind of look at and take as their narrative of robotics.

 

And if you're a robotics firm that says to hell with you, Nick, we're going to replace everybody. I'm sorry. I don't believe that. But I'd love to have a conversation on why you believe. So. I think we need to, as an industry, embraced robotics as a mechanism to help and how can I empower my people, my crew, or how can I empower myself to do more with less effort?

 

And so that, that is less strain on the body that might be less stressed in the evenings. Whatever it is that you determined to be less stressed on yourself. But I think robotics is a, is a tool, not a, not a replacement. So don't shy away from them, look at them and then think of them as a cool toy.

 

How, how can I, how can I best maximize this? Don't look at it as in a lens of a man, they got a dry roll robot. They're going to take all my good, like, okay, well, what if, what if you could maximize that and use your crew to the best of their abilities elsewhere. There's a way to take robotics and use it.

 

And let's be an industry that supports the development of these robotics so that they're welcomed, and they can help us because at the end of the day, every robot, I believe is less strain on a human body and less strain on a human body is a happier person and a happier person creates a better industry.

 

So to me, I think that's, that's enough to, to, to take a look at it and say, can this work, but yeah, robotics is it's. I think it's still in the, where, where does it fit? Where does it, where does it fence world? There's a lot of, there's a lot of proposals, but what's the, what's the real benefit.

 

Yeah. I mean, so like my company, Calvin C is we automate the design document process for electrical engineering, right?

 

Low voltage lighting, power, fire alarm, all that stuff. So we go from zero to design documents, roughly right. 85% design documents set. So we placed all the devices in your model. And then from there now a person, and this has been our thesis. A person does all the like engineering, all the things that take thought, all the coordination pieces, all the like actual brain power.

 

And we took all the tedious stuff out of that process. And that's what I think a lot of these solutions in robotics where you have a lot of outside firms coming in that want to do the whole chain, but anything that's coming from the industry is taken out these tiny. Well, in some cases tiny, but like, you know, these swaths of a problem that are super tedious, super repetitive, and don't use the full like extent of a person it's like the really hard stuff.

 

Right. Or so like a robot, like if it puts up drywall, right, it's going to do sheets, but anything that is complicated, any curved wall, right. Thing is like need some craftsmanship. That robot is, or

 

a long, straight hallway. That's what it's got. And that is probably five years away from now.

 

Yeah. So like, again, for a lot of these solutions, it's to take out the like super tedious, stressful time-consuming painful process.

 

And I think that's across the board and, and robotics and software is what one people should be looking at doing if they're not but to allow the person to be a better. Designer a better craftsman, a better tradesman in whatever it is that they're doing. Right? Like that's, that's my company's whole thesis is taking out this tedious, repetitive stuff that you know, needs to be done and then allows you to do everything else.

 

Right. Meet with owners. Have those meetings coordinate do actually professional, be the professional. Yeah. Yeah. I like the layout robot is really exciting. For drywall framing, I call it a Roomba with a Sharpie and I don't mean to discredit the effort that's going into it, but that's insane because the people who were laying out now can go coordinate materials, get better quicker procurement.

 

Now they have an idea. They can trust that the layout is accurate. It's cool. But then you're going to have, the contractors are going to come poke holes in it and go, okay. What if it runs over his group? Okay, dude, like clearly you're not one to embrace robots then, but. That is a very valid, valid question.

 

That's very real. And was that thought of because you're never going to get a clean floor.

 

Yeah. Yeah. And it's, again, you're getting 85, 90% of the way through a project, right. It's an 80 20 rule, right. So 80% of this is going to be done again, the super complicated things for like layout in particular are just, it's not going to happen.

 

Right. So some odd corners, some weird cases just aren't going to happen. But for the majority of your office walls for the majority of your hallways, right? All those things can now be laid out using I mean, industrial robotics as a company To do that right. And area it's only in the Bay area right now.

 

And then like canvas is doing mud and tape for drywall projects. And they're acting as a subcontractor for these projects, right? They're not licensing their tech out currently, but in a lot of that it's so that they are they're owning the whole problem and allowing a person that would have started, you know, at the bottom of the ladder to now have to operate a robot, probably get paid a little more to do so they're more productive.

 

They can do that. And then really they can see and go through more projects quicker and learn more. Right? So we look at the learning trajectory or somebody because you see it over and over and over again, quicker, your growth in learning is actually going to be hired to basically what we start out this conversation with and how to learn and grow is really it's cycle times, which you know, is a.

 

In construction. You've got to be in the industry a long time to see a lot of cycles, versus like, if you're in the automotive industry, right. You see a thousand cars going down the line a day, you get to see that quite a few.

 

Yeah. Until they changed the year. Yeah, yeah, yeah. And sort of dusty and Kevin, both of those require people, but they still require people, and those people can either get an added education.

 

So it could be a trades person with an adjunct. Yeah. What you just said, added education or a brand new application. That's, that's more people in the industry or more valuable people.

 

Yeah. And the other side of this that you mentioned too, is safety. Right? So safety and longevity. Now that that same traits person said of having to retire at 50.

 

Cause you've got a back problem might be able to stay till 60 with no back problem.

 

Right. That that's cool to me. That seems cool. I mean, someone might say, Oh, so you want me to work 10 more years. So you're just going to use me for 10 more years. That's what you're trying to do. It's like, man, no ma maybe someone with a negative mindset, but no it's so, so you can, so you can do what you love or it, yeah.

 

Chase it. Do what you want or retire at 50 and go fishing and not worry about sitting, sitting down for too long because your bankrupt.

 

Yeah. Well, and they probably had that back problem at 42 and then just got tired of it at 50 an hour, you know, have way more issues than they care to admit moving forward.

 

So I think that's, that's really cool Nick, before we kind of wrap this up, where can everybody find you?

 

So I work for WWE CCA, which is the Western wall and ceiling contractors association. You can visit our website, www.org. I'm on Twitter. It's Kareo, but it's spelled K a H R E O. Find me there LinkedIn kind of everywhere, wherever you are, I'll be there to reach out.

 

And then you can find my email is just my first name@wwecca.org. Reach out anytime I'm here. I'll talk to anybody that loves the industry.

 

and, and beyond, yeah. And beyond. So we've talked about where the industry's headed. We've talked about people coming into it. What is something else that you want people in industry or attracting people into the industry?

 

So one of like mats pieces is build better and like the blue collar, you know? Bad-ass so, you know, we want to people to know that being a tradesman, being a subcontractor is a, is a cool thing, right. Or a blue collar bad-ass but where else, and what else would you like to impart upon our listeners today?

 

I think through set it through it's there, the pride of this industry is unmatched and anything else I've ever done. Aside from being a parent, getting married, that's the personal, but career wise, the pride of being part of building something is great. And we all know being in the industry, you're driving down your city and you say, I built that.

 

I built that in this, what I'm saying too, is, is known for all of us watching that's in the industry. But those outside the industry, if we can just give a flavor of that, to the people who are considering a career in the trades, I think we can't, we'll never be able to see everybody. It's the greatest feeling in the world, working on the city you live in, it's done matched.

 

And then, yeah, I think that's probably what I I'd like to leave with it. I care deeply about this industry. It's that's my blood. And I want to do whatever I can to ensure that it, it grows, and it stays, but it is the best industry and that's construction, not as specific trade construction. I'd be remiss though, to feel.

 

And if I didn't, we started a campaign in Arizona called Butterfield, Arizona. So anybody who's looking for a career in Arizona, our employers are all taking candidates and it's on that idea of construction being a legitimate career. Where did they go? Better builds arizona.org, Arizona spelled out.

 

Yeah guys. So if one that's, those are great words to leave on to if, you know, either somebody that wants to get in it to it you know, that once leave Texas and go to some warmer weather right now since Texas can handle snow or anywhere else. I mean, that's what Matt's dealing with right now was a freezing cold weather and a bunch of stuff in Michigan.

 

But you know, Arizona is a great place to go. And again, if you know anybody that wants to get into it, I highly suggest checking it out again through the, these trade associations. There's tons of knowledge, tons of information that just can help you in, in so many ways. I'll say this, anybody who wants to know where to go to try and find a job, if you kind of don't call me.

 

I'll go. I'll do the research for you. Very fortunate to kind of have a pulse of where to go for the associations for the campaigns that are hiring. But I don't care where you're from. If you're from Canada, the United States abroad call me. I am why I'm so passionate about growing this industry that I will help anybody who's interested in a job send you.

 

I'll say I won't get to the gym. I'll send you to where to go help you find where to go. It's on you to get it. You're going to get it. I got to do the interview for you.

 

All right, guys, that, those that's awesome. Nick, thank you so much for, for coming on the show. This has been a ton of fun and you know, maybe we'll do another one when Matt doesn't have to worry about pipes and cold water.

 

Yeah.

 

I'm in Arizona. I feel for them, I must suck cold weathers for visiting Dylan. Not for living in Texas gets credit though. They didn't know.

 

Yeah. Well so I'm in the mountains here in California. So right now we're, we're sunny, but like two weeks ago I got like two feet of snow. So yeah, no

 

for

 

me, I enjoyed the conversation a lot.

 

You can count on me to come back anytime, anytime.

 

Awesome. Awesome. Well guys, that's going to be this episode of the construction corner podcast. We've covered. Just a ton of great ground, it's worth a relisten. And going back to, I mean, we covered so much recovered from contracts to AR to specs, to words, build buildings to just building better.

 

And knowing that you have tons of opportunity in the trades and organizations like Western wall contractors association is a great place to go Nika. I mean, all these trade organizations are wonderful place to get so many resources to learn and grow within your select industry. Or just to, to learn more about this great wide world that we have in construction.

 

So guys, till next time, see ya.

Building Community in Construction  

All right. Hello and welcome to another episode of the construction corner podcast. I'm Dylan. I'm your host joined by my new cohost, the blue collar. Bad-ass Matt Vetter, Matt. How's it going?

 

It's going great, Dylan. It's another nice Friday, a chilly week here in Michigan, but what we're getting through guys this week, we have a special guest.  We were so impressed with her from our round table episode that we aired a few weeks ago to here. Ali, she's an executive director at Nika, formerly at Milwaukee, and now it's focused on their kind of product innovation to hero. Welcome to the construction corner podcast. Thank you so much, Dylan and Matt, it's great to meet you.

 

It's great to, to reconnect and I'm so excited to be here with you all and wrap up the week.

 

Doing these on Fridays. I know Matt was joking a few weeks ago that we might see him with a beer or something like that. Since we're, you know, three o'clock on a Friday here, this is, to me, this is the celebration, right? It's the good conversation. And we can all end the week on an inspirational note,

 

definitely on a positive note, you know, regardless of what happened during the week, this is kind of a.

 

Half hour, hour or so to just decompress and, and have some good conversation and move into a nice weekend. Yeah.

 

Now from our round table, a couple of weeks ago, we talked technology innovation, but there was a kind of maybe a good starting point. Well, first is to kind of give your background for anybody that might not have listened to that, that last episode. But kind of a little bit of your background and where you're coming from on the construction side of things.

 

Absolutely. So as you mentioned, I am the. Executive director of industry innovation for Nika. And that's the national electrical contractors association. So we represent the union electrical contractors about you know, a huge part of the specialty contracting industry. And so how I kind of got into this position, it's a, it's a bit of a tale, but I actually, my background is in advanced technology.

 

So I worked on things like. Machine learning, artificial intelligence robotics. And to be honest, how I got into that field was I have two degrees in mechanical engineering with a computer science focus. So I wanted to build machines and make them smart. And how I got into that field was the fact that I was actually really bad at math and science.

 

And I had some really great teachers and mentors who kind of encouraged me to, to, to, to poke deeper and to find the why. And so to, to kind of rewind and fast forward, back to how I got into the construction industry, I came up again, doing very technical work, very detailed work. And one day I happened to be in Wisconsin at a tour for Milwaukee tool, a just kind of you know, learn about the company sort of situation.

 

And I saw this opportunity that I had never in my life seen of. Being able to focus on products and design them and be completely user-focused because the people who are designing your products, that Milwaukee tool are not necessarily people who've been, you know, lifelong career driven in the trades.

 

So they're not a blue collar champions as, as, as you said. And so having the ability to really focus in on the user piece, Was so huge. And so I spent many years at Milwaukee and one of the things that I learned there was the ability to, again, focus on the problems at hand, right? It's not about the next best drill or the next best saw, or even adding Bluetooth to, you know, anything you can.

 

It's about dedicated user driven solutions to solve the industry's pain points. And that's really what allowed me to grow in my own role there. And. You know, learn about, and preach about and advocate for construction technology. And we've kind of created this, this movement in the industry, those of us who care about construction technology, that it's really about culture.

 

It's about passion. It's about people, it's about the process and then the technology comes after. And so I'm delighted to be a part of the Nica team. Now I've been here almost a month. So you're catching me on week three, but it's just so incredible because now I get to be that one step closer to the contractors and that one step closer to the people who are actually building the buildings or putting in the wiring and, and, and, you know, looking at the new you know, low voltage or electric vehicle or micro grid opportunities and truly help to support them as they continue to build the future.

 

That is impressive to say the least none notwithstanding the, your, your current title, executive director of industry innovation. Does that fit on a business card?

 

Well, luckily we don't go anywhere these days because of COVID. So I don't even need to worry about that. Right.

 

I like the title it's very official.

 

I guess my first question would be what, what does that role really entail at Nika?

 

So that's, that's a great question. And you know, I'll be honest with you. The thing that excites me the most about being the head of the industry innovation team at Nica is that we are really focused on innovation at its core.

 

So the idea of, you know, whatever you're doing, figure out a way to evaluate are you doing it the best way possible? Could you be faster? Could you be safer? Could you be more, not just more. You know, efficient but more effective. And so it's all about how do you continue to grow? Not just the technology piece of it, which is a huge part of innovation and what we most traditionally think about, but also the strategic and the business development piece.

 

So it's as much about change management and that growth mindset and looking with a critical eye on how you disrupt your own behavior and disrupt your own innovation as it is, you know, what's the next robot. What's the next headset. What's the next Bluetooth, you know, IOT device that could be changing the industry?

 

Very neat. Very neat,

 

I guess, with that. So being, you know, Nika, right? The overarching harm for, for all these hundreds of thousands of electrical contractors, you know, across the U S and really the U S and a lot of ways sets the stage for. Kind of the rest of the world and our practices and codes and everything like that.

 

And obviously, so I'm an electrical engineer, so this is right up my alley. But for, for a lot of this and, and just talking change management from like the Nica side of things, obviously with trade associations and the ability to get out in front of your people fairly often, granted, we're not doing that as much in person anymore.

 

Through conventions or anything like that, but how does Nika go about kind of pushing some of these best practices out to, again, you've got hundreds of thousands of electrical contractors, you know, from residential all the way to do utility scale you know, installations. So what's kind of one of the wet methods that you guys use to, to outreach to, you know, this broad group of people.

 

Well, you know, that's a really great question and I think COVID has really put us in this position. And I learned this in my role at Milwaukee, as well as my, my time at Nika. You really have to almost innovate yourself. Right? Look at things from a, you know, how can you improve and how can you be. Ever more impactful, create ever more opportunities and channels and connections to help people grow.

 

So at the end of the day, it still all goes back to construction, being a people business. And so what I find to be really powerful is you want to approach it in as many ways as possible. You want to always be making a positive impact, whether you're talking to you know, executives at the top, or you're talking to governing boards, or you're talking to.

 

You know, the one-off the apprentice, or you're talking to students who are studying construction management, it's all about helping people understand that these are problems. We can tackle one step at a time, one incremental change at a time. And one of the really great things about, you know, the vehicles that we have to do this is that there are.

 

So many out there, right? There's podcasts, there's webinars, there's direct phone conversations. Let's not forget that, you know, before people started going to these big conventions, just being able to pick up a phone and call someone. And now we have that elevated because now you can pick up a phone and see someone like we're doing here.

 

So that's a really powerful thing as well. And then there's also. There's the virtual conventions. There's the you know, just, just grabbing a quick, one of my favorite things to do is to just grab a quick 15 minute or a 30 minute call and just connect with someone and talk to them and learn about what they are looking at.

 

What's worrying them what they're doing to prepare for the future of their business. And, and we also have some really great avenues. Nico puts out several different podcasts, including the innovation overload, which is one of the podcasts that my team and I created. Kind of around the idea of how do you handle this overload of information.

 

And there's also so many industry standards, right? You've got your trade organizations. So you know, Nika is a great example. That's always putting out education. You can go do training, whether it's training on. You know how to be a better estimator, how to be better at project management or coordination, or even, you know, technical trainings, like learning more about Bluebeam or learning more about, Revit learning more about BIM three 60 and then there's also some of the, maybe the lesser known, but incredibly powerful vehicles out there include learning about industry research.

 

So going to places like. You know, Nika actually has a non-profit arm called electri. And so it's like electric without the sea. And so electric.org actually has free reports for everyone in the industry that are carefully curated by the electric foundations and boards around specific topics that are important to all of us.

 

So that's, you know, a really great free resource FMI has great, great reports, right? Dodge data analytics, ENR the list goes on. So again, you know, from a Nica perspective, we are really, really focused on how do we bring targeted information to those within our network and those throughout our network, to make sure that we're working with our partners to deliver the best results and the best conversations from an industry as a whole.

 

I think the opportunities, whether you're interested in digital content, whether interested in a peer group or a conversation, or even a periodical. Right. There's still those paper, you know, magazines that are out there like electrical contractor is one that allows you to learn more about what's going on in your neighborhood, in your district, but also in the world.

 

That's great. You mentioned, you know, getting to know people and doing your 15 minute 30 minute conversations. And to me, that's, it, it started off as an annoyance with COVID having to do all the zoom meetings and having to. You know, look at yourself in the, in the, in the screen next to the Hershey you're talking to, but it's, it's completely become a, a great way to quickly engage and get to know more people on, on a worldwide scale.

 

And we couldn't have done this last year. Well, we, we could have, but we, we probably wouldn't have gone this route, you know, and it involved travel, which. You can't do right now easily. And it's great to hear and to see different groups using this technology. We have, you know, we kind of got forced into, but you're using it for a real positive purpose.

 

That's so true. And I, you know, I've heard, I've read about, especially this time last year, and as things started to slow down, you, you heard all these fears about. 2020 being the year, the year of last innovation, the year that everything just ground to a halt and we all shuttered our doors and, and everything stopped.

 

And the truth of the matter is that everything didn't stop. We just learned. To innovate in a different way. And so it almost became the year of burgeoning innovation. So, you know, whether you all of a sudden found yourself putting, you know, all of your files on a, on a cloud-based network, or you were investing in things like the VPN networks, or you were looking at zoom versus teams versus Skype versus GoToMeeting.

 

So many platforms out there got a boost from this idea of we, we all still have to connect and what's also really powerful is so many companies and their culture has got a boost from how do you connect in unorthodox ways to continue to drive these conversations? One thing, for example, That was really powerful.

 

That happened at Nika during that time is there was actually a deliberate effort, not just to, you know, put your cameras on what you hear about the cliche of, you know, camera's on engagement, like you said, but even an effort to create an opportunity for employees to take turns, telling stories about themselves and sending it to the whole company and then nominating the next person so that you actually got to people you've worked with for.

 

Five 10, 20, 30 years. You actually got to know them on a whole different level. And who would have made the time who would have made that deliberate intention to connect in that way? How do we not been in the situation where we weren't sitting next to each other anymore?

 

That's a great point. We at Schaefer construction, we're a much smaller firm, but we kind of got into the same sort of thing.

 

And, and through. Meetings like this. And even on our social media channels, we kind of started introducing our team to the world. And it was just, it was, we had time to do that sort of thing that we never really had thought of doing before, but it, it keeps the human element human.

 

Exactly, exactly. And I think one of the things that's also really cool is I've heard from a lot of contractors out there that they actually saw their younger employees start to step up more.

 

Because of working remotely because it's the easiest thing in the world. I think we've all been guilty of it when you're sitting next to someone, when you're, you know, just down the hall from the people who've been doing, whatever you're learning for so many years, whether it's estimation, whether it's VDC, whether it's the accounting side, it's the easiest thing to just you know, get up and go ask them.

 

But now there's that extra layer. And, you know, especially millennials, gen Z, a lot of the newer generations are not so comfortable or we're not so comfortable with making a phone call. So people, especially in construction have started to see this, you know, the younger talent is rising more because they kind of have to go through this, this exercise of figuring things out by themselves.

 

Before they make that call or before they reach out for help. So it's in a way, you know, some of these, these opportunities are allowing us to have our teams Excel.

 

Yeah, absolutely.

 

And that was always one of the biggest things that I learned. And especially early on in construction is to pick up the phone, right?

 

Like there's no, there's no transcript it's phone calls most of the time. So when it comes to the fourth phase of construction and litigation that those things are not recorded or written down to come back and bite you, but always pick up the phone, have a conversation and it comes. Across, not only for that which we have to worry about in construction, but also for just an ease of communication, right?

 

There's a lot of intention tonality things that you, you're not going to pick up in an email that you can get across a lot, a lot better when you're on the phone with somebody to make sure that you're understanding it correctly. And then the on top of that now with the screen sharing and all that kind of stuff, you can pretty easily collaborate.

 

Make sure that you're looking at the same thing, the same set of drawings at the same time, so that, you know, everyone's on the same page and looking at two different versions of something to, to move forward. And I guess this brings up a pretty good point in that, you know, we're. In the construction.

 

And you made this point at the round table is we're looking to build communities, right? We're not looking or in one of our biggest assets in construction is, is the people right? Not just the buildings that we build, the roads that we create. But all the people and knowledge that It gets retained through the industry.

 

And one of the things too, in that, you know, that Nick is doing a great job of is writing articles and having things that people can go back and look at in two podcasts that are a whole new way of communicating, I guess, what. Are you seeing for contractors in some of the ways that they're able to not only share the information, which I think we've talked about, but kind of help retain some of the best practices within their firms?

 

I think knowledge retention has been, and this is across construction, whether it's a contractor design firm, that that knowledge retention becomes one of the harder things. You know, you have somebody of 30, 40 years’ experience that. You want all this information and knowledge that they have to pull out of them.

 

But they're not going to write a white paper, but they'll have a two hour conversation with you. No problem. But how does, how does kind of knowledge retention and knowledge transfer? What are some of the best practices that you've seen?

 

I think that's, that's such a great. An interesting topic to think about.

 

And especially, you know, because it is our status quo is to remain at the status quo is to always kind of do neurologically. We want to do what we've always done. And I have to tell you one of the things that's been incredibly powerful. And for those, you know, those listeners and those we have who are tuning in today, one of the most incredibly powerful things that we have right at this moment in history.

 

Is that we are more connected than we've ever been before. Whether you're looking through a trades lens, like you said, or through an owner or a general contractor, or, you know, any, you know, a technology provider or manufacturer, any level of engagement can be amplified. And so we talk about these virtual conferences and yet it's a bummer because you can't.

 

Be in person in the same room together. But what you can do is now you don't have to pay for the travel to send your team, you know, to some fancy destination, because there's a conference going out there now you're not paying for the hotel room. And so we've actually even seen conferences where instead of just paying for one license for somebody to attend the event or one ticket, you can actually go, and you can actually pay for essentially a company.

 

A ticket or company attendance, and that'll give you several licenses that can be used. And so that's something that's been huge because now, you know, when there's a technology conference, you don't just have to send your BIM or VDC manager or your head of it or your CIO. You can actually have the safety person be there.

 

You can actually have, you know, again, some of your, your journeyman, you can actually have. Your project managers, your estimator is you can have different people going and looking at things through different lenses. And I'll tell you from the standpoint of how do you, how do you make sure you retain, how do you make sure that information is shared?

 

One of the best things I've ever done with any team I've ever worked with is when we send people to an event, we always have them come back and share, you know, just, just three things you've learned. Three things that will affect the company. So what are you personally learning? Because so many of these events will have, you know, prefer professional or personal development.

 

So what are you personally learning that might've changed your life and what are you seeing for your company? You're seeing for our practices that can help elevate or change, or just even incrementally help us get started down, you know, considering a different path. So that's a really powerful thing and I'll also.

 

I'll give you guys a little bit of inside baseball. And I don't think I've ever told anyone this, but when I go to shows whether they are virtual or in-person I always try to engage with at least someone else, one other person to where I am, that person build up enough rapport that I can then say, Hey, is it okay if I call you in three months, six months, whatever it is.

 

Can I just give you a call? And this interesting thing we're learning about today. Can we just touch base in, you know, in six months from now on how this thing has changed, the way you do your job or the way you live your life. And it's so amazing because it, it enriches what you're able to do and it helps you again, it doesn't have to be something that everyday you're changing a new piece, but just, just that one little bit of accountability with someone who you you've now connected with.

 

It, it creates such a strong network effect.

 

That's hugely powerful. Thank you for sharing that. You know, it, it, it stretches the collaboration. But, but the accountability is great because so many people, whether, whether they listen to podcasts or go to the events or, or pay for coaching, you know, there there's so much information and, and new things always being thrown at us.

 

It's, it's hard to, to grab them sometimes and to follow through with it. And if you learn all this great stuff, but you never implement any of it, you're not really, you're not really moving forward on the, on the ladder at all. So that's a. Fantastic idea that kind of built in follow-up. I'm going to write that one down and use it myself.

 

I'll put it, I'll put it to you this way. The most powerful thing you can do is make a decision. Whether it's a decision to adopt something new or not adopt something new, you're still making a decision either way. And so having the ability. To think critically again, that goes back to, this is what innovation is.

 

And I, you know, I, it, it's so fascinating, you know, as someone who comes from a very technical background, I love. Machinery. I love electronics. I love putting new solutions together in a way that changes the world. That being said, not every solution is right for every situation. And one of the things, when we talk about technology, when we talk about innovation, so often you hear people talk about, Oh, you got to go paperless, or you got to.

 

Employ the software you don't look Excel is, is, is this dinosaur, but for some companies, depending on the size, depending on the business vending, depending on a myriad of factors for some companies going from paper to Excel is huge. For some companies, they don't need to use the biggest software platforms out there.

 

They don't need to be on the best data lakes in the industry. They might just need to be using. You know, QuickBooks or Microsoft teams or FaceTime on their phones. And that I think is the coolest part of innovation is innovation. It doesn't have to be a one size fits all, or here's my check that I'm going to write for this R and D budget.

 

It can be, what is that one small thing that you can do to change what your, your path is? And it starts today.

 

It's the 1% better every day theory, right?

 

Exactly. Exactly.

 

As long as you keep it moving forward and, and growing, you know, we all do it in different places at different levels, but you know, I thought you were going to tear into the Excel and QuickBooks users, and I was going to have to butt heads with you.  Cause that's what we still do it at Schafer construction, but you know, it, it. It's not to say that we don't look at other technology because we always are. I'm constantly looking for the next greatest app or, or some communication technology that we haven't seen yet, but it's also difficult, you know, given that we're a small company.

 

So given our size and our revenue, we don't have budgets available to, you know, lock in pro core or some of these other really great platforms, but what we also know how to survive without it. And you know, as long as you keep growing and keep moving forward. I think that's the, that's the key.

 

Well, and I think it's also interesting because sometimes your solution can have nothing to do with technology at all.

 

So I've seen companies make huge gains by moving, moving the port-a-potties once a month, you know, moving to a system where you have your lay down area, you have your, you know, your makeshift tool crib on the job site, but instead investing in everyone, having one of those, Uline carts. Right. If you can have your tools next to you, if you can have your equipment next to you, if you don't have to walk, you know, get on a lift, and go down 20 floors, just to use the bathroom, think of how that changes every single day.

 

You're making that small change and you're making a huge difference, not just in your worker comfort, but also in the safety you're exposed to less also in the productivity. You're not wasting as much time looking for your tools also in the morale. You know, in the engagement. And so again, you know, innovation doesn't have to be, like you said, it doesn't have to be a license fee.

 

There's nothing against those license fees, but everyone's at a different spot. And that's the, that's the, I think that's the secret is you have to kind of bloom where you're planted, figure out where you are and figure out how to grow and change with what you have.

 

I think that, I mean, you're spot on with all this stuff and that when we look at, or when we think innovation, right, everyone goes to AI and software and robotics and all this really fancy stuff that for the most part isn't necessarily the cheapest either, but that there's. What we're ultimately getting at is waste reduction.

 

Right? That's the thing that we're ultimately driving for is increased efficiency, you know, happiness that you want some return on whenever you're investing, right? Whether that's, somebody's taken half an hour, an hour to, to move a port-a-potty up, you know, a floor or 10 or whatever that that's, you know, hugely important.

 

And it saves a bunch of other time in it. Whether that's safety and increasing, you know, the, how people work, whether that's through a new tool or just in a new practice, right. It doesn't have to be these big, robust things, but you're looking for something in your process to, to improve and reduce the amount of waste the waste of time.

 

And especially like on job sites today, we don't want as many people onsite. So you're looking to find ways to improve, you know, your workflows, your efficiencies, your throughput. For all that. So I think and we mentioned this on the round table was a waste reduction, and I think that's really the core of this is to really help your people be better at everything that they do.

 

Well, and you hit on something really interesting too. The idea of, you know, you're helping your people. And that brings me to something that I think is always on people's minds when they, they think about or talk about the pain points of our industry, which is the, the, the talent acquisition, right? You got to get people, you got to get them in, and you got to train them up and you got to get them to stay.

 

And then you got to elevate them. And that succession planning is now more than ever. Something that's on so many people's minds and this is where again, technology. Yeah. It drives, you know, efficiency that makes your people better and more effective at doing what they're doing, but it also can help you to bring people into the industry and it can also help you to create those avenues for people to shine.

 

So one of the things that I, a lot of the companies that I work with that I really, you know, advocate for them is how can you. You know, you say there's too many solutions, everybody's busy, there's so much going on. And all of that is true, but maybe instead of everyone at the top, trying to figure out all the solutions as might have traditionally been the case, are there people in your company that you can set about elevating them, giving them a specific task, putting them on a task force, giving them a specific challenge or even just saying.

 

Hey, you know what? We're open for comments, we're open for improvements and you know, something as simple as the, you know, in a sense, the suggestion box and give people an opportunity to become champions and become advocates and, and elevate themselves within your organization, because this is how we continue to grow.

 

And this is how we continue to invest in our people in ways that they will invest back, and it builds engagement. Right. And when people feel that they're valued across multiple levels, there they're more likely to stay. They're more likely to be a better worker, a more efficient, productive member of the team.

 

Exactly, exactly. And with the fact that we have such a challenge with skilled labor and the fact that we have, you know, this generational gap, we have people among five generations all in the workforce, everyone is motivated in a different way. And just because you have someone who is an expert at the specific craft that they've been doing for 30 years does not mean that they are the best that using cell phones or using zoom or using, you know, any of these digital platforms.

 

None of this is a shock to any of us. So how can you find the people who maybe don't understand the industry as well? Because they're newer to it. And pair them up with the people who really know a lot about, you know, bending conduit, but maybe don't know that much about how to, you know, take digital three 60 photos off their phone and give people a chance to, you know, everybody likes to be appreciated.

 

Everybody likes to contribute. So give people a chance to contribute with the skills that they're best at. And then also give them a chance to build and learn from the skills that they, they do have gaps in, where they can improve upon.

 

I love that Dylan and I have talked a lot about this topic, excuse me, the topic of, of our industry as a whole, the construction industry, having such a huge labor problem, a huge shortage of skilled labor coming in.

 

And, you know, we, we've kind of bounced that idea around quite a few times of, you know, Telling the, the young, new person on the site to go hang out with, with the, with the old guy, you know, the 30 year vet who's been doing whatever he does for so long that he's an expert at it. It's all part of that collaboration effort.

 

And you nailed it just now because the young guy or young girl or whoever. Now is bringing a different viewpoint and bringing different skillsets and different talents. And even just through osmosis, the two parties now are going to be better for that engagement for that relationship.

 

Absolutely. And I'll tell you, you know, I, like I said, I spent many years in academia.

 

I've spent many years on kind of the. The cutting edge of the, some of the, the, you know, the sexiest technologies in the industry. But one of my first jobs was at an automotive assembly plant. And the things that I learned didn't even have an engineering degree, barely had a semester under my belt. But the things that I learned from those people.

 

Who had been working in this plant? Who'd been working on cars, on building cars and designing on putting, assembling cars. The things that I learned from them about what they could do with their hands and what they could see in terms of, you know, what you needed to do to create the perfect product. It was just, it blew me away and it really shaped my own perception of where I wanted my career to go, because I never, you know, I don't want to be the person who knows everything.

 

I don't want to be the person who has all the answers. I know I can't be. So it helps that I don't want to be, but what I want to do is I want to help those people who are experts, those people who are doing their job, the way that they've been trained by generations before them, how do we position ourselves to serve them?

 

This is at the end of the day; this is a servant leadership position. What I do, what you guys do, where all of us in the industry who care about technology and efficiencies, we're not ever going to solve this by ourselves. And we certainly don't have the perspectives to, you know, come up with all the answers, but it's about how do you understand the process well enough that you can figure out those, those, those incremental ways that you can at least present solutions and get that feedback.

 

I think this is a, a nice little dovetail. So you have all these people that have tons of experience. And then now you have access to all these conferences that they probably didn't go to. Right. It was usually like, as you mentioned, your VDC, your BIM manager, your CIO, maybe the president of the company.

 

Rarely. I don't think any of the conventions I saw. It's a handful of those guys, but you have in, they're typically younger, right? They're younger people in those positions. So. Through this now allowing or having the ability for a lot of your veterans to experience some of the new tech, some of the things that are being released and then with all their experience.

 

They can see how this might be able to be implemented into their process. Right. They're intimately familiar with the process where maybe your BIM VDC guy isn't or Galler, whatever. Right. They don't have quite the experience level, but they know that technology really well. So now this pairing of people with tremendous experience can be.

 

Exposed really what it is at these conferences, be exposed all this technology and then work with somebody who might know the technology more intimately to, again, streamline those processes much like you would have at a assembly plant or manufacturing facility where you're kind of pairing technology and innovation with somebody that knows how a car gets put together, right.

 

Or a building gets put together. So I think the, the dovetail of these too, and at the cost that a company can afford to put these people in just creates tremendous innovation.

 

Absolutely. And that's how we change the industry, right? We're not here because we want to make small changes or we're here because we want to do little things.

 

We have grand visions, all of us. And I think the cool part is grand visions. All start with small changes. They start with. People, they start with culture and everything that we've talked about goes back to, you know, if you're a leader, if you're someone listening, who's the head of a company you don't, you don't want to be the one who has all the answers, because think of, think of how limited the focus is then.

 

So it, the opportunity then becomes bringing people in and giving people the chance and then connecting them together and giving them the culture and giving them the trust. That you are supporting them at all levels entry level all the way up so that these solutions, these ideas are coming from the top down and the bottom up so that we can meet in the middle.

 

That's a great point. Yeah, it's just, it's all about growth and. And setting our goals high. And, you know, you mentioned none of us are here for, for small changes. We have a, a saying that we use that we're, we're here to blow the doors off, you know, we're, we're not looking to just grow as a normal company grows and, you know, Increase our profits by, or our revenue by 3%, each year to cover inflation.

 

We're, we're here to completely blow the doors off of, of the construction world of the GC side, what we do. And, and we're, we're making these changes through culture through, through building the team and, and everything you just mentioned fits really well into that, into that formula.

 

Absolutely. And I think it's also too, it's important to remember that this is not a problem.

 

That's solved by one. Trade or a one company. This is a problem that belongs to all of us. And that's, what's really powerful is, you know, you, whether you're tackling communication in your company or you're tackling communication project wide on a job site or from the field to the office, there's so many ways to look at how we can help move things and move the needle.

 

Yeah, I agree.

 

I guess, with this, so. In implementing this change, right? Because it can be a big daunting task and like something like Pro-core, or even switching to BIM from a simple drawing or going from paper to, you know, PlanGrid, so a lot of this, you know, can be a very daunting, overwhelming task, but you mentioned in.

 

One it's making decisions. Right? So to, to make a decision and move with it, and you don't have to implement this overnight, right? It's not a switch on type of a task. It's a, it's an incremental thing, right. Doing a little bit every day. For the firms and companies that you've worked with, obviously being at a place like Milwaukee and now Nico, right?

 

There's a lot of companies that, that you work with and you're not just, you know, within kind of your own, you're seeing the industry as a whole and seeing a lot of firms kind of grow or take these approaches. Now the, I guess, in working with all these, these companies across the industry, how have you seen.

 

Companies really start to adopt this mindset or in some of the companies that maybe as we can be in construction, a little bullheaded, right. And unwilling to change. How have you seen kind of some of that adoption or those mindset shifts take place or what might be some catalyst to help firms that they want to change, but you know, are on the, on the

 

fence?

 

I think one thing that's incredibly important is to understand that. Just because we're talking about kicking the doors down and just because we're talking about, you know, everybody's got a move towards these, these big grand solutions does not mean that they have to be employed in the same way. And we, we touched on this a little bit earlier in the conversation.

 

So the first thing I would say, the very first thing is figure out, you know, identify the people who you're going to have as your champions. And it doesn't have to be the same people every time. And it doesn't have to be the same people for every task, but find people, elevate people, escalate people, and they could be the people who are having the problems.

 

So let's say if your problem is something to do with the project workflow and how to make it smoother and how to, you know, reduce the RFS, you can work with the people who are, you know, nose deep in the trenches, or you can have people who. Again, you know, might be some of your leadership might be some of your younger, more junior members of the team.

 

But again, what that allows them to do is it allows them to feel like they have more ownership in the process, bring them in and then give them the opportunity to understand and investigate what's going on. Right. It's not about what solutions they think are the right solutions. Even if they are the ones who are, again, those deep in the process, what you want is you want them to take, take a moment.

 

Take a beat and just lay out what's going on, understand the situation end to end whether it's workflows, whether it's value mapping, whether it's pain point analysis, whether it's a gap analysis, whether it's a SWAT use, any tool you want and there's a million out there, but the whole idea of it is understand.

 

What's happening, understand who the key players are, understand where you know, where things are stalling out. And then, and only then only after you've investigated, can you really start to evaluate which solutions might be the right ones? And so many people start by, they don't even start by evaluating which solutions might be the right ones for the problems they're having.

 

They start by, Hey, I heard this cool commercial, or I read this thing online about this new software or hardware solution, and they go straight to the solution. But if you haven't had the time or made the time to bring your people along with you, and that doesn't have to be everyone, it doesn't have to be everyone who touches the solution needs to, you know, if you have 30 project managers doesn't mean they all have to be in every single conversation, but get a good sample size and be respectful of their time.

 

And give them that opportunity, give them that opportunity to figure out, you know, what solutions are out there. And then once you have your solutions, do you know I'm an engineer at heart, right? So I believe in forced ranking, I believe in matrices to qualify, I believe in you figuring out, you know, what is the weighted reason or the score that meant that you went with this solution versus that solution.

 

And once you have. Some something you want to try or test or trial, that's where you come in and that's where you say, okay, if I want to see how successful this may be, I have to measure it. You cannot improve something that you are not measuring. You cannot, it's impossible. So there again, no matter what your measure is, whether it's time, whether it's you know, safety metrics, whether it's a reduced number of clashes, if it's clash detection, everything you do figure out your metrics and figure out a very deliberate way to pilot your solutions.

 

Figure out a very deliberate way to. Implement these solutions in a controlled environment and like all things that we have in our own everyday lives, you have to have a backup plan. You have to have a pivot. And so, you know, whether your pivot is okay, I tried this on one type of job site. And it's not working.

 

Let's evaluate why based on, you know, this is what working looks like in terms of metrics, or I tried the solution with this type of team and the, the challenges that we have are around, you know, maybe it's an educational challenge. Maybe people don't understand the software. Maybe it's a culture challenge.

 

Maybe people don't understand the ROI that they get out of collecting data or out of you know, using a digital model. These are the pieces where. You have to have in your mind and with your teams, you all, you have to have contingency plans. And so often when people say pivot, they mean, well, I was doing this thing and it didn't work out.

 

So I pivoted and I quit my job and I got a new career and that's not a pivot. And what a pivot is, is, you know, think of traveling and basketball, right? It's the idea of you keep all things the same, except for the specific things that you're going back to change. So you keep all your, the variables the same as most, as best as you can.

 

And you change one thing, two things, and you see if that makes a difference, because again, so often, you know, I can't tell you the number of places I've been, where you see sitting on the executives, you know, desk or sitting in their office, you see a virtual reality headset, you see an exoskeleton, you see, you know, you talk to the it team and they say, we've got this great software implemented.

 

No one's using it. So it's how do you figure out those pieces and how do you go through this process? This exercise to make sure that you're not just going into it with intention, but you're also going into the execution and the pilot with attention as well.

 

Beautifully said before I have another follow up question to hear, where can everybody find you?

 

So you can find me at Tauhira at Nika net.org. You can find me on LinkedIn. You can find me. I mean, I think that's really it. It's, it's funny. Cause I'm a technologist when people tease me about not having Twitter, but again, you know, that's the thing is everyone's at a different place in their life with where they adopt technology of their own.

 

I'm also a mom. I my son will turn six months old in a, in a week or two. So where I am most days is. You know, working on construction problems during the day and hanging out with a baby at night. So, you know, you could find me in my son's nursery, but again, you know, I encourage you. I implore you reach out.

 

I would love to talk with anyone. I, you know, I'm, I I'm enjoying, although potentially overpowering this conversation, but I, I do think the people connection is the most important part.

 

I absolutely agree with you and your basketball reference was, was spot on. I'm really glad you brought that up. Cause it, it it's something to keep in mind.

 

Right? The whole pivoting it's pivot has become a catchphrase and a buzz word like core values have, and you know, there's lots of other ones now. And until people start using these. These techniques and these, these aspects correctly, they don't do anything. You can't, you can't implement a pivot in business or in life.

 

If, if what you're doing is what you said and, and, you know, turning tail and running away and starting over again, that that's a whole different, whole different technique or a whole different term. So, but, but to bring the basketball role in, I liked that a lot. Thank you.

 

Oh, well, I mean, I, I have to say my basketball days ended in seventh grade gym, but the lessons that were learned have, have remained with perfect I've coached seventh grade basketball.

 

So I do, I think this is, you know, so we hit on a few really good points in here and. You know, like everybody out there. Right. So tier as are follow-ups from conferences, I take notes like crazy. And that is still analog for me. Like as much as I like, you know, I'm a software company and do a lot of electrical engineering, design, BIM, all that kind of good stuff.

 

But like, I still take a ton of handwritten notes and go through a good, you know ledger sheet of notes of probably a month. So for everyone out there, like the. One of the things that I do want to emphasize besides note-taking is data and really measurement, right? So we hit on data collection measurement, and I'm always astounded by.

 

The number of firms that especially. So I come from the design side and how many firms can't say off the bat, right? Like how, how many hours something takes them to do, right? Like they don't have an hours per square foot of design, right. Some standard metric that they can then, you know, extrapolate for any given building, because everything is quote unquote unique right here.

 

Every project is different in some way, or, you know, Bob really screwed this one up for us or whatever the thing might be for a given project that that comes across. But that was always one thing that I tried to push heavily was, Hey, we should know like a dollars per square foot and hours per square foot on the design side of, of what this takes.

 

So we can, we can bid this accurately. We can budget for it appropriately. But I just, there was always a push back in. You know, uniqueness, but with that, I guess to a lot of these points, you know, like on the electrical side, like, and contractors, right. They know how much an estimated based on like how much time it takes to install a light, or an outlet or a given linear feet of pipe.

 

So through this maybe what are some of the more specific examples that you've seen to really help, I guess, Clarify, the data points, the pieces that, that people should really be measuring against and what KPIs you've seen in particular across the industry that, that people might help to get started with.

 

I think one of the biggest things when people talk about KPIs and it's a big initiative for Nika as well is you just have to; you have to start somewhere. You have to start where you're at. And I so many times, again, you know, I, I worked in computer science when AI and machine learning were still neural networks.

 

So back before we even had that cool branding. And so the idea here is that you, you have to really like, it's all about process. It's all about process. And so you have to understand your process and from understanding that workflow. It helps you to understand the gaps and the miseries, the paint points, the challenges, the breakdowns, but it also helps you to understand what can be measured.

 

Because again, you know, maybe, maybe you need fantastic software, but maybe all you need is a stopwatch and maybe you don't even need a stopwatch. Maybe all you need is your phone to be able to measure, you know, how long does it take you to do this repeatable task? And you know, maybe what you need is Excel.

 

To be able to make a Gantt chart and to see how your project is progressing, or maybe you can use this fantastic software and it can help you, you know, use AI to determine the health of your you know, your project or your job site. All of these solutions are great. Just depends on where you are. And again, you know what I would caution anyone is think very tactically about how do you want to measure success?

 

So if you think of something like, all right, I'm gonna use a stopwatch to measure this process, understand, you know, what sort of baseline are you at today and what sort of improvement are you looking for? Short-term mid-term long-term and again, I'll tell you what you can't do is go around a job site, waving a stopwatch without, you know, any sort of preamble or explanation on what, what you're doing or why.

 

So take the time to bring your team alone. Take the time to help people to understand like, Oh, I'm just trying to figure out, you know, are you spending half your day looking for tools or equipment? Are you spending half of your time? Like, yeah, it's great that you're doing offsite construction or pre-fab, but there's little to no communication between the field and the fab shop.

 

So at the end of the day, like everything's getting delivered in the wrong way or the wrong time, or, you know, like it's, these are the pieces that are the building blocks that give you a good foundation.

 

I would suggest that everybody, when this comes out on the podcast version, they rewind it here for the last three minutes and listen to that over and over again, because that is, is perfect.

 

And it is spot on your, your comment about, you know, thinking tactically about how you want to measure success. It's so powerful because we're all going to be different, whether you're a GC or a designer or in the electrical field or whatever did you do? You know, we all have different goals, and we all have different motivations.

 

And to, to really map that out ahead of time is going to what is what's going to help drive to that goal. You have to have the roadmap before you, you go on the trip, so to speak.

 

I think that's very true. And it reminds me of. You know, again, I still know people who will print out a MapQuest set of directions and there is not a dang thing wrong with using MapQuest versus using Google maps versus using government versus looking at the sun.

 

If the sun gets you to figure out East and Western North and South do what you need to do, but again, you know, figure out what's right for you. Perfect.

 

Yeah, I think, I mean, this comes down to, you know, it's the curse of knowledge, right? So the, those of us that are further along, down the path of technology, or just engrossed in this stuff and think it's the greatest thing since sliced bread have really.

 

Gone down the rabbit hole of technology and software and AI and robotics and whatever. And we don't always bring everybody else along for the learning journey that we've been on. Right. And that could be years in the making in some cases, right. To, to understand everything that we do about it. You got to remember and go back to when you were just starting, what you wanted to know, what, what things clicked for you along that, and try to bring everyone else along that journey with you to.

 

To make it as clear as possible for everybody else. So they understand where you are. And I'm sure if you ask people on a job site, if you're bringing a stopwatch around and telling them why you're doing it, you're going to get a lot of helpful comments back on you know, what, what could be improved.

 

Right? A lot of people have a lot of opinions on different things and, you know, just by asking you will, you'll get a lot of feedback.

 

Absolutely. And you know, you could have the best solution in the world, and you may know that it's the best solution in the world. And the president of your company may agree with you.

 

That it's the best solution in the world. But if you don't implement it the right way, it will fail, it will fail. So make sure that you take the time to invest, because if you have the best solution in the world, then give it the time it needs.

 

We are approaching the end of our time here together. And I don't know about you, Matt, but I've thoroughly enjoyed this this conversation to hear what final parting words would you like to impart on our audience?

 

I would say that instead of thinking about this as. There's so much out there.

 

It's overwhelming. What do I do? I don't have time to do anything. Think of the next one thing you can do for all of our listeners out there. What's one thing you can do. It may be subscribed to a newsletter. It may be, you know, Google me, it may be connect with me on LinkedIn. It may be connect with, with mater Dylan.

 

It may be re listen to this podcast. Just pick one thing that you can do. And it's by picking these one little things at a time, that's how we change the industry. And that's how we change the world.

 

That's awesome to hear. I'm so glad that, that you came on. I wasn't in the round table, I was, I was watching it that day.

 

I called Dylan afterwards and said, man, we need to get her on the podcast because you have a way of speaking. You have a level of engagement that you can just. You can sense it and it’s; it's been an absolute

 

pleasure. Awesome. Well, thank you guys so much for the opportunity I told you. My favorite part of the end of a week is to be inspired.

 

And this was a lot of fun. I appreciate the time.

 

Guys go back and listen to this episode. Again, there's tons of nuggets on starting, starting small, right? We're not trying to solve the world in a day. Rome wasn't built in a day. We all know buildings are not built in a day, no matter what the owner might want.

 

So just knowing that. Wherever you are, is okay. Right. Wherever you are is perfectly fine. Just look at improving, adding that 1% each and every day. Again, whether that's just learning, whether it's implementing, whether it's sharing a story with your team, going to some conferences, and bringing some other people along or making that phone call back to somebody you met, whether it's virtually or in person, whenever we can do those again.

 

At a conference to kind of connect, be held accountable and to continue to move forward. So to hear it, thank you so much, guys, go connect with her on LinkedIn, she, and follow the podcast that Nika puts out and the team there to learn everything that you need to know about what's going on in the electrical industry.

 

And I'm sure that cover way more across the industry. So thank you all for watching and that's going to be this episode of the construction corner podcast.

 

Awesome. Thanks so much.

 

See ya.

The Welding Lord

All right. Hello and welcome to another episode of the construction corner podcast. I'm Dylan, I'm your host and our blue collar. Bad-ass cohost, Matt Vetter. Matt, what is going on?

 

It's a beautiful Friday, Dylan. It's snowy as hell here in Southeast Michigan, but it's a nice end to a long week.

 

And. We've got another guest joining us, the welding Lord, Zach Arnold of Utah.

 

And it's going to get a little colorful today, guys. Zach is a colorful character. He owns Arnold quality. Metalworks out of Logan, Utah, and. Just a great, great guy and MF CEO of Arnold, Callie metalwork. So Zach, welcome to the

 

show. Thanks guys. I appreciate you inviting me out today. Excited to do this.

 

Glad

 

to have you man. Glad to have you. So

 

before we got started here, we were talking about snow and what a like snow storm. It, so, I mean, it's, it's the beginning of February here and like, I got a foot and a half last week, the mountains up above me got seven feet of snow. And, you know, it's, it varies.

 

But Matt, you were saying that you got a few inches, and everything got shut down, but Zach what's, what's like a typical storm for you there in

 

Logan. So up here in Northern Utah, we're sitting at about. Wow. 4,500 feet above sea level. And so we're kind of up there in elevation. So if it's a serious snow storm, we may see a foot or a foot and a half of snow.

 

I think I remember. Two, maybe three times in my whole childhood school being canceled because of snow. And it was like two feet in a couple of hours. Right. First thing in the morning. So the plows can get out. I mean, it's like, I remember walking into the school bus stop in a foot and a half of snow, like, well, there's, maybe we're going to be a little late today, you know, like, but schools still go, and they don't cancel for snow around here.

 

Like nothing shuts down for snow around here unless it's real serious for sure.

 

I'm with you, man. I grew up in around Chicago land area. And then, and then in Michigan, obviously, and I could probably count on my hands, how many times school was canceled, but now I've got three school-aged children. And like I was saying before, we got a whopping four inches last night, they shut schools down.

 

It blows my mind. I mean, they, they started a couple of years ago, shutting the school down the night before because of the prediction.

 

If we think it might snow tomorrow, so a school's canceled.

 

It, it literally represents everything I think is wrong with society. We had, I had subs call in sick today because of four inches of snow.

 

They couldn't put their trucks out. And

 

yeah, I had guys out on a job site in a blizzard the other day. And I mean, a couple of weeks ago I was outside in a blizzard, just, I mean, well-done rails out in a blizzard, snowing sideways, and I like it. You're welcome to Utah. That's a fact of

 

life. We can all go down to Florida.

 

Yeah, jobs still got to get done, you know? Yeah,

 

definitely. My superintendent was a rare form of pissed off this morning and I actually had to go out there to try and calm him down because he's on the same mindset I am, but you know, we've got deadlines to meet and it's one thing if you get an accident.

 

Okay. But because it's snowy out, we all drive trucks. But one day won't kill us, right.

 

Or

 

real button got to hit that four wheel button to make sure you can go put some new tires on.

 

Yep. I think it's fun to be out, frankly, but.

 

Yeah, I love sliding around corners and you know, practicing my drifting and donuts in the parking lot.

 

You know, it's one of my favorites. Absolutely.

 

I'm the first one to turn off the traction control and let's go on. I do. And I get in the truck, hit that button. Turn that shit off, man.

 

Awesome.

 

Zach, I guess one of the first, you know, big questions, changing topics here a little bit is, you know, what got you into welding?

 

Yeah. So I, when I was 16 years old, I was, you know, I was big into riding my bike BMX street, biking, that type of thing. And I didn't really have a path of what I wanted to do with my life. And one day I was sitting down in my mom's basement and I was watching TV and I saw this TV show. It was called Fuck.

 

What was it called? It was Jesse James. He built a custom shopper from just raw materials and then he wrote it to Sturgis a motorcycle mania. That's what it was on the discovery channel. And I watched that, and I was like, Holy shit. That's what I want to do is my life. I want to build cool things out of metal.

 

And so I signed up for welding classes down at the local technical school. And I was fortunate that my high school allowed me to go take welding classes in my junior and senior year. And so I took. Oh, I think I did five trimesters’ worth in those two years of welding. And then I got a full-time scholarship, or they did like a senior scholarship for a few of the seniors that were graduating to go full-time and finish out the program.

 

So I did that and finished, and then. And got into welding. Like the day I graduated, and my teacher says, Hey, do you have a job? Well, I'm delivering pizzas. He's like, cool, go visit this weld shop. They're going to hire you. And so I was like, okay, cool. Went out and interviewed the old man that interviewed me.

 

He's like as soon as you're going to have to cut your hair off. Cause I had hair down to here and piercings in my face, you know, as a punk ass kid and. He's like, well, we might have to make you cut your hair. And then the guy that actually owned it, he's like, we don't give a shit if he got long hair, man, like, can you, well, and so that was how I got into metal working and welding.

 

And then I, I worked for about 15 years in the industry. Before I decided to start my own business, which had kind of always been a thought of mine. Like when I decided I was going to do welding I knew I wasn't going to always do it for someone else. I was eventually going to get into just doing it for myself or for my company.

 

And then that's kind of grown into now. It's teaching other people how to weld. Like I. I rarely weld anymore. Now I'm just running my business.

 

That's awesome, man. So going back to the, to your high school start, did you actually get high school credits for the welding classes?

 

Yes. So, I mean, like my senior year, I think I took jewelry three times, so I was making rings and stuff, you know, working with metal and then I'd go over and I do welding for half the day.

 

And so, I mean, I was just like playing with metal for the last year that I was in school. And yeah, I mean, credit, I graduated early and then just started working. That's

 

awesome. I love that in the, in the short time that I've been co-hosting with Dylan, we probably talk about this sort of thing. I don't know, every episode.

 

And it just that sort of stuff wasn't around when I was coming up through high school and, you know, voc-tech was, was auto shop and that, that was it. And, you know, we don't need to re rehash all my bitching and moaning about the problems in the industry. But I think if, if more schools got on board with stuff like what you went through and we had Andy's Zeller a week or so ago, and he had, you know, a similar, similar kind of vocational program, but he was on the design side, the BIM side.

 

But if more places got on board with that sort of thing, We wouldn't have this problem in the trades that we have today.

 

Yeah, absolutely. I mean, it seems to me that over about the last 20 years or so the school system has really pushed the idea that technical or vocational schools are for. People who can't necessarily get into a four-year college.

 

And that the path to success is to go to a four year college, get yourself a degree. And then because of that little piece of paper, someone's going to give you a job. But I mean, all these people, I, how many times have you heard of people that have like a fucking master's degree and their manager at McDonald's?

 

You know, and like 200 grand in debt. I'm like, dude, I, I got a scholarship. I think I paid 300 bucks for my books, you know? And it's like, and that was all my investment in school. And then on the job training, you know, and you can make good money in skilled trades. There's lots of money to be made. And there's also a lot of satisfaction to be taken from creating things with your hands in mind.

 

I have, so a couple of questions in there. One, I want to go back to like the jewelry thing cause like jewelers make a ton of money.

 

Yeah. Easy Marcos on that.

 

Yeah. Yeah. And just, well, in like the skill, the craftsmanship, when you're dealing with stuff, that's that tiny, you know, like you're under a microscope and magnifying glass to.

 

To do all of it, but like how many people out of your, your school, you know, that, that were in those classes went and, and made that a

 

career? I, I honestly don't think it's many, you know, it's like, there's, I there's actually one guy that he's my vice president of business development and we met in welding school.

 

You know, he went to a different high school, but the high schools around here, they all allow the kids to go to this technical college during high school and start learning. And so I met him and then didn't see him for 10 years. He continued down the same path as I did. And so it's, I'd say it's a small percentage.

 

You know, like the average age of welders now is 58 and a half years old. Wow. And so, yeah, I mean, it's an old industry, as far as the people that are actually working in it. Cause there's just not a lot of kids or younger people that are getting into it. You know, why would you, if you're told, Hey, you got to go and get a degree and you should sit in front of a computer and do something working that way, you know, that you don't want to do hard, physical, dangerous, and dirty, you know, I guess it's not really glamorous to be a welder.

 

Like the work is brutal, right? But I it's super fucking fulfilling to do it. You know? So

 

this is the other side of things that I really want to talk about is so as a, as a welder, you went through school, got maybe some certificate, or graduated, right. Through that, what did you make when you started?

 

My first welding job, I was making nine bucks an hour and I did that job.

 

I was doing structural steel erection. I was doing structural steel fabrication and welding, and I was doing some ornamental railings welding and installation as well. So I was just kinda like the new guy. I spent a lot of time with a grinder in my hand. Spent a lot of time, like for the first month I just went with this old timer and he's like, okay.

 

Give me that give me that Jimmy, that I don't mean that was like a cent of his conversation was like, grab that for me, grab that for me. Like, don't even talk to me on the ride, up to the job site in the morning, just like, give me that, give me that. And it took him probably a month, month, and a half to warm up to had actually talked to me, you know?

 

And so it's like, that was kind of my initial exposure. And then I decided I didn't much care for working out in the field because it was nice for a month in the spring and a month in the fall. And other than that, it was like hotter than hell or it's, you know, a snow storm and your gloves are soaked and frozen within the first five minutes you get on the job site.

 

So I was like, yeah, I want to get into a climate control shop. And so I moved out of that into a different shop and I think I got hired on at $11 an hour at that next place. After probably six months, I got a raise to $12 an hour. And then I started really developing my TIG welding skills, which is more of the specialty welding.

 

Started welding a lot of aluminum. And at that point I went to my supervisor and I was like, look. I, I don't like this shop that much, and I'd be totally willing to go to another shops. That'll pay me, you know, 15 bucks an hour to do this exact same work. So, you know, what are you going to do? And so they gave me a raise to 16 bucks an hour.

 

And I did that for a while. I ended up moving to a different shop. I worked my way up to like 18 bucks an hour. My final welding job that I had before I started my company. I was making 27 bucks an hour, which in Logan, Utah was a good paying job. You know, we got a lower cost of living here. And so it was like, it was a comfortable living.

 

My wife didn't have to work. We've got four kids. So it wasn't like we're a small family, you know, but I made enough money for us to live off of doing that, you know, and then it was just the like, Hey, I'm. Tired of working for other people. I'm tired of building someone else's dream. So I gotta start building mine, you know?

 

Yeah. So there's a couple of things I really want to hit on in here and then go into some other financials and kind of your, your journey too, as a business owner. But the big thing that you know, for, for some of you out there, these numbers might not seem like crazy. You also have to remember, there's no debt, right?

 

You started working at 18 or 17 whenever you graduate with no debt, you know, 300 bucks for books, which is cash, right? So no debt. Even okay. Take the four years of somebody going to college at even 30 grand a year, you know, so there's $120,000, you know, that you're to the good plus whatever you made over those four years, let's say you made 120 grand over the same four years.

 

Right? So now you're 250 a year, a quarter million dollars to the good. Of somebody that went to college and then, and then plus whatever you're doing now, and your earnings are higher through that. And so everything, you know, it's quarter million plus in the same four years, or right after graduation, you're probably a half a million to the good.

 

Right. So this is the thing to understand, even though those numbers don't sound like crazy, right? You were you're 18, right. Is good enough to have a good time. By the time you turn 21, you can afford some beer on the weekend, probably before that. But we won't, you know, like that's the, that's the type of thing, right?

 

You had enough money to drive around. You were, you know, you could support yourself. Right. And that's, that's the biggest thing that I want to push here is like, Even though, like for some of those numbers and I'm sure like today, like starting salaries are much, much higher for welders, but like having that skill, you know, one is going to be with you for a lifetime, right?

 

If the average age is 57 and a half 58 years old. So now you're in it for 40 years, right? From 18 to 58, 40 years of working, making good money. And no debt, right? And you have a skill, you can build shit at your house, do all that type of stuff, right. Help your buddies out on the weekend, you know, put their trailer back together that they broke or whatever.

 

Like, absolutely. This is what I want to really push here is. You know, tr like I went, I did the school thing, right. I'm an engineer. I got the good degrees, all that shit. But like, you know, through that, like I picked up debt like any, you know, other good college kid, but it's knowing that there are other opportunities, right?

 

Like, I've said this before. Like I'm not the most mechanically inclined guy. I know that. Right. But like math and science and computers and all that stuff is my skillset. You're, you know, super good with your hands and you know, what you want to do at an early age. And I think that it's so important that all of us like.

 

Understand what you're good at, right. If you can do math and science and all that stuff. Great. Go, go that side of it. If you know that you're, you love fixing shit and, you know, welding and putting stuff together, tearing it down and putting it back, do that, right? Like don't there. And there's plenty of great examples of people that have fantastic jobs, fantastic careers in, in doing all this.

 

And I just want to, you know, I know we emphasize this point every single time, but it's, it's worth repeating because I think not enough people understand that there's. There's people like yourself and we'll have more and more of them on that are skilled craftsman. Right. And you can appreciate skilled and quality craftsmanship when you see it.

 

And this goes for anything from woodworking to metal, to art through the, you can appreciate it. That that in and of itself is the blue collar Bad ass right. You, you found something, you were passionate about, you exploited it. You blazed your own career path. And I would correct me if I'm wrong, but I would almost guarantee if you didn't start your own shop, had you kept working for someone else?

 

I would bet you could walk out to any shop ever and have a job in minutes. Right? You created these skills that most people don't have, you know, and that's the beauty of it.

 

A hundred percent correct. I mean, I, and that really alleviates a lot of like potential stress as far as the unknown, because what I know is if things were to go terrible in my business and we had to shut down this afternoon, I could have a new job that paid me 25 bucks an hour to start in on.

 

So it's like, what do I really have to worry about? My life would change a little bit, you know, and I'd have to go on and follow someone else's rules, but yeah. Ultimately, like I wouldn't have any issue finding gainful employment, like zero at all. It might not be ideal, but I'd have a new job, you know, this day, the same day.

 

And that's a huge level of comfort, right? I mean, not, not all industries can say that there's a lot of, there's a lot of career choices that, you know, if you get bagged one day at work, you might be pretty far down in your luck for a long time, you know, but, but construction all across construction. Like you said you could walk out and go drink a beer and then, you know, drop a tear tonight and start on the new cruise tomorrow.

 

Yeah. I mean, I can't tell you how many times I've heard people that are like, Oh yeah, I just left this job after four years to go work for this company. Cause they offered me $1 more per hour. What the fuck are you talking about man? But yeah, that's like, that's totally it. People are like, Hey, I've got to.

 

Skilled trade. You know if you don't treat me right. I'll just go somewhere else. Yup.

 

And there's opportunity out there for that, which is, which is absolutely right. So when, when did you actually start Arnold quality? Metalworks

 

I started it four years ago. So it's actually almost to the day, four years ago.

 

It was February of 2017 and my wife was pregnant with our third kid, our third daughter, and I had a good job, you know, as a fabrication supervisor. Running my own department. There was potential for me to grow within that company as well, but I just got to the point where, like I had always worked early.

 

I'd always missed seeing my kids. I was gone to work before they woke up. I'd get home just before dinner. He was hanging out for an hour maybe, and then put them to bed. And like, that was all the interaction I got with my kids. And so why am I found out my wife was pregnant with our third daughter? I was like, look, something's got to change.

 

Like I can't just keep doing what I have been doing. I, even though I had a good. Good job. I wasn't being challenged. I wasn't growing, I wasn't learning, you know, I was feeling very stagnant and it drove me nuts. Like I was losing my shit. I was like getting to the point where I was like, maybe I'm just going to quit welding and go and try something else.

 

Because like, I don't know what else to do. You know, like I'm not being challenged here. I'm not, I'm not growing as a person, you know? And so I. It, when I found out she was pregnant, I was like, okay. I'm going to quit my job and start my own weld shop. And that was like, she was like, well, okay. Cause I mean, I'd tried that a few times before, like tossing out the idea, Hey, maybe I'll just quit and start my own shop, you know, there's money to be made.

 

And I finally, like, I guess, broke her down enough that she was like, fine. Like, you're just gonna do whatever you're going to do anyways. So just fucking do it. And so I really didn't have a business plan. I didn't have a clientele list. All I had was a dream and luckily, I owned my house. So I refinanced it did a cash out mortgage took about $80,000 out and I used $40,000 to start up the business and the other 40,000 to live off for the first year, year and a half.

 

And just bootstrapped the business. I started in my two car garage at my house with one TIG welder. And a little table, a little saw. And after about six months, I had filled up my garage with equipment to the point where I had about open space for maybe like a VW bug. And that was my open working space.

 

I was like, shit, winter's coming. And it's going to be 10 degrees outside. If I have to put something on my saw the garage door has to be open. And so at that point I started looking for a new shop. I was talking with my grandpa and told him, Hey, I'm looking for a bigger shop. And he says, Oh, Hey, well, the family owns this building and it's not being used right now.

 

I'll call your cousin. He's managing it. And I was like, Holy shit. And so I call him up and he's like, yeah, it's just it's just being used as like storage right now. And a couple people have a little eBay business where they're selling stuff. Excuse me. And so I moved into about a thousand square feet of this building that I'm in now.

 

And after a year I had grown into the full 7,000 square feet of the shop. I got into doing commercial work. Like at first, I was just building rails for little old ladies. And it was like, what, what little old lady am I going to meet this month? Who's going to pay me. To build a rail for a front porch so that she doesn't slip and fall down the stairs.

 

And like, that's how I'm going to continue growing for this month, you know, like, and so I do one or two rail jobs a month and it was like, it was slow and it was stressful. And one morning I'm talking with my wife and I was like, you know, I am I'm getting really frustrated. I've like, I'm really good now at landing three to $5,000 jobs, but I'm never going to get where I want to get to with three to $5,000 jobs.

 

There's just not enough days in the year to do this. And so I said, I'm going to start landing 50 and hundred thousand dollar jobs. Like that's what I'm going to do. I'm going to do it a few months while it wasn't even a few months later, probably three weeks later, I went to a poker game over at my buddy's house.

 

He just hits me up. Hey, I'm having a poker game. Do you want to come out? Sure man. Like I, you know, I'm kind of a home body. Most of the time we'll wanna hang out with my family. I was like, yeah. Okay. I'll do it. It was like Friday night, go out. And I ended up meeting this guy there. Who's also a local welder and we kind of hit it off.

 

Cause he was working at a shop that I used to work at and that I fucking hated. And he all, he also hated it, you know? So it was like, Hey yeah, fuck that place. We both hate that place. And A few weeks after that, he hits me up and he says, Hey, I've got an associate that works for a bigger shop. That's looking for smaller shops to sub out parts of their contracts that they get.

 

Do you want to meet this guy? And I was like, yeah, yeah, let's go meet him. You know, I want to grow my business. So at this point, my business is me. So me and this guy, his name's Mike he's now my VP of operations. He was the first guy that I hired. We go and we meet with this other guy. And he says, well, what I need is 2,500 linear feet of brushed stainless guardrails for the salt Lake city airport.

 

Or like the fuck did this dude just say, cause I mean, at that point, my largest rail contract was like 40 feet of mild steel rails for an old ladies board, you know? And so I'm like 2,500 feet of brush stainless. Like yeah, let's do it. You know? And so we, me and Mike were chatting and he's like, I'll quit.

 

I'll come work with you, like let's do this. And so, yeah, dude, let's do it. And so we took on, it ended up being about a half million dollar contract when all of a sudden Dawn and we got involved with that. We started hiring people like crazy. I mean, over the course of that year, we grew from just myself to, I think we finished out with five guys at the end of the year, by the way.

 

And of the following year, we’d grown to 10 guys we're sitting at about 13 right now and pushing to grow to 60 this year. And so it's been a wild couple of years, a lot of change, very rapidly, you know, to the point where like about, it's been almost two years ago now, I was like, Hey, I can't work in the shop anymore.

 

I have to run the business. Like I, I can't try and split my time between the two because I'm being ineffective in both places.

 

That is tremendous, man. That, that growth is amazing. I love hearing these stories. Do you so do you guys primarily focus on, on miscellaneous steel?

 

So we're kind of right now, our niche that we've found is in ornamental metals specifically non-ferrous and so aluminum glass.

 

Stainless steel, bronze. Those are the main ones that we've been focusing on. We do a little bit of mile steel powder coat and stuff. Generally. We're more inclined to do that if it has like glass panels in it. So for instance, where I. We're in the middle of a project right now for the St. Regis hotel in park city, they built seven private condominiums, and we're doing a bunch of glass balcony rails for the front of the building.

 

And so that's one we've been working on for the past few months.

 

Fair enough questions that just for everyone out there that doesn't weld for a living is when you talk stainless, you know, in 2,500 linear feet, what. Make stainless. So you know, different in welding and what makes it like a harder metal to, to work with and like your normal steel or anything else, right.

 

To where this is a huge project and a big undertaking.

 

Yes. So with stainless steel, it. It's generally presented in the raw state and like a brush form. And so you put a surface finish onto the metal and then. Beyond that point. You've gotta be careful with it because you've established this really nice looking grain and the material, whereas with mild steel and, and you can grind all over that, it doesn't really matter.

 

You're gonna spray primer on it. You're going to spray powder coat or paint over the top of it. And it's going to hide a lot of those inconsistencies. But with stainless it's what you see is what you get. You know, it's like, there's no way to hide if there's a scratch that goes across the grain on it. Same thing with bronze, which scratches incredibly easily.

 

But stainless, the other thing is if you weld it too hot, then you can burn out the nickel and the chromium in it, which is essentially what gives it its stainless properties. And so you can burn the metal and ruin it so that you're going to get corrosion. And you're not going to have that nice surface finish.

 

You're going to end up with rust on it. Which just looks terrible when you got that nice, bright, shiny stuff. Silver material. And then the other aspect of it is a stainless is quite a bit more expensive, just the raw materials than a mild steel is. And then by the time you add in the polishing as well because we polished everything in house.

 

There was another like $75,000 worth of polishing just to take the raw materials, which there was $300,000 worth of raw material on that project. So it was damn near $400,000 worth of raw material by the time it's polished and just ready to be built into rails. You know, so it's like, it's, the stakes are higher.

 

It's more specialized. It's easier to fuck up. Stainless likes to move a lot when you weld it. And so there was a lot of trial and error. There was a lot of figuring of how to make these work so that they would look good after you're done. Because when you heat up metal, it. Expands. And then when it cools it contracts, but it always contracts more than it expands.

 

So every time it goes through a heating and cooling cycle, it's going to shrink a little bit. So if you have a piece of plate like this, and it has a rail baluster that comes in on this bottom side and you're welding around that bottom side, right. That bottom side of the piece of metal just got smaller.

 

And so it pulls down like this and so compensating with bath bowing before you well, so that after it Wells and pulls, it pulls into straight is one of the things that we had to do or post-weld straightening is another thing that you can do by applying heat to the opposite side afterwards. But with stainless, once again, it's really easy to burn it and essentially ruined that corrosion protection.

 

But it has.

 

So this is the other thing, guys, right? Like when an expert actually talks about what they do, you know, that all comes through. Right. And these, like, that's, there's a ton of nuance in that. Right. And the heating, the cooling, you know, does it sit right? How long does it sit? The metals and material like your You're half metallurgist by the time you're done with this.

 

Absolutely. Yes. It's critical. You have to learn about the materials that you work with and how they behave because. Metals behave differently to welding aluminum versus welding, mild steel or stainless are like two different ball games. I mean, welding aluminum.

 

There's a lot of people that are fairly good steel welders, and they try and weld aluminum and they just can't do it because it has different mechanical properties. It has different physical properties. It has different melting points. There's different there. Even the oxide layers on them. I affect the metal in different ways.

 

So for instance, what gives stainless it's staying less ability or I corrosion inhibition is that it? I, if you clean it and you put it into a clean state and then allow it to be exposed to oxygen, the chromium. Reacts with the oxygen in the air and forms a thin layer of chromium oxide, which is mostly clear.

 

It's got a little bit of a shine to it, so you can see they call it passivation and it's a naturally occurring phenomenon, but a lot of people will act like it's some special thing that they do to their stainless. Oh yeah. We'll provide it. And it'll be passive.  all that means is that you cleaned it and let it sit there for 48 hours.

 

And so it grows this oxide layer that is corrosion resistant. So if you don't allow it to form that chromium oxide layer, then it's going to be open to corrosion. And that's when, like, if you've ever seen a stainless rail that has rust around the weld. So that's because it wasn't cleaned properly.

 

Post-weld so it was aluminum, aluminum oxide. Melts at about 3000 degrees Fahrenheit, but aluminum itself melts at about 1,250 degrees. And so what you can get, if you don't understand that is you can be heating up your piece of metal and the insight can be totally molten. At 1,250 degrees, while all of a sudden you get that surface oxide layer to 3000 degrees and it melts.

 

And all of a sudden, the entire piece just goes and disappears on you because that's another thing aluminum will not support its own weight at melting temperature, but steel will support its own weight at melting temperature. And so it's like, it's all of these little tiny things that you learn through experience.

 

You know, it's like, I've seen guys right. Preheating an aluminum beam and go to weld on it. And all of a sudden, the beam just goes and melts into a pile on the floor. And they're like, what the hell just happened? You know, that was an expensive chunk of metal. Well, you didn't understand the metal. You didn't understand how to work it.

 

You don't understand, you know, like the use of heat sinks to suck out some of that heat so that you don't overheat it or mechanically removing the oxide layer so that you don't have to Mel, through that 3000 degree melting point material to get to. The softer aluminum that melts at a lower temperature,

 

man, I, you are, you're definitely an expert in this field and in all things, welding, and metal and, and I, I can appreciate the hell out of that.

 

That's, that's really cool to hear, you know, it's kinda, I get it. It's like the carpenter, you know, that's, my background is in carpentry and you, you know, How different species of would react, you know, how different, you know, different wood products be plywood or, or to buy or lineal. So I, I get the, the mindset anyways.

 

I don't know anything about metal. Welding is one of the few things I've never even tried. Maybe someday you can show me, but so absolutely. So you're a genius in metal,

 

right? That's why I'm the welding Lord, man. You're the

 

welding. Tell me about the, tell us about the transition though, from going from, from welding Lord genius and metal to now business owner.

 

How, how was that in business owner with now a shit ton of employees?

 

Yeah, that that was a wild process for me. What happened was we ended up getting involved with building some bronze rails for some Mormon temples and. One of the temples was in Port-au-Prince Haiti. And so I went down to Haiti for two weeks to work on the install of these rails that we had built.

 

And while I was gone, I had to turn over control of my shop to my guy, Mike. Cause I was like, I, you know, you gotta run the shop cause I'm going to be in a different country. And so when I came back. I came out into the shop and I was like, you guys are just doing this, like, and I don't need to be here. I'm going to transition into just running the business.

 

Like, I'm just going to be the motherfucking CEO from now on, instead of Zach, the welder sometimes, and Zach, the motherfucking CEO for the second half of the day, or back and forth all day long, you know So for me, it was an identity shift because I, for the previous decade, almost a decade and a half, I had identified myself by what I did.

 

I would introduce myself as, Hey, I'm Zack, I'm the best welder you've ever met. And I'll take the Pepsi challenge on that. You know, like I wasn't scared because I knew my skill set. You know, I knew my level of mastery that I had over my craft. And so it was literally built into my identity, Zach, the welder, like that's who I was.

 

And so when I made that change, that transition into working in the office and doing human resources and doing sales and doing all of these other things that are involved with operating a business. I had to make an identity shift. I couldn't be Zach the welder anymore, you know? And so what I did was I did 75 hard and with the intention of changing who I was as a person, I was like, you know, I, I also went through an exercise.

 

Beforehand of deciding who I was going to be, who this next character in my life was going to be. Zach, the motherfucking CEO. How did that guy act? How did he think, how did he talk to other people? What sort of impact as you make on people when he would meet with them? Like, I. Intentionally designed all of those things, knowing like I'm not the person that I need to be to lead this company to where I want it to go.

 

So I'm going to have to change who I am as a person in order to be able to take this too. Where I want it to go. And so at that point I worked my way through 75 hard. I did phase one. I did phase two. I did phase three, completed live hard May 4th of last year, last week, I just finished up phase two of my second time through the program.

 

And so that was the key. For me was making that mental shift and it's, I mean, I'm a radically different person today than I was a year ago than I was two years ago, three years ago, four years ago. I mean, the last year I felt like I lived 10 years in a single year, which set a new benchmark for me, like, well, shit.

 

Now the water levels here. How do I live a decade worth of life every year from now on?

 

I love it.

 

You've done 75 hard. Now you've done the whole program one and a half times, which is mind blowing. We we've talked about the program a bit on here before I, I did 75 hard and that's it. I have yet to start phase one and anything else, but that alone for anyone who doesn't know about it, I would suggest you look it up because.

 

The commitment and the level of, of mental, not as mental toughness, mental bad-ass newness that you have to have to do what this man has just told us he did is, is outstanding. So hats off to you just for that part of it, let alone successful business. In the meantime.

 

Thank you. I appreciate that. Yeah. I mean like

 

it's phase one can break you.

 

Like that's the, that's the hardest phase of, of all of them. Like I, I try

 

to do that. I did phase three phase one looked like a fucking cakewalk. That's true.

 

Yeah, like I try to do too much on the second term around phase one where I try to do like the calendar club and running, you know, my, you know, whatever day it is that Tony and I made it to like day 20 before just like broke.

 

The second time around on welfare. But through that, like the, it, some of this stuff like hit the emotion through, this is like a sign for how much he was happy. Well, how much you know, just how much Like grown through all of this is tremendous, right? From, from being in your, for welding and like saying, Hey, I want to go and do a business, right.

 

For somebody you were working for somebody else. And then just say, Hey, like I'm not growing here. I'm not developing anything. And then to go and do your own thing to then say, Hey, I'm not, I'm never going to make this in three and $5,000 jobs. Right. Which for a lot of people is pretty good. Right? You do that over a year.

 

Like that's living, you work a few hours a week and, you know, drink beer. People are like super happy with that in, in life. Right. But to say that you want it more to, to really pull on a lot of those opportunities to, to chase that, to say yes, right. To a random poker game. To a random thing to a random meeting.

 

Right. That, but all because you said that you wanted to land 50, a hundred thousand dollar jobs and then, you know, through the rest of this, right, like you, you said yes to this thing had to go to Haiti for, you know, weeks on end, right. Foreign country. And, and do all this work. You know that again, saying yes to opportunity.

 

I think most people pass that by they don't, they don't say yes, they don't chase that opportunity. And then they don't do other things that, that challenge themselves. You know, some people from the outside looking at this might see, like, I was just a welder or whatever, but like, man, the amount of like personal development and growth that you've done just in the last year through 75 hard is like, More than most people do in their lifetimes.

 

So to me, I see someone that wants to grow that is willing to change that has become an expert in their craft and is looking to not only continue to be the expert in their craft. Right. But to, to level that up, to, to own a business, to teach other people how to do stuff, to build a team of people that, that are experts in their craft.

 

Right. So it's not just a one man shop. It's a team of, of welding wards. Right. That's what you're creating and to. And this is this in and of itself is the thing that I think most people, I don't care what industry you're in, whether you're in construction or not, that people do not, you know, when you see it in construction, especially because it shows in the quality work, the thing that they're putting out is, you know, are you good?

 

Right? Do you have a quality product? You take pride in what you do, but then the transition that you have gone through in. Being somebody to not only be the master of your craft, but to be the teacher of other masters of their craft. That is a hard shift to make, because you want to, like you said, you tied your identity to being great at what you do.

 

And I think that. Do you, I mean, like S kudos on all this stuff. Like, I love talking to you, Zach, and the thing like you're so teachable, right? I remember being in St. Louis at the live in October and the Charles Covey, which I need to reach out and have him on, but you, we were sitting in that room and you asked so many questions.

 

Next thing, you know, you've done basically everything that they said, right? You're, you're teachable. You want to learn, you want to grow, you want to improve everything that you do. And I think if anybody takes anything away from this, and I mean, we're still going to go here, but you, you have to take away these things, right?

 

You have to be willing to grow. You have to be willing to seize opportunity. You have to be willing to change your identity, change your mindset and to. To know what you want. Right? You knew you wanted bigger jobs; you knew you wanted to build a team. You knew you wanted a decade in a year. And I think most people don't ever think first about what they want.

 

They don't know who they want to be or what that guy does. So just super kudos to you, man. This is, this is hats off and in everything that you've, you've done and you've become over the last

 

few years. Well, thanks, Dylan. I really appreciate that. It's a, it's been a wild journey, you know, it's like, I, one of the great benefits of 75 heart is all the books that you get to read as a result of that.

 

And so, I mean, I've read more books in the last three years than I read in the entire rest of my life put together. And they're all focused around me becoming a better person, becoming a better version of myself, you know? Cause it's like, I. I've got this dichotomy where I know that I'm a bad-ass, but I also know I'm not shit, you know?

 

And so it's like, yeah, I may be a bad-ass in some areas, but until I'm the best in every area, am I really that good? You know, I don't think so. I think there's still a lot of room for improvement. There's still a long way for me to go. I look in the mirror every day and go, is that the motherfucker that I'm supposed to be?

 

No, not quiet. Like I'm on the path, but I'm not there yet. So I still keep pushing. I still have to keep going.

 

And that's the, that's the true path of the entrepreneur, right? Especially the tradesman entrepreneur is you're, you're never at the top. You can always get better and to see that and recognize it, most people can't do that.

 

That's why most people don't do what you do or, or what Dylan does or what I do, you know? And it's, it's just a different mentality and it's, it's fun to have these conversations and, you know, I hope people are listening because. You know, we, we talk a lot about, about youth and we, we kind of started today with that, with, you know, what you went through in high school.

 

And, you know, I look at my three boys and if they don't want to go the college route, I really hope they watch this podcast someday and, and recognize that there's, there's other really easy, not easy, but there's other paths out there where you can blaze your own trail. You can, you can make it, you can do whatever it is you want.

 

You just got to start up here. Yeah, you got to have that mental toughness. You gotta be willing to sweat and bleed and, and, and when you gotta be willing to die for it, but once you hit to that, it gets to that point. There's a lot that's out there that you can do.

 

Yeah, you're absolutely right, man. I mean, it's, the trades are one of the few things where you can start as someone with zero experience gained the skills, gained the experience, start your own company, and become a millionaire, multimillionaire, or billionaire.

 

You know, it's like the story is as old as time it's been going on over and over and over again, it happens every day. You know, the opportunities are there and like you guys hit on. Saying yes to opportunities. That's really what makes the difference. I mean, opportunities are all around us, but it's picking and choosing which ones we want to move on.

 

And the way that you know, which ones to say yes to is by knowing where you're trying to go. You know, if you know where you're trying to get to, then an opportunity comes up. Yeah. Now, is this opportunity going to take me towards my destination? Or is this a good idea for you saying, Hey, what about this?

 

So what about this? You know, cause it's, you'll get that constantly. Oh, Hey, the more you open yourself to opportunity, the more you'll see them everywhere, but you've got limited time and energy. So you have to focus on what it is that you're really trying to accomplish and make sure that those. Opportunities are in blind with where you're trying to go.

 

And then you say, yes, you know, say yes, and figure out how to do it. That's I, first year I was in business. I heard that quote from Richard Branson and I embraced it, you know, and for me, like one of my top six human needs is growth. I have to grow. If I'm not growing, if I'm not changing, then I must be dying.

 

You know, I, I look at life like it's a treadmill. As long as you're walking, you can make forward progress. As soon as you stop, you're not staying in the same spot. You're going backwards. You know, if you stop pushing the Boulder up the Hill, that thing rolls back down such great analogies. And the next thing that I kind of want to hit on, you know, through this and in continuing this train of thought, is that poster that's right?

 

Yeah.

 

Helped really align you your company and everything that you do.

 

Yeah. So for me, I was fortunate to learn about core values at my last job before I started this company. And so I became aware of them, which that's like the first step is becoming aware that core values are something that everybody has, but are you being intentional with them?

 

And so when I started the company, I defined what my core values is just for me as a person where, and so it's. My honor doing the right thing, even if it's the hard choice or pride taking pride in the things that we do and the things that we're able to accomplish through force of will.

 

Sorry, respect, you know, for all of our daily interactions for the work that we do, discipline, you know, discipline is what keeps us moving forward. It's what keeps us on track. It's the oil that keeps our finely tuned machine moving forward. Ingenuity, we solve problems. You know, we're not here to make excuses.

 

We're not here to do anything other than solve situations. And industriousness, we work hard. We're here to work, you know, and then attention to detail. Because it's all of the little, tiny things that add up to the big things. So I defined those for myself. I made banners, I put it up visually before I had ever even hired anybody.

 

You know, I defined this as who I am as a person. This is what my company's about. This is the culture that we're going to have. And. You know, for me, I, I've never been a quote unquote normal person, you know, it's like, I've always kind of done my own thing and blaze my own path. I wanted to just be who I am.

 

And so this is, you know, having your own companies and amazing opportunity to just be whoever it is that you are.

 

I love that. And, you know, core values have become really kind of a catch phrase in the last few years. I think there's a lot of corporations that, you know, have, have them pasted on their front window or up in their conference room.

 

But it's, it's the companies that truly succeed are the ones that are taking those core values. And it's not just a poster, your posters, possum. But, but you're utilizing it, you know? Right. You're, you're pushing that into your guys, into your, your employees. You're pushing that into your ranks of leadership.

 

You embody it. Right. And so, and, and everyone grows and everyone feeds on that energy. You create. Once you finally recognize what those values are and you, you nailed it. Everybody has them. Everybody stands for something. You may, you may not know what it is yet. You may not like it when you find out. But, but you gotta do that, that soul searching at some point in life to, to determine what those are and, and what it is you really stand for.

 

And before you do that, you can't be successful in business. Not like what you're seeing now. You know, it doesn't happen cause it's, it's, it's too accidental if you don't do it.

 

Yeah. I mean, culture is a, in this crazy thing that a lot of people try to define. And a lot of people, it seems like a lot of people don't put the value on it that they should, and they don't choose to control it in an active way.

 

And so this was another thing that I was fortunate to learn at my last job was they started. Introducing this concept of culture. And as a supervisor, I went around, I started asking people like, Hey, what do you think the culture of this company is? And the most common answer I got back was I think it's pretty good, you know?

 

And it was like, okay, cool. Like, so what this means is nobody has any idea what the fuck culture even means. And so the way that I came to define it was culture is like this. Organic entity that is compromised of all of the actions, thoughts, mindset of everybody within the organization. And so if you don't define what that culture is going to be, it's just going to be this thing that grows based off of.

 

Essentially, whoever is the most dominant personality, you know? And so it's like if you have a dominant personality type come in and you haven't defined what your culture is, your culture is going to become whatever that person decides the culture is. And so for me, being a dominant personality type, I went ahead and said, this is who we are as a company.

 

Either you fit with this culture or you don't fit with this culture. And it's fine if you don't, you just can't do it here. Yeah. Almost. It's like where if you're trying to make an elite group of people, you have to understand that average people won't cut it. You and you can't be afraid to call out people for being average.

 

You can't be afraid to be selective. You can't be afraid to cut people off of the team because they don't meet the standard. You know, it's like, look at Navy seal training. Those dudes have a quarter of the people that apply that actually make it through. And so it's the same concept. If you want to be elite, if you want to be the best of the best, it's going to take extraordinary effort and it's going to take extraordinary people that are willing to put forth the effort required.

 

Mediocrity has a place. And there there's plenty of mediocre companies out there. There's plenty of, you know, really big construction companies where you could go get a job and, and you could find every gray corner and every shadow, and you could hide there, and you could build a career doing that. And then there's not necessarily anything wrong with that.

 

But to do the type of work that you're doing, that that we're doing, mediocrity has no place here. You have to always be striving for you gotta be trying to attain perfection. Right. You'll never get it, but if you stop running that race and you start sliding back into mediocrity, again, you can't do the things that you really want to do in this industry.

 

You have to always have that mindset and just charging forward and chasing the dream.

 

Yeah, I agree. Completely.

 

And with that, you know, one of the things that along with culture that. I don't know if it always gets enough limelight, you know, it does in our world. Right. And in personal development and the people that we listen to and follow, but an intent, right?

 

That your intent, your heart, your, you know, Intentions are in the right place. You know, you're trying to do the right thing and sometimes you might fall short, right? Sometimes it might not land the exact right way. But I think, you know, a lot of people understand where you're coming from, where your heart's at, and if you screw up, you own it, you come back and, you know, how can we make this right?

 

And usually, you know, it ends up for the best. There's always going to be one jackass that doesn't fall through on that. But usually, you know, intent is the. Is a cornerstone that I think a lot of people miss or don't give themselves credit for, for, you know, their heart being in the right place. And it might take a little longer to get there, right.

 

For your, for your company to get off the ground. But knowing that your intent and your heart is in the right place, I think goes a really long way. And, and not enough people give themselves kind of credit for, for

 

that intent.

 

Good before we get too far. I know we're getting towards the end here, but I gotta tell you, Zach, I spent some time on your website last night. Just kind of prepping for this. If you haven't been to this guy's website correct me if I'm wrong, but I believe it's Arnold quality.com.

 

That's correct.

 

Awesome website. It's, it's a combination of, of showing off all the cool stuff they're building and they're doing, there's some thrashing guitar rock in the background that that makes it, makes it really cool. You can see the culture you're breeding, you know, the joiner join our team tab, join our team tab.

 

The fact that you direct people to a write us a paragraph about their personal character is huge to me. And then B what really caught my eye is the direction to send it with the email. The subject line is, my name is blank and I'm a winner. I got to ask it. Do you get people that don't follow those rules still trying to apply?

 

Do you ever get, you know, just applying for the job guy or?

 

Absolutely every day, you know, it's like, and that is part of the whole idea of we're an elite team. It's not, Hey, we're accepting applications. It's follow these instructions to the letter. If you count, follow them basic instructions. Okay. There's no place for you on this team.

 

And so it's a, essentially, it's a pre-qualifier. Can you read through an entire page of information and do what you're asked to do if you can't then like that's cool. Just not here, you know, I

 

thought it was brilliant, man. Yeah. Yeah, really. It was really cool to see it. It speaks to your culture, you know, without even having to talk to you.

 

Well, that's, that's the whole point, you know, it's like we, we hire based on cultural fit, we hire based on core values. We hire based on who people are as human beings, rather than just what skillsets they have, because that's exactly it they're skillsets. They are acquired skills. There are things that I've learned that my guys.

 

My girls have learned, like they are things that is 100% within everybody's realm of possibility to learn and master it's whether or not they choose to put the time and effort forth to become that master.

 

yeah. You can find me on Instagram. I post on there every once in a while. My personal page is at welding Lord. My business page is at Arnold quality metal works that's I don't post to Facebook hardly ever because. You know, I get like three people that like my shit. So I don't really post to Facebook.

 

I should be better about posting on LinkedIn, but I'm kind of a wild man and you know, social media is not my biggest time spend good stuff. So I have one last question and I've been saving this purposely towards the end for you. Who is the white Samuel L. Jackson?

 

The white Samuel L. Jackson is my VP of operations, Michael holes. I love it.

 

Trailers.

 

It's

 

great. He's got, I bought him a mug for Christmas a couple of years back and it says.

 

Fuck you, you fucking fuck the white Samuel L. Jackson. Cause it's, I mean, it's like, that's who he is as a person too, you know? And it's like, it's, he falls very much in line with the culture that we have here. You know, like we're, we're a wild bunch. But we're also true professionals. You know, it's like in the eye of the public, when we're on a job site, we're there to outwork everybody.

 

We're there to do better quality work than everyone. When we're in the shop, man, we're a wild bunch. We like having a good time. We like, you know, laughing, joking around like the most bio things you've ever heard. Our daily conversation in the weld shop.

 

Nothing wrong with that, man. You gotta make it fun.

 

Absolutely. I mean, if it wasn't fun, what would be the point of doing it? You know, life's too short to be serious all the time. And I mean, I'm, I'm pretty serious about what I want, but I also like to have a good time and like, you see a smile on my face a lot of the time, because like, I mean, shit, when I went to Haiti and the first hour I was there, I saw two dead people on the side of the road.

 

And so I'm like, yeah, you know what? Utah's pretty fucking cool. I got a pretty good life, you know, like I, I'm pretty grateful for all of that. And so I'm going to be happy. I'm going to be positive because, you know, I want positive things in my life. You're, you're going to find whatever you look for.

 

Perfect.

 

Yeah. I mean, it's, it's continued growth. It's, you know, pushing everybody to, to be the best it's pushing to, to continue to learn and grow. And some people won't be able to hack it. And that's totally fine. Right. They there's a place for them somewhere. It's just not going to be, be with you or, you know, or, or really for us.

 

But you know, everybody finds their place. Everybody finds where they're, they're meant to be and it's okay. Right. Like it's, it doesn't make anybody better or worse. It's just, you don't fit here. Right. And, and knowing who your culture is standing for it you know, it's, it's one thing when people actually show their culture who they are.

 

Right. And that's, that is us like through and through. If you fit here, You fit here, if you don't, you don't, we're not hiding anything, right? This is, this is who we are through and through. And I think a lot of places, they project one thing and then there are another, right? Like they're on their internals.

 

There they're completely different than everything that they project on the outside. So really, man, I appreciate you showing up as yourself, as you know, I'm sure this is the same guy that you get in the shop. As you get here on the podcast, as you get. You know, in a conversation, right? Like it's all the same.

 

And I, I can totally appreciate that. I think not enough people are or who they are. Some people might not agree, but that's again, that's okay. Right. Like maybe you

 

and yeah. Those people aren't called winners. So I'm, you know, not worried about them.

 

Awesome. Zach, any well, Matt, any parting words?

 

You know, I saved my Samuel L. Jackson for the very end. I already shot it. So Zach just want to thank you, man. It was fun. I'd like to continue this conversation someday.

 

Hell yeah, I appreciate it guys. It was it was awesome to come on and talk with other real motherfuckers, you know, it's like real recognizes real.

 

And so that's why you guys can recognize all these traits in me is because you have them yourselves, you know? And so it's like, it's always good to be in the company of good people.

 

Right on, man. Thank you.

 

Yeah, Zach. Thanks for coming on. Everybody decks links will be in the show notes here. I'll put them in the comments so you can go in and check Zach out.

 

If you're a wanting to be part of excellence in a weld shop, then you can follow the instructions.

 

Yeah, we are hiring right now. We're looking for good people. So if you're interested, Yeah, check out the website, the instructions are there. Yeah. And

 

you want to move to Utah, you know, that's the other, other piece, but Zack, thank you so much for being on really appreciate having you and for everyone else out there, that's going to be this episode of the construction corner podcast until next time.

 

Thanks.

Blue Collar Badass and the Future of Construction

Hello, and welcome to a, another episode of the construction corner podcast. I'm Dylan, I'm your host. And now as always joined by my blue collar, bad-ass cohost Matt Vetter, Matt, what's going on,

 

man. How's it going? Dylan? These intros keep getting better and better, sir. I think this one might stick I'm okay with that.

 

A good one.

 

Which really, I mean, ultimately, we're going to talk about it, but how are things going, man?

 

You know, I'm pretty good. It's been a week full of test days so far, but that happens quite often in construction, but we get through it and keep moving forward and everything's probably better because of it in the end.

 

Yeah. So you got to explain to our audience, you know, and those of us that are. In Arete that follow Andy Frisella my, my Noah test days are, but explain for everybody else what, what are test days?

 

So, yeah, and I'm going to paraphrase from, from his, his version, but the test day is the day where everything that could possibly go wrong, go wrong, goes wrong.

 

And you know, it's, it's a more or less, it's the universe testing you it's, it's putting you up against the wall and, and seeing how much of the. How much more bullshit you can take before you break. So in a nutshell, that's what it is. And you know, as long as you, you start learning to like those and, and push forward and, and keep fighting they're good for you.

 

Yeah. Yeah. Andrew Andy, our last guest also agrees that test days are the best days now when you're in them. No. But looking back for sure.

 

Yeah. Th they're good for you. They can, they can add to the stress level, which I think we chatted about a couple of weeks ago, but you gotta be able to shake it off and you know, you can't sweat the small stuff.

 

Yeah, yeah, absolutely. I've been, I've had a few of those too. I'm doing some project work right now and I it's one of those things. So I wrote about this a little bit is. You never realized like the things that you're doing until like they're gone. Right. So it could be, it could be a relationship, right.

 

That. You miss right. Or something that, or, or, I mean, this goes both ways. Right? Good and bad. This goes for like the one that got away, as well as the one you never want to see again, it definitely slides both ways, but with a lot of things, like time, time heals, all wounds. Right. It's if you did not think about it or deal with it for that time period, right.

 

You still think about it. If you still live in the past. You know, it's basically still with you. So it's, you know, it didn't heal cause it's, it never left. But like in dealing with project work and I, I do project work, you know, every, every little bit I take some, some projects and do some actual design work and it's A reminder at times that there's a reason I don't do these projects as much anymore.

 

Just for the stress, the tight deadlines, the, you know, kicking the ass that, that you get for doing these. The, I have nothing against late nights. I just like late nights on the projects. I want to work on that on my own terms. But yeah, just the, the feeling of. Going through stuff and, you know, coming back to it where it's like, Oh yeah, there was a reason, you know, I've made the decisions I did a long time ago, but yeah, it's in construction.

 

There's always something new man. Always something that you didn't think would happen or something that went wrong that, you know, you look to fix and we, you just get through and learn, learn from

 

them and move on. Yeah, that's all you can do. You know, we're always so busy. We have in our company two or three active projects at any given time, plus all of the prospects we're working on and it just leads to impossibly busy days where, you know, yesterday I was in meetings from about seven 30 in the morning until six 30 in the evening and all the, all the stuff that I planned to do yesterday, that was on my, in my neat written out list.

 

None of it got touched and it, it just has been one of those weeks. It's not atypical, but you learn to handle them and manage time that's for sure.

 

Yeah. And it gets to you know, we've talked about this before, too. But I want to touch on it before we get into our main topic, which is the blue collar bad-ass and future construction, but is you've got to, especially in construction You've got to do the things, you know, you need to do, like, whether that's personal, like working out, reading you know, eating breakfast, or maybe eating period throughout the day.

 

Like, but to take that time for, for yourself again, an hour, right. To, to get through some of this stuff, because otherwise it's not going to get touched, right. Like projects can drag on into the night to. Get it out or whatever. And more often than not finding that 30, 45 minutes hour to just take a break, go for a walk, do something is going to one.

 

It's going to improve your mental state, which we're all about here. Right. Being happier and more productive, all that kind of stuff which we'll get into today too. But it's also, you're probably going to be more productive when you come back. Right. You're. Your eyes took a break from looking at those sheets sets and seeing the same things over and over again.

 

You're gonna see a new solution probably on your walk or the break you're gonna like, Oh, if I just do this, it'll all work out. So often those breaks can be far more beneficial than just to continue plowing through everything that you have going on.

 

Without a doubt, you need to have a little bit of time to, to hear yourself.

 

All right. So the main event for today, you have been working on this thing called the blue collar. Badass which awesome, awesome fricking name by the way, but I'm going to let you lead this one off. What, what is the blue car? Badass what have you been working on? And why is this so important to you?

 

So, you know, as we've talked about, I've been involved in construction in some shape or form for over two decades. Now it's an industry that I, I know intently. I love intently. I choose to be here and I'm not, I'm not being forced to stay here. And, and we've kind of chatted before about, about the future of construction in general.

 

And, you know, I think there's a huge problem that we're starting to see now and, and we're, we're heading towards it even more so in that we have a giant lack of skilled labor and, and really an overall lack of interest in construction in general. And I think there's some reasons why that will touch on today, but You know, over the last couple of years, I kind of had started having this feeling that I needed to be doing something to help this situation other than just continuing to run our company and, you know, build projects.

 

And so it's kind of been a side project of mine. Came up with the name blue collar. Badass to be quite honest with you right now, it's still a pretty disorganized mess of ideas. I scratched together pretty horrible looking logo on, on PowerPoint. I bought a domain, which for the record I bought blue collar ba.com because it was $12 a year.

 

Blue collar badass was more like $600 a year. It's probably easier to market with the BA at the end anyways. And I started some social media handles, and you know, my, my intent is to bring awareness to this issue, to, to somehow get. The youth of today, more interested in construction in general to start backfilling the population backfilling.

 

So we can have a farm team again, because if we don't, we're in for a world of trouble, you know, we, we see, like right now we're in a massive, massive pricing shift in the market because of primarily because of COVID last year, you know, commodities pricing is going through the roof. Now, if you add to that, you know, all of our materials are more expensive and, and now all of a sudden, we don't have enough labor.

 

So labor becomes more expensive. How does anyone afford to build anything anymore?

 

Okay. A few, a few big points here. So in dealing with a lot of projects that I've worked on, right? I mean, it's big commercial stuff and you get like, as much as I, so there's a, there's a like, and dislike factor here, but so hospitals are probably one of the, there they can be the best and the worst clients to work for.

 

They're the best and they, they understand construction one. They. Kind of don't care on cost. I mean, they do, but they don't. And then the, so that's like, that's a good and bad, but they understand construction, which is huge. And then the, the other side of like hospitals and healthcare is they, when they want it, they want it now because they need that room up and running to be build.

 

But they're, they're kind of a unique market segment. And then on the other side of that, you work with. Like school districts, let's say, or a community district which I know you're building a community center now, and those people have no clue. They build a building once every 10, 20 years, probably the only time in their career that they'll put together a building.

 

They just, you know, you don't need them that often, especially in school districts that aren't growing now, there's, there's exceptions to this. All over the place, but you know, 95% of all school districts don't build or they build once every 10, 20 years. Right. So you have so what Matt is talking about and all of a sudden, the industry now that when those projects come up, you, you have your standard designs.

 

This is typically what it costs. And then you have these big pricing shifts, right? So labor is like half the cost of any given job, right? Like just off the bat, labor overhead that's half if not more. And then material costs, let's just say it's 40% in there. And let's say that increases 10%, right?

 

It was probably more than that, but let's just say 10%. So now your overall cost of the job went up. 5%, right. Immediately. That's usually contingency. So you just blew contingency. Now let's say labor went up 10% just because you couldn't get anybody. Like now you're paying overtime. So really 10% light, but okay.

 

Half the job, 40%. There's another 5%. So now you need to cut. Five 10% out of the project and not have any problems. Cause those never happened on the job site to get that project in under budget. So just like these two things, right? Not same design, same everything prices just went up 10% across the board for Manufacturing being decreased because they had their own constraints and what they could do, people in the factories, everything like that, shipping stuff in from overseas, whether that heck that could be the UK, China, or Brazil for steel.

 

Like, I mean, we're in a global economy. This is not just a China thing. This is like, you're getting steel from Brazil or, you know, whatever from Europe you know, we're very much in a global economy. So then. Material, you know, or you just can't get it. So now your job sites down for however long to then.

 

Now you're able to work, but now you're the crew that you wanted is somewhere else. Like this all goes into the, you know, supply chain, getting people onsite at the right time which we talked about last time. And you know, if you have people on top of each other, that's a problem that increased costs versus, you know, being able to streamline everything.

 

So I just want to point out here, like what we're talking about. Is in trying to bring people into the trades so that you have more people in it. And ultimately the thing that I, and then I'll give it back to you, Matt. But the thing here too, is that having more people in the trades, isn't going to take away somebody's job, right?

 

Having more people in the trades, isn't going to take away projects, right? Those projects need to get built one way or the other. What it's going to help do is. So if you're, you're an electrician, you're a plumber. You're a craftsman, tradesmen, superintendent, whatever, somebody on a job site now you're gonna, you're still gonna have your job.

 

You're probably not going to work. 60 hours a week for six months out of the year. Right. Break her back, everything else that goes into that. And then you can work for an extra five, 10 years, right? So you're going to forfeit maybe a little bit of overtime, so you can sit on the couch at home and recuperate versus you know, having to.

 

To kill yourself on a job site, you know, get tired accidents happen, right? That's when people get hurt is in those overtime hours. So at the end of the day, this is still making sure that you can go home. You can have a good and better life and really extend the length of your career and not have to worry about, you know, medical problems down there.

 

Yeah, yeah, absolutely. Because if you don't have quality of life, then you have nothing really at all. And if you're working. Too much and, and, you know, unscrupulous hours, it just it's dangerous all around. You know, it, it breeds a question though, right? I think in that, you know, where did this shortage come from and, and what, what happened?

 

Because, you know, if you think back to when you were a kid, you know, you don't have kids, Dylan, but I have a gaggle of them, you know, as a, as a child, what kid doesn't play with construction equipment, right? Drive Tonka trucks, and plastic hammers and all that stuff. Something, something disconnects though, from, from that point to the point when you come out into the workforce or, or out of high school, and it's, you know, Mike Rowe, the dirty jobs guy has a quote and I'm gonna paraphrase it and probably butcher it.

 

But it's basically along the lines that, that. Pop culture has, has, has really glorified the corner office, right? It's glorified the, the corner office job, the white collar job, but it has in doing that and maybe unintentionally, but it's, it's built this, this belittling effect of the jobs that were created, that, that went to build that corner office, you know, and you can't have one without the other.

 

And I think, you know, there there's a lot that goes into it. But it starts in school and, you know, middle school to a degree, but, but high school certainly, you know, we, we have talked about the Volk tech programs. A couple of times we talked about it last week when, when Andy was on, you know, when I was in school, voc-tech was not.

 

Quote unquote, good thing to be involved in. You know, you, it was for the, for the dumb kids, it was for the, the path of travel that most people didn't want to go. And you know, now it sounds like that may be changing and there's, there's some, there's some schools around here and, you know, Andy mentioned it last week that, you know, there are schools with voc-tech programs that are, are getting better, but there's still a.

 

A general unacceptance of the trades as a worthwhile career, we are you know, shop class, what the hell happened to shop class. It's gone now almost a hundred percent for most schools. And if you go back not so long ago in history to 2001, when our president signed into, into act, the no child left behind act.

 

All of a sudden schools now who are competing on funding ferociously to begin with it, it took the underperforming schools. And now in order to qualify for funding, they can only qualify based on, on standardized testing grades. Well, shop class doesn't provide standardized testing grades home-ec class doesn't provide them.

 

So all those things kind of got cast to the wayside and, and we, we got, we got pigeonholed as a. Educational society, if you will, into just the classes, the academic side classes that can produce a grade to produce the funding, to keep the school running. Obviously, we have to keep them running, but you know, it's a, it's a big, deep rabbit hole of a problem.

 

And then, you know, on top of that, it's, it's, society's insistence now on college. You know that that going to college after high school is, is the only, the only way to a rewarding career. And, you know, we we've talked about my crazy path before I went to college. I ended up graduating. I could argue either way, but, but I also have a lot of close friends and associates that, that didn't go to college make far more money than I ever probably will, are happy as can be in, in their careers.

 

And. You know, there's ways to get to the end that don't always have to follow the same road. So it's, I think it's been going on for a long time. I think, you know, it's just, it's something that's not easy to fix. We can't overnight fix it. But we need to start trying because we're, we're neglecting.

 

We're neglecting kids really, and incense that we're, we're trying to force feed them into, you know, different occupations that, that are deemed more worthwhile in society, but there really is no basis for that, that deeming, if that makes any sense.

 

Yeah, no, it makes total sense. And you know you know, a couple good comments here on a lot of this is.

 

So there are people that are mechanically inclined, right? Like, honestly, I'm not one of them. Right. Like I am great math, science, you know, abstract stuff I can do. Part of that is I also did like farmer's markets growing up. So like I could do simple math and count, change back. Right. Like. I grew up doing a lot of that stuff and people, I think lose some of those small little skills and then with, you know, schools and we talk about kids and education.

 

It's, I'm all for education. And the, I think one of the other pieces that we go into is when we talk about education is fuel. Just think school, you know, that you, you know, whether it's your K-12 or higher ed, that that is the way to get educated. And there's a, I think a big misnomer, right? That the only way to get education is to be in this school system and follow this path.

 

But yet, you know, like the average person reads, like what a book a year? Not even in self-development. So when you start going down, like the education route, which I think is a big, big crux, and what we talk about is you don't need to go to school for education. There's, there's a lot of ways to get educated in the learn stuff.

 

But the, the other thing too is unless you're going to be a doctor, a lawyer. An engineer in some regards, right? So construction is the only engineering industry that requires a stamp. Right? I can, I can design a car, it can kill millions of people and nobody's responsible for it. Buildings on the other hand, right.

 

Or any public infrastructure project, somebody at the end of the day is responsible for their trade, right? So you, you do have to have licensure. You can do that actually through, depending on the state, you can do that through just time in the industry. It takes a lot longer, but. That there is a path for it, a law in the same regard, you can become a Bard lawyer if you know, in certain States, right?

 

This is all state dependent on, you know, time in the industry, passing the bar and all that kind of good stuff. Doctors, you do have to come to school for that, but there's like three, four professions, right outside of that. You know that you don't need college, right? You don't need college to start a business.

 

Like it, it's just not, not it. And then when we look at trade and I think we're a lot of this goes is to. You know, people have innate skills, innate things that they're really good at, right? Some people can think abstractly, some people need like concrete things. Some people are really good mechanically.

 

Like they just can put stuff together and see how it's going to end up being. And we need to. When we look at like our kids and you could talk more to this one is, you know, each kid has their own talent, right? Each and parents know this and you're still on this, you know, I'm not saying you, but like people in general want to shove them in the like, same box, right.

 

They want to put them in the same hole or that like, I need to learn a foreign language, you know, but is this gonna really benefit me, maybe?

 

You know, knowledge is powerful regardless of where it comes from. So I, I'm not an opponent of, of schooling and of college by any means, but, but you kind of nailed it then that there's, you know, everybody's so vastly different.

 

Everybody learns differently and there's no right or wrong way to get where you're going. You know, and there's no saying that, that you can't go back and do it over either. You know, if let's say you go into the trade. I mean, I'm an okay example of that. I went into the trades, very young. I dropped out of college and decided I didn't need it.

 

And I did it for a while. And then I went back to college because I decided I needed it, but all it really did for me. I mean, it was a good experience, you know, I, I took away a lot from it. I'm sure. Including student loans, but I could absolutely be where I'm at now, having not gone that path. You know, and I just pulled up the comments and Andy brings up a really good point in that, you know, the trades lost their sex appeal.

 

When, when you get that, you know, you don't want to be like that guy, do you, you don't want to end up like him, you know? And Andy mentioned the, you know, portraying them as dirty uneducated, knuckle draggers, you know, That's kind of that mentality. That was that that has been proliferated for, for quite some time into the industry.

 

And it, you know, as a, as a kid and impressionable youth course, if that's all you're hearing is, you know, all those, those dirty guys sitting on the side of the road, you know, catcalling women, as they walk by, you don't want to be one of those assholes in the hardhats. And you know, it, it just, it has a negative effect all the way across and it creates this social bias towards the trades in general.

 

But, you know, the other thing to keep in mind too, is, you know, you mentioned yourself as not being incredibly mechanically inclined nowadays. And we touch on this probably every episode that I've been on so far construction is so tech dependent and so tech heavy that you don't necessarily have to be the guy out, swinging the hammer.

 

You know, you don't necessarily have to be the guy down in the bottom of the, of the trench shoveling dirt, what you could be doing. Yeah. The BIM side of it doing the design side of it, you know, planning and scheduling and, and innovating. And there's, there's so much else involved with the trade work that, that just doesn't get much light a day.

 

Construction can never be outsourced. Right. So when we talk about bringing manufacturing back to us, or heck this applies to any country, right? Like you want to bring manufacturing back to your, your country, your industry, whatever you know, it cannot be outsourced, like just like getting a haircut when you're not, you're not outsourcing that.

 

Right. That is a local thing. Construction is a local deal. You know, there are a few. Big mega construction companies, but they all have local offices, and they make a point of having a local office. So this is a very location dependent deal. Even some of the biggest firms, you know, on the engineering side design side, they have one typically major office.

 

They might be in a bunch of different locations, but they have. One main office where probably half their staff is, and then they just have these tiny little satellite offices. So when we talk about a lot of this too, it's construction is your local economy, you know, like, just look at Oh eight to 12, right?

 

That was construction. That was housing. And I mean, Matt and I are more on the commercial side are really all on the commercial side. But you talk about you. Yeah. How many trades are in residential? I mean, it's huge. So when you look at construction, commercial construction, I think the last numbers I saw were in 2019 not including like roads and all that stuff.

 

It's an $800 million a year industry, and that's just commercial. Those are strictly commercial numbers. When you start including roads, that's another, I don’t know, 400. Billion. Like it's, it's a, I mean, it's a multi-trillion dollar industry, right? They're not 800 million. So it's 800 billion is what commercial is, was in 2019.

 

And then like you add a, I don't know, the number is pretty big. It's in the billions for like roads and, you know horizontal construction. And then you add another trillion for residential, and then all the things on top of that with financing and real estate and mortgages and all that stuff. I mean, it's a construction as a whole is a multi-trillion dollar industry.

 

Let's just say it's 2 trillion. That is 10% of the U S economy.

 

It's huge. And it can't go anywhere. You know, you, you can't. There's cool videos on YouTube of, of robots laying bricks. It'll never replace the human element to it. And, you know, you mentioned not being able to outsource it. You can't outsource it.

 

It's just, it's impossible. And you know, there's, there's huge companies like you touched on, but there's a lot of small companies too. And the huge guys they're never going anywhere either. We need them for certain things, but the projects, you know, candidly that I touched that I look at those guys would never shake a stick at it.

 

They don't want anything to do with it. And so the, the smaller, and I'm saying smaller, you know, genuinely, you know, the, the lower dollar volume, you know, less than hundreds of millions of dollars type projects, those have to be served by smaller local companies to some degree. And, you know, it, it's just it's a huge economic factor.

 

It's, it's a giant spinning wheel. All of these companies have employees. We, you know, they all, we all have suppliers and vendors and subcontractors and, you know, the, the web that we create is so vast. It, it, it really spans and it, it touches everyone.

 

And it goes up and down like, you know, from the, the fleet of vehicles, you know, to the auto mechanics, to the, you know, tire guy to the warehouses, the storage facilities, the financing, and that's, that's ultimately what it comes down to.

 

Right? These big, big companies they're going to do these mega projects because they can finance them. Right. They've got the cash to do them and this, these little stuff, they have more overhead than the project is worth to, to deal with. And then it's vice versa for you where. You know, you're, you're not going to be able to finance a billion dollar project.

 

And, but these other ones are, yeah. I mean, small business, great contribution to GDP. Yeah, exactly. I mean, most companies are in that, you know, they're under a hundred people, right? Small businesses, anything under 500 people. Like that's what? So like 98% 95, it's a huge number. Right? Huge percentile is small business.

 

Right and that's like all of construction, right. Is under 500 people except for maybe a couple of hundred firms across the country. Right? So you maybe get 10 in a state that are above that threshold. So, you know, with a lot of this is the trays are super important. You need to, I mean, it's not going anywhere and even let's, let's talk about that masonry robot.

 

So with the masonry robot, you still need somebody to load bricks. That is a US-based company, right? You need somebody to service and maintain the robot. That mortar still came from a local place, you know, or you're mixing it yourself for all the material to do that. Right. So somebody still had to store the bricks, somebody still to transport the bricks, somebody still to load the bricks and the robot, somebody, you know, it's saving.

 

And then the guy loaded the bricks, and the Mason can do all the craft pieces that are needed. The like high-end craftsmanship. They can focus on that and not break their back, doing all the you know, general wall masonry. They can do the actual, like high skill pieces, not the lower, you know, apprentice stuff.

 

So. Now that guy is way more productive. That masonry company is much more profitable. They can do more projects with, you know, the lower amount of people in the labor force that want to do masonry. So now, like, that robot to me is one, a huge benefit. It's not taking anybody's job and it's really making that guy last probably 20 years longer in the industry, because he's doing upright work, he's got a load, you know, move the same bricks that he was going to have to move anyway.

 

And then he's not doing the repetitive hand motion. So no carpal tunnel. No, not, you know, there's up and down the line. It. It helped make them more productive, safer. And it's still like all the other jobs that went around that masonry getting it to the site, all that stuff. Those still exist. Right? Like they're still there.

 

So that robot just made the company more profitable, not like taking anybody's job or harming anything. And it's still, it's a local thing, right. It's still doing like at that job site.

 

And, and it's it, it breeds new jobs, right? Because you, now you have to have a mechanic to take care of the thing and you have to have the, the operator to operate it.

 

It's, it's, it's all cyclical and it's not a bad thing at all, but I think it, that sort of stuff goes to help, you know, to help make the trades cool again. And that's, that's the biggest. The biggest fight we have right now, right. Is, is how do we shift that mindset? How do we shift it back to respecting the, the blue collar badass, you know, cause construction, it results in tangible product, right?

 

It's solving real world problems and it's, it's adding real value and you know, no offense to those that, that do it. But the Tik TOK millionaires, that's a fine. Path ago, but you know, that that stuff comes and goes with the wind, the trades and building is here to stay. So we collectively need to keep working to, to keep this mindset shift that, that you and I are trying to do to keep it growing and, and to push people back into the trades again.

 

Yeah. And the great point, man, like. Construction is not going away. Like you're not gonna, this is not a thing that's ever going to go away. And even if, you know, virtual reality did take it over, you still need to build some data centers like this aren't those aren't going away. You know, you still need a warehouse for food.

 

You still need a grocery store. Right? Like even if we go through all this, like the amount of warehousing and data centers that were built in 2020 is astronomical. You know, like any design firm that I talked to that was in those two markets were busier than they'd ever been. You know, and that, there's a lot of stuff that goes into those.

 

But w when you talk about a lot of this stuff, w construction never going anywhere, right. Always going to be a high paying job, right. It's going to be in for the trades. They have at most like, A couple of years into like electrician school or apprentice school. It's not that much money. Right. They're going to pay that off or their employer is going to pay for it.

 

So the biggest thing that I see across the industry and the reason why people don't stay is, well, if you fold one, you get beat down. So you have to, you know, Keep your spirits high. You have to look for solutions, not problems. And that's probably the biggest thing. You know, when we talk about mental health and everything that goes into construction, you get beat down a lot and you got to take it with a grain of salt.

 

You got to have some thick skin and you've got to look for again, solutions, not problems. You can't keep pointing out problems. That's just a recipe for disaster. But the other thing in construction is if you, if you care, if you. Do a good job. You're never gonna be without, right. You will never not have a job.

 

People will want you on their job sites. People want to work with you. We've covered this a ton, and this goes for any industry, but especially in construction, when you have a lot of Gruff grumpy people on site being that, that Ray of sunshine being the person, you know, they might be annoyed that you're whistling Dixie, but at the end of the day, they're, they're gonna miss it when it's not there.

 

Right. To what we talked about earlier. So having those people that are super happy that are enthusiastic, that want to be on the job site and make other people want to show up to, you know, hear Bob whistle again, that's going to be a, you know, it's a great day for a lot of people. But you have to be that kind of Ray of sunshine and a cloudy storm, which is hot construction.

 

But again, looking for work solutions, being the positive person out there on the job site is going to help everybody. It will make you never be without a job, even in the worst of construction times because everybody will want you on their job site

 

and you can't be afraid of hard work. You know, the, the, the benefit.

 

Of a lot of jobs is the hard work. You know, the, the power is in the process. So there's Tim Kennedy had a quote that I I've taught my boys, my kids and that everything you ever want in life is located on the other side of hard work and people shy away from it. People, you know, there's a, there's a mindset that, you know, construction's too tough.

 

It's, it's too difficult. It's manual labor or it's, it's too difficult. You know, mentally putting projects together and keeping things organized and it is tough. It is hard work. It's supposed to be hard work, anything you do. And I, and I would argue that with, with lots of professions, not just construction, but you have to learn to value the hard work.

 

And I think, you know, societies of the past really got that, you know, my grandfather busted his ass every day and loved doing it. Well, we kind of made this shift in this slide and, you know, everyone's gotten soft and there are no, there are no trophies first place trophies anymore. And you know, everyone wins and that's all garbage that none of that, that we'll maintain.

 

So once we get back to the hard work and, and, and getting back into the trades and getting back, I mean, the other thing too is. You know, we celebrate entrepreneurship a lot in this country as we should, you know, you're an entrepreneur, I'm an entrepreneur, we're in an entrepreneurial group. We, we know hundreds.

 

If not thousands of entrepreneurs, we'll look at construction. I mean, the number of trades that are entrepreneurial based companies is astounding. I can't tell you how many companies we work with every single day that were started. With one person with an idea or, or two people with an idea. And now it's grown into, you know, to the industry that it is, you can, you can be heavily, heavily involved in this industry.

 

You can make a ton of money and you can, you can be that prototypical entrepreneur and, and have that, that lifestyle, because I can tell you one thing myself personally, I don't like working for anybody else anymore. I've done it. And I, I. I shine, better doing my own thing and creating my own. And this is an industry that allows for that and promotes it.

 

And it just needs to be, to be celebrated, I think, and really put on the, in the limelight more often than it than it is.

 

And with that too. There's a lot of room for intrapreneurs. Right. So you don't want to take cause really in construction, it's a big financial risk. Let's just, you know, dealing with cashflow, which is the word, you know, if you've worked for a company you don't know, right.

 

Unless you're in finance or accounting. So cashflow is a huge deal for anybody on the, well, both really throughout construction design side, you know, build side it's. Everybody struggles with cashflow. So okay. Outside of that risk, but it's huge for intrapreneurship. Right. So any, any person working in a firm that figures out how to do something better?

 

Right. Which is basically all an entrepreneur does. Right. We find solutions and we sell it the market. You're just selling it into your company. Right. Finding a diff a new process, a new tool, a whatever. That's intrapreneurship right. You're just, you have one client and that is your company, right? That is your boss.

 

That is the people that make decisions within your firm. So it's huge, right? Everybody's always looking for a better way to do something, right. A new tool, something that'll help them do it faster. Something else. Save them. The. You know, pain of, of doing something, right. Like a simple thing is, so there's new tools out there for like splicing fiber optic cable, right.

 

Used to be a huge pain, very highly skilled to do that, to make sure that communications went cause you know, align the light within those cables are pretty difficult. Probably five years ago, a tool came out to where you could place two cables in a box, and it would splice it right. Became the simplest thing to use.

 

Now it's not a skill thing. Quality went up and you improve. Right? So finding that tool if you were in a fiber company, right. That did any type of fiber work, that was a great thing to sell into your organization. Right? If you're one of the first companies to do that,

 

You did pretty well. Yeah. Innovation, innovation drives this industry, and it will what it's, what will help it survive?

 

You know, I, when I did work for a previous company, one of the, one of the aspects they really touted was that, you know, everyone in the ranks from, from the guy in the field, to the guy in the corner office, they're all, you're all entrepreneurs. And what they would tell me or tell us is, you know, you, you run your section of this business of this company as if it's your own business and you're responsible for it, but, but you're also able then to, to be the intrapreneur and to, to innovate and to come up with new ideas and to, to, you know, leave your Mark on the company and on, on the industry.

 

And that's how everything should be run. And with a lot of this, it's. You've got to continue to learn. Right? You've got to continue to grow. You've got to understand the tools that are across the market and far, often than not, you know, there's a lack to learn and this. All hammer on this till the cows come home.

 

Right? Like it is, it is the one thing that we need to all do continuously. And that is learn. That's read like tree journals. That's seeing what's out there seeing the new solutions, you know, even if it's assigning somebody in your Office and your team to go and try it. If it's you doing stuff in your off hours, one, that's how you're going to move up in a company too.

 

That's how, if you're a company owner, that's how you're going to make more money and improve and get better. And by doing this, you're going to have just so much improvement, right? Over a period of time, right? It could be a year, could be five years. You do this consistently enough. You're going to be one of the top.

 

Firms in the world. One of the things that like you'd look at the design world in particular, like let's say Gensler, right? So Gensler is the largest, I think, straight architecture firm in the world. They're like 40 years old. They do a billion in revenue.

 

And when we look at construction, that is not very old, right? Most construction firms that you see out, there are a hundred or 80 years old or whatever. Gensler became that in the I think it's art Gensler right in his lifetime became the largest design firm in the world it's possible. Right. But that became from continuous improvement effort, branding, you know, everything that goes into building a company, you can't do that with like, they're still not Gensler is not drawing things by hand.

 

Right. You know, like, let's take those examples of, you've got to learn. You've got to develop your own tools. You know, some had a, basically a Revit tool 25 years ago that they built in-house and spent millions on. So a lot of this is you gotta be willing to learn, and this is across the board. I don't care, you know?

 

From electrician to plumber, to pipe, fitter, to engineer, to GC, like you have to learn, you have to continue to improve on your craft. And you're not the, this is the other thing in construction too. You're not better or worse than anybody else, right? You're not, you might know more. You might have some different experience than another guy, but we're not better or worse than, than anybody.

 

Somebody just hasn't learned that lesson yet that you've probably had to learn the hard way. So let's be a little more kind, a little more empathetic. You never know what somebody is going through for like all the mental health stuff. Right. They could have problems at home or whatever, but just know that you're not better or worse.

 

You just might have to spend some time to, to educate, to train, to enlighten the people that are around you so that they understand where you're coming from. An email is not the best way to communicate that. Right. Pick up the phone, have a phone call or talk to them in person to, to work through whatever thing you're dealing with.

 

Yeah. And, and, and to add to that, you know, there is no difference in quality of individual, whether they're in the corner office, in a suit selling the project, or they're in the field in blue jeans building. Yes, there's, there's gotta be that mutual respect across the board. And you know, the only place you start at the top is digging a hole.

 

So everybody works. And you got to work your way up in, in any industry, you can be wherever you want to get to. If you set your sights on the office side, or if you set your sights on, on running the field, it's all possible. It just takes hard work. And we just had to keep, keep spearheading this, this movement to make the trade school again, to, to make it acceptable or not, or make it, make it.

 

A good idea, make it a, a valuable commodity to, to be the blue collar. Badass whether you're whether you're that guy in the office or that guy in the field.

 

Yeah. I mean, construction is a great, I can't, I mean, I was the kid that built like cushion Fords, you know, as a kid, right. Like tearing apart the house and doing all that kind of stuff.

 

So with a lot of this, it's. Not only building things, right. Seeing things come to fruition and seeing them stand the test of time. Right. You look at electronics, your laptops bad in three years, right? Like construction's the thing that stands the test of time. Right. It's going to be there for 10 years before renovation.

 

Maybe that's on like the, the. Fast side of the cycle, probably 50 years before renovation, you know, and I'll stand for a hundred if you take care of it. So, you know, constructions here to last, it's not going anywhere. It's the oldest, one of the oldest industries there is and it's a good paying job, right?

 

We all have our cycles, right. A boom and bust. But again, if you're good at what you do, there's always going to be a place for you.

 

Definitely. So I, I think we just continue to spearhead this, you know, if anyone out in the audience or anyone in our network has a connection to Mike Rowe, I think he'd make a great guest for the podcast.

 

Yeah. I mean, it's it, the field can be a dirty place, right. Often it is. But at the end of the day, you know, when you do those final sweeps, walk-throughs right. It's beautiful. There's nothing like walking through a fresh building,

 

nothing I'd agree. I'd agree. A hundred percent,

 

most people just don't. Right.

 

Most people don't get to experience what a new build looks like. They don't get to walk through it on the, on the first day. Right. Of it being open of everything, working the way it's supposed to right on day one. And that's, there's nothing like that feeling.

 

Yeah, it's, it's truly, almost a magical thing.

 

You know, it's, it's not as cool as seeing your, your children born, you know, but when it's a close second, you know, when you've worked on something, blood, sweat, and tears for however long, the project lasts to see it come to fruition. And when, when you were the one making it happen and, and helping to do it, there's no better feeling.

 

Now we're gonna, we didn't cover too much in the future of construction, but the ultimately construction is here to stay right where the blue collar badass right. Like construction up and down the chain. Is a good industry. It's a good place to be. You're going to earn a very good living. If you own a firm, you're going to make a great living as long as you run it well, but with that, you know, it's a great industry to be in.

 

There's a ton of opportunity. Again, it's a multi-trillion dollar industry and that's just in the U S globally, you know, it's 10 times that. So when we look at construction, the built environment, you know, there's, there's a lot of money in it. To be made to help improve and frankly, more projects we built.

 

If we didn't have the labor shortage, we would have more great buildings. We would have more great things opening more apartment complexes, condos, offices, like you name it. They're ready to be built. They were just waiting on some of it's just waiting on the labor force to be available, to start the project.

 

Yeah. I mean, this country was built on hard work. Right. And, and that's how we're gonna keep going into the future. We just gotta, we gotta keep working hard on our end to, to keep spreading the word.

 

Yeah. And I mean, everybody out there, like have you know, in a lot of the firms that I've worked in, it's, you know, have those jobs, shadows reach out to your, middle and high schools, right. Have people come into the, to the office or go out in the field you know, to do a day or whatever probably in the summer, right. To, to go and either be in the office. And this is for, I mean, everybody, right? Subs, GCs, design firms bring people into the office, bring people out on site with you, right.

 

Have them shadow somebody and see if. It's an industry they want to be in, right? That they, this is something that we could do. This is a career path. This exists. This is other things show up to career fairs. I've done a number for like my Alma mater when I lived back in the Midwest, like I went to a bunch of career fairs to talk to like high schoolers, right.

 

Namely I was showing up there for like Rose-Hulman, but for my college to say that like, Hey, engineering is also like a, a degree that you can go and do. Right. But as well as, you know, as a, as a company, I think more companies should show up to like high school career fairs to show up to those types of events to say, Hey, like, we exist.

 

Do you want a summer job? Like as a high schooler, right. Reach down into the community, right? You're not looking for somebody that's just 18 or in college or whatever. You can, you know, start younger and have people to help you. You know, maybe it's not in the field, maybe it's an office, but you know, find some places for them to let them know that, hey construction is more than you see on TV, right. Is it's something that, you know, is a career path. It might not be forever. It's not for everybody. Let's just be straight with that. But it is a good option for a lot of people that might not know about it or how to get started.

 

Yeah, absolutely. And that's, that's one of those initiatives blue collar BA that, that.

 

That myself and my business partner, we're trying to, to kind of format that locally. How we, how can we interject or inject ourselves into the high school programs? And, you know, we don't have a ton of interns that come and work for us, but, but to bring kids out for a day, just to show them, you know, here's a real-life shop class.

 

Check it out, you know, it, I think it could be really powerful. So it's just going back to the very beginning here with test days. It's one of those things that it takes time. It takes time to put these programs together and to make those, those introductions. And it's important. So, you know, maybe I'll work late tonight and keep going on it.

 

Yeah. I mean, it's, it's shown people like. Clearing the site, right? Like showing them that, Hey, somebody is driving that a dozer, right. Somebody's digging those holes with an excavator. Somebody is, you know, like there's a person that that's their job and here's how much money they make. Right. Roughly, you know, like it's.

 

And that's the other thing.  like a lot of people, you basically know what other people make. It's one of those few industries where you kind of know what a, you know, journeymen electrician makes, right? Like it's just known. So that's the other thing through a lot of this is, yeah. I mean, everybody wants a real-life Tonka truck and to drive them around.

 

Absolutely that I can't tell you how many times I've, I've jumped on machines. I, I carry you know, master key ring in my truck that I can get into all of them. So once in a while, on the weekends, you might find me out there pushing piles of dirt that don't necessarily need to be pushed.

 

One of the, so yeah, I grew up with cattle and one of the things that we would do on one of the.

 

Ranches that we'd run cattle on is the guy that owned. It was a logger. So this was when I lived in Oregon on the coast. And so, I mean, that's when you get 120 inches of rain trees kind of grow pretty quickly. So we would we had to put up some fence and we did like one of the head Gates, right.

 

For kind of like the master Gates to come through. So usually those are. Big bulky deals. So we use railroad ties as the ends for the gate. We dug a hole with the excavator, set the post, or like, you know, we'd hold the post. And then the guy was a good enough operator to where he just pushed the dirt back with the excavator and set up a post.

 

And then for the other posts we'd use pointed You know, fence posts, one person would stand, hold the point of fence posts. Cause it's got the pencil point on it and there would be, you know, light enough towards somebody hold it, put the bucket on it. And then you just drive it right into the ground.

 

Easiest way I've ever done fence posts versus having to, you know, dig out a hole. But that's a. Equipment is cool. And you get to play with a lot of the big toys when you're on, especially like in the beginning of projects, right. Moving dirt and all that kind of good stuff.

 

Yeah. I will more frequently than I like to admit, even to myself, I'll, I'll find that I'm watching videos on, on LinkedIn or somewhere on social of, you know, the, the crane operators throwing basketballs into hoops or, you know, all that sort of stuff, which.

 

I better, never see on one of my jobs sites, but it's, it's just fun stuff. You know, it goes back to that childhood curiosity of, of big trucks and, you know, banging things together.

 

And that's a skill man to be able to, to do that, you know, like the skill of those operators to, you know, finally grade something, or throw whatever at a skill.

 

Yeah, the skill we need more of.

 

All right, guys, that's going to be, we're going to wrap up the episode here talking about blue collar. We love talking about this stuff. So again, if anybody's got a contact to Mike Rowe, we'd love to have him on talk some dirty jobs and you know, in construction. But with that, any, any closing words you want to leave, Matt?

 

You know, just that, just that keep following along. You know, Dylan and I are working to, to try and bring awareness to the industry as a whole, in all facets and, you know, help us spread the word. We, we don't, we don't ask for payment or anything, but, but sharing this around and, and telling your friends or telling people in the industry, all of that helps and it helps us do what we're trying to do.

 

So let's get after it.

 

Yeah. Back to work. So yeah. Thank you all for joining in live here on a LinkedIn YouTube, Facebook. Thank you all for commenting. We really appreciate we'll do more of these lives. Probably once a week, we got a show coming up on Friday with the welding Lord, Zach Arnold. So we're going to talk about division five metals from specialty metals to all division five.

 

So that's going to be an exciting show on Friday. It was Zack. It'll be we'll be alive again. And then the show will come out on the podcast in a couple of weeks. So thank you all for listening. And that's going to be this episode of the construction corner podcast.

Talking Shop about BIM

All right. Hello and welcome to the construction corner podcast. I'm Dylan on your host and we got a few, well, one guest today, and then my, I got to work on our, my intro mat on what the hell I'm going to say now, since I've been sitting there for so long, but Matt is here with us today, Matt. How's it going, man?

 p

Fantastic. It's been a great day. Freezing cold here in Southeast Michigan, but got a lot done and happy to be here.

 

Yeah, man. It's I just got done with my 75 hard outdoor walk. It's a snow sleet in here. It's I dunno, 34, I guess something above freezing. Cause it's not snowing. And like it's just what cold miserable out, but Hey, you gotta, gotta get it done.

 

Yeah. It was a high of 20 here today and it's just turned into an icy Tundra, you know, not nothing works. It's just ice everywhere. It's fun.

 

And today, so we are, do have a, another guest on if you're watching live here on Facebook at LinkedIn or YouTube, you know, we've got another guest, but Andy is also joining us from the mitten of the Midwest and third generation in his in construction.

 

So I mean, construction basically runs in his blood, which we'll hear all about today. Before Mandy got into the industry, just aspire to be an architect engineer. And we'll, we'll talk about where you went awry in that whole plan today. But. When it worked his way through, on the contractor construction side of the construction industry and gaining his career as a draftsman and just has witnessed the whole evolution of construction, which we all know I'm passionate about on the, on the evolution of how we put together buildings and do design, but from, you know, 2d, AutoCAD to modern day 5g, BIM and coordination, laser scanning reality capture robotics, automated layout solutions, and.

 

Really is an avid user day in, day out. So Andy Zeller, welcome to construction corner podcast.

 

Thanks guys. I appreciate it to say the least. I'm excited to talk shop.

 

Awesome. Glad to have you, Andy. Appreciate it, especially nice to bring another Michigan guy up here. Well,

 

don't go that far. Actually, I grew up in Omaha.

 

I'm in the people's Republic of Michigan right now because yeah.

 

You and me both, man. Yeah.

 

I'm probably ahead of you in California here. So we're coming for you, right? Close second.

 

I think lately, Hey, stay at home. Got lifted.

 

So. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. We, we finally got to the point where we can go to restaurant.

 

Well, when's that start mad? Is it two days?

 

I think it's Monday. Whenever the

 

first is. Yeah. Yeah. So, but it's 25% and all that. Yeah. So that's a whole nother conversation. Yes.

 

Yeah. It's not for this podcast, you know, we're, we're in construction. We can still work.

 

But now Andy, tell us a little bit about your family. What got you into the construction? What your, maybe what your grandpa did in construction and a little bit on that story.

 

So way back when, obviously long before I was around at least my dad's dad they, they own a lumber yard out in Western Nebraska.

 

Being way out in the middle of nowhere, basically, if you sell, would you know how to build things apparently, and if you're selling nails, you know how to actually install them. So kind of by default, they were also the general contractor in the area, putting up grain bins houses, you know, you need fences done, all that kind of stuff.

 

Back then they didn't really have a whole lot of code, you know, that was. It just, it was what it was back then. Right. Really, you got your good word of mouth in you. You got known in the industry, as long as the stuff you built didn't fall down. So it was, it was definitely a quality based industry back then.

 

From there, my dad also went to school for construction management ever since I was little, honestly, some of my first memories growing up. Nailed me to a roof because I refuse to not be on the ground while they were up shingling. My grandparent's house. Actually nailed the tail of my shirt to the roof, so I wouldn't fall off while they were actually off working.

 

I remember walking through big commercial job sites. He worked for one of the largest general contractors in the world at the time. Working, you know, walking through those job sites, being told, don't look at the welders Ark you know, don't touch that, make sure you don't trip on that. So going through that, you know, I just, just kind of followed my dad's footsteps.

 

I always knew I wanted to be in construction. Everybody else was coloring Superman and Batman coloring books. I got my dad's leftover blueprints and as pack of highlighters, and that was my coloring book. So., I knew always all along that I was going to be in construction one way or another. Found out that my school at the time my high school also had a CAD program.

 

So got into that doing auto CAD. I had already met with AutoCAD before. Obviously had no idea what I was doing until I actually got training, but it was enough to get interested in it. So went into that program, thought I want to be an architect. Actually, I went to multiple schools trying to figure out, you know, did the whole school tours and all that found out.

 

I really didn't want to be an architect. I want to be more of an engineer side. Life happened. That was, I graduated high school in Oh five and the economy in Michigan had already started going a little bit South on stuff. So we ended up moving back to Nebraska. Then ended up going back to school at all.

 

I had, I graduated high school with a vocational certificate for CAD, excuse me. And that honestly kind of took me to where I am today. The rest of it's all for the most part, been more on the job training kind of stuff. Little classes here and there, manufacturer training, stuff like that. So went to.

 

I don't know a handful I've been in manufacturing. I've been in obviously construction anywhere from the architect to the engineer, to the actual contractor side, went back to manufacturing for a little bit then went back into construction. And then, I mean, Matt Dillon, you guys are both in construction, obviously on different sides of the.

 

You know, let's be honest, there's kind of this us versus them mentality that I'm sure we can talk about, but

 

we all know it's there. We're just willing to talk about it.

 

Right. Sometimes more, more loudly than the other guy, but yeah, it's. It's a very real thing. That's out there. And I found out that I'm much more comfortable on the contractor side, you know, through the experiences engineers, look at certain things, contractors.

 

Yeah. Look at other things. And at the end of the day, I mean, even in manufacturing at which is another thing, I'm sure we'll be talking about where construction is turning more and more into manufacturing. Used to be when I started, you could draw something and in nine months in construction, you were lucky if you even got to go to a job site to go see what you actually designed and drew because by that time, by the time something was actually built, you were already working on, you know, two, three, even four projects down the road.

 

As long as it was kind of those, no news is good news situations. Whereas in manufacturing I can draw something in within 12 to 24 hours. I can physically hold that part in my hand. So that was always extremely rewarding for me. But again, going back into construction, just being in that more throughout my lifetime, I was able to.

 

I can go to a, to a job site and I can talk to the guys in the field. I've never hung a piece of pipe. I've never been a piece of sheet metal. I've never hammered a nail into a stud. But when I talked to those guys, they know what I'm saying, and I know what they're saying a lot more so than in manufacturing.

 

So this is where I am now. This is where I'm going to stay. Whether I like it or not, that, you know, construction is where I'm going to end up. So You know, with that being said, though, throughout that process, when I first started with AutoCAD, it was, you know, like you kind of alluded to in that beautiful bio Dylan the, I started off with 2d AutoCAD back in the day.

 

And that was really, you know, when you think about it, AutoCAD was a glorified handcrafting, right?

 

Well, hold on, before we get into that. So one of the big things that, that mats super passionate about. Is, you know, not only building better, but making the trades cool again. So like in this it's I guess I wanna, I want to hit on a couple points here.

 

One that look engineering, architecture is not for everybody. And like you realize that early on and there's, you know, there in construction, there's, there's no bad job, right? Like it's, there's some shitty ones, like, but. There's, there's not a bad spot. We need everybody. And then it's the, the biggest thing too, that we want to instill is there's always ways to get better.

 

Right? You got to start somewhere and there's, there's always ways to get better. But the point that I want to kind of hit on it and Matt feel free to jump in here is the vocational program, like how instrumental was that for you to have in high school? And to, to really learn, you know, not only CAD, but CAD in a way that allows you to kind of jump into an industry.

 

You know, like my high school didn't have it. And I'm sure there's tons of bicycles that, that don't right. Not just like, not every high school has FFA. Not every high school is going to have a vocational program. So how instrumental was, was that program for you?

 

That honestly, to me, Not exaggerating at all changed my life.

 

If I did not have that program, then there's a very good chance that I, I can promise you. There's no way that I would be where I am today. Even if I was making the same amount of money now, as if I went down that other path, making the same amount of money now, as I would, obviously what I'm doing now I'd have $200,000 in student loans.

 

You know, but by the time I got out of high school, I had a vo-tech certificate. I already had a full year worth of, co-op so it was basically working part-time I think I was putting in 20, 30 hours a week during my senior year. My entire senior year. My first block was co-op. Second block was a free because I already had all my credits done.

 

And then my third block was lunch. So I literally, I would go into the shop at five 30, six o'clock in the morning. I didn't have to be back to school until my third block. Which was, I don't know what, 1231 o'clock. So five days a week for that entire time I was working, getting actual work experience, getting the credit and.

 

So, yeah, there's not a whole lot of other programs that you can do that for. So, so

 

going to that, how was it generally accepted when in your school? Because first of all, I'm gonna rewind real quick. I don't throw out any of my old plans. They all go to my three boys and they color it shit out of them.

 

And it's great. But back to your, to your point. So I'm a little bit older than, than both of you when I was in high school. You know where I was, first of all, voc-tech I don't think there was any construction related aspect of it, period. And to be quite honest, I mean, the voc-tech in my day was like the burnouts and that's how it was at least that's how it was looked at by everyone.

 

So how, from your standpoint, you know, you got into the cabin and the little construction side, how was it looked at? Was it that still have that kind of stigma to it? Or was it starting to lighten up a little bit?

 

Honestly, not really. I think part of it was because the high school, I went to the, I guess the actual vo-tech certificate program, wasn't technically part of the high school is put on by the school district.

 

So we had all the surrounding high schools would go to this. Now that kicker to it for me, is that our ISD, what are our, yeah, our ISD offices, I guess, was in the same building as the high school. So all I had to do is walk through a second set of doors and I was there. I didn't have to worry about actually driving.

 

The other aspect of that, probably the bigger one was that you actually cannot even apply for any of these classes, unless you already had all your high school credits done. So my senior year I think I had to take one or two actual classes to complete my full high school curriculum and requirements.

 

And so that's why I was able to get into Ted and why I was able to actually go to the co-op. So.

 

So could people take like so if they let's say it took them their full, like senior year, four years to complete all their stuff, could they take a, like a gap year? I don't know what to call it, but like another year you can go do the vocational program or if, cause like, you know, you turn 18, usually they kick you out.

 

Like how

 

did that work? So as far as getting your curriculum hours in. Like your credit hours. I think, like I said, I still had to do some stuff my senior year. I didn't fail any of my classes, so no matter what I was still going to have to go my senior year, I think part of it though, too, is like the actual physical number of hours that you're in a school building.

 

So that played into it. So I don't think you could really take a gap year, but because of the way that our school was structured. You could either go to this vo-tech school, which, I mean, we had building trades, which you are actually out like habitat for humanity kind of stuff, putting up a building.

 

We had an electrician's school where they had half of it was like PCBs. The other half was actual like residential, commercial wiring. You have machine shop, you had CAD, you had autotech, you had wood shop, stuff like that. So I consider it the, the fun school for, for lack of a better for others. But as far as the trying to get the best way to word it, as far as like the stigma around it, I don't want to say that we were the elite of the elite, you know, the best of the best, just because we had it.

 

It was, I think it was more for the kids. And I know you guys have touched on this in previous episodes where, you know, college isn't for everybody. And I learned real quick. I mean, even in high school, I'm like, why do I have to take two years of chemistry and Spanish to go get a CAD certificate and pay $70,000 for it, right.

 

To go, essentially, go get a job that was going to start me off at 14 bucks an hour. That just, it didn't ever really make sense to me. So I'm like, I'm going to take every opportunity I can to get just through this so I can actually go start making money in the real world. So I think I had a little bit different mentality about it.

 

A little bit different perspective than a lot of the students. Now don't get me wrong. There were a lot of kids that, you know, like you were saying, Matt, you know, some of them seem like burnouts, you know, they like working on cars and it was just a blow off class to them. But I think for the most part, those of us who actually went through it did take it fairly seriously.

 

Like we knew we wanted to do something in that field. So. That's

 

that's good to hear because frankly, we need a lot more of that. You know, there I'm on the East side of the state and there's some, some local districts around here that are, are really stepping up and offering programs like that. For construction, for fire academies, for police, you know, all sorts of things that kids can get in in high school and, and come out of high school at 18 years old with a job with a real job.

 

And. You know, we've touched on it before, but you know, like Dylan said, keeping the trades. Cool. And that's kind of a tagline I started using, but the reality is if we don't get kids involved and, and keep building up that farm team as an industry, we're going to suffer big time.

 

Oh yeah, no, I, I agree. A hundred percent.

 

That's honestly why I believe construction tech itself and the evolution of construction tech is so crucial to our industry as a whole. Yeah.

 

It's both too. Like it's both and right. Like you with like tech, you gotta be like somewhat computer literate. Like just knowing how to run an iPad, you know, like you need some basic knowledge, but you also like going in and you can go into both sides of it.

 

And we'll, we'll get into this too, but you can go into like just the CAD side or you can be a guy in the field that can. Put the stuff up and know how to run the iPad. And now you're a much more valuable asset. You know, I'm seeing more and more high schools put these programs together. Like in Indianapolis.

 

When I was there, we designed a voc-tech lab space for. HVAC granted. So carrier is a big has there been main factory there in Indi? So they donated like Thompson issue, AC units for everybody to work on. Right. Which is in their, their sole interest. Right. They can have people come in that are trained on carrier units you know, and then put those out.

 

Right. And so it's an easy way, but there's a lot of other things. Like that, that are around, but the thing too, I want to hammer on. It's not just tech, which, you know, Andy, I know that your, your focus and what we're going to dive in here too. And I mean, I'm on the tech side, like, don't get me wrong.

 

It's important. But like, there needs to be also people that are like the guys that are super mechanically inclined. Like I went to high school with a few guys, best mechanics I've ever. Ever known, right? Like they could fix you name it, they could fix it. And then they went to a vocational school for a few years to learn how to do all the computer stuff that are in like the new diesels, right.

 

Like all the emission stuff. So you need people that understand the technology that go into this. Especially as much tech is in an engine nowadays, let alone everything else. You know, but they need people that can just. Build stuff, you know, let alone like the, the tech side of it. Any, any piece that I kind of went on a little tear there, but

 

no, no, I honestly, I agree a hundred percent with it.

 

You know, you're talking about guys that are either computer savvy or they're mechanically inclined and, in all honesty, it. I always want to talk to everybody who has an interest in it, because at this point, I mean, I've talked with graphic designers that, that a true BIM VDC job description, when you really look at it, it almost is kind of vague to a certain point where people think that we design cartoon characters, you know, and, and that's, it's just a lot of the same nomenclature, a lot of same terminology, but.

 

The I've always had the mentality of, I will always take somebody out of the field, over somebody who comes just out of school to draft my, and the reasoning for that is because you can teach anybody to draft for the most part, but if they don't know what they're drawing, their drawings are absolutely worthless.

 

And so with that being said, if my, so my ideal candidate for a BIM guy for example, would be an ideal, would be a 50 year veteran pipe fitter or sheet metal, tin knocker, who comes in. He's like, okay, I know this process, I've been on a hundred temp jobs before. I know what the guys in the field are looking for.

 

Now, let me come into the office and actually produce those drawings because he knows that. What we do on the computer is we are essentially building that in that exact same building. We're just doing it on the computer. So if a duct doesn't fit or a pipe, doesn't go where, you know, on the computer, we know it's not going to work out in the field.

 

And it's, we run by the 10, 50, 100 rule where it's $10 to fix a problem on the computer, $50 to fix it in the shop. If we find a problem, say with prefab, and it's a hundred dollars to fix it, if we're out on scissor lifts and ladders, trying to do it when it's 20 feet in the air. So yeah, with that, you know, I know I'm kinda going off on a little tangent there, but yeah, that's, it is very important to say the least, I know the, the, the courses and the, you know, classes and stuff that I've been a part of the like I went to Autodesk university for example, and tremble dementia, stuff like that.

 

And they're saying over the next five years, we're supposed to lose 40% of our workforce. However, so with that being said, they're also saying, all right, well, over the last a hundred years, our, our industry has grown like this, but somehow magically, they think that over the next five years, it's also going to go like this.

 

So where their reasoning is for that, I'm not exactly sure, but You know, and we're going to have a massive labor shortage. And yet our, our actual production needs are going to skyrocket. And that's really, I agree, you know, I can draw all the prettiest pictures in the world, but if there's nobody there to actually install it, it's all for nothing.

 

So I

 

like what you said about bringing guys in from the field. In a, in a previous life, I ran an estimating department for a larger contractor and that was. Those guys were my unicorns, right? When I was hiring for estimators, we would get lots of people come in and they know the, the schooling side of it.

 

They know the technology side of it, but if they've never swung a hammer so to speak, or they'd never seen it go up, it was very, very hard to teach them to do the kind of conceptual estimating that we did. So getting, you know, getting people well-rounded is, is. Fantastic in my book. And I think that's how we saved the industry.

 

Because as, as you get older in the field, you know, there's a natural attrition where shit starts shutting down on you. You know, it just doesn't feel as good getting up and, and hanging Piper, banging hammers all day. So to take those guys and instead of letting them kind of die on the vine, bring them back in and, and repurpose them.

 

I think that could be huge.

 

Yeah, no, absolutely. That's, you know, even as an estimator, for example, cause that was. I'm kinda in that same boat. I used to be an estimator and NPM you know, getting the guys who can look at a set of blueprints. I mean, yeah, you can go to school and you can learn to run AutoCAD.

 

You can rev it or whatever you're using. You can go to school and learn how to read blueprints, but until you actually do it, there's only so much that a school can teach you, you know, the, you go straight to Autodesk for training and they train you how to use our software, which is great. But it's developed from a process of how the.

 

The industry could or should function in their eyes, not necessarily how it does function. So if you get a guy that looks at a blueprint, for example, as an estimator and says, well, that's not going to work. And we know that we're going to have to add a million dollars to the budget in order to make this work.

 

You as a contractor may not win that particular bid, but at the same time, you're also not going to have to eat a million dollars worth of problems down the road, though. You know, it's kind of a give and take, but having that experience is huge in my mind.

 

Yeah. So the, the biggest thing that I've seen across the industry, and this is coming from the engineering side.

 

So, I mean, I had a advantage that I spent a lot of time in the field digging in panels before I ever went to the AC side of it. I did power systems for industrial plants. So I looked at a lot of, a lot of power systems, wrote a lot of arc flash reports. And, you know, like, like I lived and breathed all that stuff.

 

So for me coming into it, I had a much different understanding and being implants, working with electricians for years before I ever went to the like design side of it. And I knew what was safe, like electrically to put in versus what, like get people hurt. So like I had a very different upbringing, but when I stepped into the industry, I saw that like, people didn't go to site you know, and I.

 

I moved up quickly because I had all that experience, that power system stuff to where I, you know, I was leading projects within a year. I was like the main guy for it. And when I became a department head, like I, I made sure to take my young guys, like, Hey, you're just going to come with me. But shut up, stand behind me, you know, write the shit down and let's go.

 

And like I got, I got some flak for it for sending them for like on punches and stuff like that. Especially when, you know, we had to fly to job sites and I was like, when is this guy ever going to be able to punch a 300,000 square foot brand new high school? Like tell me when. And I needed to do it in two days.

 

I'm like these two old guys can't like run, you know, some young guy with them to like go and get, get stuff. Right. That's how

 

you want to punch your outlet. Cover on every outlet in every room. Just,

 

this is a 300 a thousand square foot brand new building. Like these two guys, I love them, but they're, you know, they're not going to be able to cover it, you know, without killing them.

 

So it's things like that where you know, Across the industry. And this is especially geared to the architecture and design side of the table is you have to put people in the field, but get them like, and you get them to the OAC meetings. You get them to all this stuff. So they know how to handle those meetings before they ever have to lead one.

 

Before they ever say something they regret and the firm regrets. But like, they need to be in those rooms, be in those meetings, be on the job site, you know, talk to them like the people that you need to talk to and have those conversations. And if it's, even if it's just like, Hey, what's up, what's going on?

 

Can you tell me about this? Like, you know, what are you guys doing? Like that is all well and good, but to send them with some senior people. And I know it's a, it's a cost, it's an expense. You're not getting stuff done in the office, but like it's, it's going to be the long-term benefit for everybody.

 

It's

 

an investment.

 

Th that's, that's exactly what I was getting at, you know, think about what it costs you to send them there for that hour is what 5,000 bucks, obviously, depending on their level, but what's the cost. If you don't send them to something like that. And like you just said, don't they say something in front of an owner later on that cost you a potential $10 million project, you know?

 

And construction is still humans, right? It's so human based. And what tends to happen from, from my side, what I saw in the office as an estimator is my estimators would never leave the office. You know, they'd, they'd bid stuff all day long, but they would never go out and see a site. They'd never see something come out of the ground and.

 

I got to assume it's similar with, on the design side, you know, I, I know architects and designers who will never leave their drafting table or their computer now, you know, there's gotta be that mix because it's still the human element. We're, we're never going to be putting up buildings with robots, no matter how cool, you know, Boston dynamics makes things.

 

They're not going to replace the human element of it. And, and to get the young designers, the young estimators, everybody out there and talking with each other. And there's nothing that most of our, my guys in the field, they would love to explain what they're doing to a younger guy. Who's actually interested, you know, it, it it's real powerful stuff.

 

Conversations have never gone bad. Like I've never had a single conversation with, I've worked with 65 year old electricians from the Hills of Kentucky, you know, He could drink beer at a table, but like, you know, asking, asking a question, like never, it was never a bad thing anywhere. I've been in weird manufacturing plants in the middle of nowhere to, you know, downtown cities, right?

 

Like those guys up and down the chain, like no one ever had a problem asking, like, if you were genuine in your ass, and it wasn't like a problem question, right? Just like, how are things going? You know, what can we help with? Well, it's, you know you know, why'd you go this way and like, not in a, you know, like we're going to get you for this one type language, but just in a like, Hey, you know this is a little different, but why why'd you make this decision?

 

There's nothing wrong with that. I was just curious, right? Like stuff like that, I think goes a very long way on the job site.

 

No, that, that honestly, so thankfully right now my day job, we have a very small department, but it's quickly growing. Just being the whole BIM VDC construction tech department.

 

My number one rule. If I ever get anybody green, they're not even getting a computer for the first two weeks. They're going out to the field to actually follow our guys around. Whether it's she, you know, you're going to the sheet metal for a day. You're going to hang duct. You're going to go out to the shop for a day.

 

You're going to learn how to bend sheet metal. You're going out to the weld shop to learn how to cut and put pipe together. You know, I don't know how many times I've dealt with. You know, relatively green draftsmen who they don't realize that a flange requires a, an impact gun in a wrench to actually put that bolt together.

 

So you can't bury that in a corner somewhere. Right. So yeah, no getting that field experience. I personally, I've never hung a pipe in my life, but I've been yelled at by enough of the failed guy, the field guys, to know what I can and cannot do on my drawings. So.

 

I love it. We we're building the community center right now in a nearby us here.

 

And there's a lot of masonry inside the building. You know, as firewall we had, I dunno, six different columns. These are pre-engineered columns right up against the masonry. And so the guys started going to, to stand them up and they can sit, you know, they can stand them on the, on the anchor bolts. But they're like, how in the hell are we supposed to crank these bolts?

 

The nuts down on the bolts on the air side, there's, you know, two inches between the column and the masonry. And we ended up cutting holes, know weld, cutting holes in, in the, in the columns themselves and having to put them back together just so they had room to stick an arm through to get a wrench on it.

 

And, and that's kinda what, I mean, it's just what you said with the, with the flanges, you know, there's little nuances that you won't pick up. On 2d or 3d or, or five D or anything, unless you can actually go in and see it in real life.

 

Yeah. Yeah. And that's where the, you know, actually getting that field experience.

 

And I mean, we, one of our internal processes is we laser scan every job as, as long as it's a renovation or an addition or something along that where we have something to laser scan. And even honestly, we're doing a new job right now where we're doing progressive scanning. So as the steel goes up, we go out and scan and bring that back into the model to make sure that it's accurate.

 

We're one of the only ones in the state with the laser scanner we have. So we can actually do that onsite and analyze what's accurate versus what's not before we ever leave site, but that kind of information, even if you go out and laser scan, right, and you bring that point cloud back into the computer, you, there is nothing you will ever do.

 

That will even remotely compare to being actually onsite and smelling the dirt, getting your group's money, just period. So can we can we shift a little bit though, and this laser scanning idea? Oh no, we just lost our I affectionately referred to him as my drone guy. He went and got some sweet jobs somewhere and he was posting pictures of their day or this thing.

 

It was called a Farrow F a R O scanner. And. He's doing that something he's in Houston or something now, but I'm just a dumb construction guy. So you got to fill me in a little bit on what, what this is and what it's doing for us.

 

No. So laser scanning is, you know, how a laser tape works, right? Yup. Shoots out mounts us back and measures the time.

 

Records it as distance. The laser scanners that I knew. So Pharaoh was actually one of the ones that I learned on. I've used all the major manufacturers basically, and Pharaoh, Leica and tremble are right up there. They they're all fairly equal. They have their pros and cons, whatever it all basically does the same thing, but.

 

Think of a laser tape that shoots out, however, it also records horizontal and I'm sorry, horizontal and vertical angle of that laser. And it does at 500,000 to 2 million times a second. So what it's doing is it records that point that is essentially an arbitrary point in space, but then it ELLs it so many times.

 

And so for every scan location that you have it arched to develop a pattern that you can see. So from there, we'll set up a cause I think I've actually seen some of the projects that you've done, that, that when you set a for example, right? So in that gym, you would split up a, say four times, right. To get rid of what we consider shadows, you know, saying both sides of a beam with all lineups, like I can't eat or anything, but knowing that, okay.

 

Yeah. Matt wants to see these beans and he needs to make sure that they're accurate. I know where I need to set up inside that gym or capture a good image of from there, we'll bring it into the computer, pointed out. The only thing we really need to do. And then you can actually take that laser scan, drop it into Navis works or rabbit or AutoCAD or recap.

 

If you want to just look at me, look just at the scan itself. Recap is a free viewer. There's real works or Trimble. I believe Leica has a icon. I think there's a free year for that. Arrow has another one for seeing or regardless, you can look at this on your computer and then literally you guys can see everything that this in full color.

 

It's an exponential degradation of measurement value. So the further out you go, the less accurate you are. But I like to say at about 300 feet Which I think the scanner I have right now is 80 meter range. And we typically say plus, or minus about a quarter of an inch. So there's other ones that are out there.

 

Tremble actually has one. Like it has another one where it's set up more for civil work, but those things are reaching out over a kilometer and reflecting back tremble actually had one when they first released, it said. It's only rated for 600 meters alum lane. So half over half a kilometer. But they said that they were getting returns back off of birds, a kilometer and a half away.

 

So, you know, it's, it's amazing what this stuff can do. And so by doing that, what we're able to do is let's say. Let's say you're working in an operating room scenario, for example, right? Every time you pop a ceiling tile, you have to recertify the room, you have to gown up, you have to do it off hours. You have, you know, there's all the different nuances that go along with working in a specialty scenario like that.

 

Right? So by going into the laser scanner, what I can do is I can go in after hours by myself, gather all this information. Bring it back to the computer. And then we can reference that information. Anytime I can have a team of literally thousands of people looking at the exact same point cloud at the exact same time, rather than trying to put 2000 heads into the same ceiling tile you know, develop presentations, load into a model to make sure that everything's going to actually work around the light fixtures and the.

 

You know, you've got a big light boom. So you have all the structural old strut and everything that's up above the ceiling, making sure that your ducks are going to work around. You know, so it's, it's good. Is that a reality capture? The big thing to remember about it though, is that it's a snapshot, right?

 

So you're going out you're you have all your stuff you'll in place. You're going to go out and go scan that steel and then bring it back in that scan is not going to contain any of the new duct work or electrical conduits until you out and rescan it. So, you know, there, there are limitations to it.

 

It's not the end all be all, but, Oh man, does it save so much headache?

 

So there's a few things to note with this, with a point clouds, there's a couple different pieces to note. So there's everything that any talks about with the laser scan, they call them point clouds. The other thing in some of these newer scanners is you can get photogrammetry.

 

Which is a little more nuanced. So you can basically, you get a full and get the HD version like SD doesn't cut it. We like one of the architects I worked with on a or remodel, we did exactly what Andy was talking about, where we they did a standard definition photo for it. And like, it's great where, you know, one guy went in from 10 at night, till six in the morning.

 

Right. Or whatever they could for the ORs to scan them and, you know, get all hallways and everything. But the thing that missed and like those Stan, like SD stuff is like, you're looking at one cable or one port and you can't make it out. Right. Is that what type of gases are in here on the like overhead?

 

So you can basically get a full three. It's like a, not matter port, but it's. It's better than Matterport is. So have you seen the like Matterport home, like 3d home pieces it's that is what we're talking about with photogrammetry, right. 3d. But it also with the laser it's super accurate.

 

So you can do dimensions and takeoffs where like, I don't think you can do that within Matterport.

 

But it's not nearly as accurate a photograph actually. Photogrammetry is actually what Google uses to get the terrain in and all the buildings in Google maps. So it's basically, you're taking photos from different angles and the computer analyzes it to say, okay, yeah, with this shadow and this shading and this and this and this, I'm going to put a building here.

 

You know, so it's usually a very rough mesh, but yes, you're, you're exactly right. And with the laser on top of it, like if you do that in some of these that I've worked with are they're super accurate. So there's. Two things like one is using these for renovations. It's a super slick way to do it.

 

Cause you always missed the corner of the thing that you needed a picture of. Right? You, you always miss that. If you're doing a video where these, you know, you're, you're more than likely not going to miss anything. And if it, if it is, that's why you take multiple locations within the same room to try to Avoid that in particular.

 

And then you have complete and total access to a three-dimensional deal. Right? So up, down left, right. Ceilings, everything within a space. So for renovations, it's super slick. Then like I can pull it up on my computer or if I'm working, I'm in California, I'm working on a project, Michigan. Like I can do it.

 

Right. And it's like, I went and walked the job site. So that's the other thing is you get with. Especially with like COVID regulations and people on site in hospitals. And this was like, I did that, Oh, our job years ago before COVID was even a word to like go and do these types of renovations. So it's, it's super beneficial.

 

Like, I don't know how many times, like job site visits it saved. Right. And then to gown to get in a clean suit, to get approval from the hospital. You know, and make sure that they have surgery, like all that stuff. So for, for spaces like that, it's super beneficial and even just saving time and it's not overly costly.

 

I mean, for Andy, you guys probably you have your own scanner, so it's, you know, pretty, pretty cost effective. I mean, obviously the equipment costs and a laser scanner now costs anywhere from 16,000 for a lower end Jeep one all the way through. I mean, I've dealt with scanners that are a quarter of a million dollars, right.

 

They get attached to helicopters. So it's, there's a pretty big gamut in there, but for the most part, you can get into it. A nice laser scanner now for under a hundred K. But it's, it's obviously the initial investment. And then after that, I can literally hand this thing to an apprentice and he can go out and go run this.

 

So then you're just talking labor costs. But no. The other thing that you were kind of touching on too, Dylan is the safety aspect, right? I've gone out, I've scanned you know, essentially warehouses or auditoriums where we need to run new duct, you know, 40 feet in the air. I don't want to be up in a scissor lift.

 

Right. I, I personally I hate Heights. It's not the fall. It's not the hides. It's a sudden stop after the fall that I'm really not a fan of. The being able to go out and again, if I can see it, I can scan it. So it's a direct shot. As long as I can see where that wall is or where that opening is from the ground.

 

There's no scissor lifts. There's no hard hats. There's no safety glasses there. You know, I'm rarely even wearing a safety vest in a lot of these because it's, it's just a regular building. I'm usually in those spaces long before the project sometimes is even awarded before there's even a bid out because we're just doing initial recon for the AEC firms.

 

You know, so again, you're also doing it with one guy rather than having to have two guys out there, pulling the tape on two different ladders and, you know, hoping that that's good. You get a guy up on a 20 foot extension ladder trying to measure 24 feet in the air. And he doesn't like Heights. Yeah.

 

That's plus or minus six inches, you know? Yeah. We'll make it fit. You know, my scanner has no feelings. It doesn't care if it hurts your feelings, it, if it'll fit my scanner, I'll tell you so lots, lots of good benefits to it.

 

Yeah. I mean, there's, there's callous uses and the new one that I'm seeing, because so.

 

In a previous life, I've dealt with a lot of point clouds and this is like eight, 10 years ago. And they were a pain in the ass. They sucked. They would take you half a day, a day to like clean up a point cloud to be able to use it again. You're like computers just didn't have enough hardware to process, you know, the millions of points that are within these things.

 

Right? Cause every, every laser.is a point and it registers that. And then to go through millions of those is tough. But in. More recent times where were able to like clean these up. And a lot of people put a lot of effort into point cloud and cleaning up these models is for progress reports actually.

 

So as a, let's say as a mechanical sub, right? Like you go out, you scan it, everybody knows it's there. You need there. I mean, you're going to do a point cloud versus photogrammetry, cause that gives you an actual like duct, but to say, you know, Hey, this is done. Right check. And then you can go against, so the new way to do this, as you go against your bill of materials and your invoicing.

 

So then you can say, all right, 25% of my duct is complete, hung done. And I have now I also have proof, right? Here's our laser scan date. And you can invoice off of that type of stuff. So it's not only as bill. But then it comes into pricing and finance for the firm as well. It's not many are doing that, but that's one of the other applications that you can have for it.

 

Yeah. Yeah. That's, that's a very good point. There's actually stuff out there now that. May or may not have been around when, when you started dealing with it, Dylan, I mean, even a point cloud today I just got done doing the one that was over 4 billion points and it was in excess of 60 gigs. So Dropbox won't even allow me to upload the whole thing at once, even zipped.

 

Very few computers have even have the software to open it, let alone the hardware on it. I got an $8,000 desktop that I built myself that was struggling to handle this thing. So it's, it's definitely not for the weak of heart. You know, and, and then the experiences and pull another aspect, you know, knowing how to fly through annoying, making sure that you're grabbing the right points to pull dimensions and all that.

 

Yeah, the, some of the stuff that we can do now with them actually is. We're actually working on this right now where 3d or three 60 cameras, you can essentially do the same thing with much smaller file sizes. There's a number of companies out there where, you know, weekly, you just send an apprentice out.

 

I want, you know, every 20 feet, I want you to take this monopod, click a photo and go down another 20 feet, click another photo, just walk the whole site and do it. GCs are doing that now. For that exact reasons that they have their own recordable. You know, basically information for billing and, and vetting, everything like that.

 

The other aspect from the chemical contractor side is duct and pipe prefabrication. We can actually say yes, this, this pipe here has already been schooled. And we know that it's in the shop. I was just sent 60 schools out to the shop. 23 of them are done. Another 17 have already been put out on site.

 

And the lab, the other 13 that are here have already been hung by this person on this date. And, you know, we can barcode everything if we want to. So there's, there's a lot of tech that's out there now that I always considered at CYA. For the contractors, you know, making sure that yeah, if, if I submit a million dollar invoice and we're, the GC is expecting 20%, but we're already billing at 70, you better have a damn good reason why you're sending in that kind of money, you know, or asking better.

 

So, but yeah, that, that's the other aspect too, is that. With the whole them and prefabrication process, right? There's a lot of stuff going on off site that you don't even see. We just, we're working on a hundred thousand square foot casino addition right now where we actually, we were submitting bids to the, or not bids, but the, the invoices, the GC, they actually stopped at our shop because they didn't believe that we had this much pipe sitting here.

 

We had three flatbed semi-trailers full of pipe, ready to install. That they did not allow us to install on site because they didn't have the crane pad set yet, but we're still submitting the invoices. Like we're ready. We're not charging you for the labor yet. Of course. But it's here. It's ready to go.

 

Just like we would have it onsite. It's just not in their way basically. So yeah, there, there's definitely a lot of benefits to it.

 

One of the things that we talked about in the round table that I hosted this week was not letting tech in your way. You know, we can talk about all this stuff and really, you know, I love it.

 

Like, don't get me wrong. I, I totally dig it, but there's, there's a point in a lot of this where Depend on who you are, get infatuated with like the new toy. Right. But this goes, I think to the, the main point that we've been talking about is you have to have experience right. Experience in the field, how this can actually help what this can actually do.

 

Does it actually do the work or help us like, you know, CYA and construction. Okay. Big deal invoicing. Okay. If it can help us do that, you know, that's a big deal. And then the rest of this can be like in saving time, back and forth. And it's always something that like you consider, cause you have to make these decisions at the beginning of job.

 

Right. Whether you go and scan it and you're like, ah, I can't be that many, you know, Sidewalks, right times, however many people, times, however many other things you've got. So it's

 

always you forget to grab that one little piece that it's like, Oh yeah, that's there.

 

Yeah. So there's, there's a lot of this, but it's also to not forget on what is this tech, this thing you're going to integrate with actually doing, because at the end of the day, and one of the big things that was brought up Was, you know, we in construction, we build communities, right?

 

It's we talk about the buildings we talk about you know, all the cool things that we do in construction. We talk about, you know, putting up walls and all this stuff, the tech behind it. But at the end of the day, and I love this I'm stealing it is. You know, we build communities. That's, that's it.

 

Right. Everything that you look out at, everything that you see, it was built by somebody, right. It was built by a person. And then used by somebody, hopefully right. Yeah. I mean like Matt, you're building a community center, right? Like. We build communities. And it's not to get that lost in the like tech talk or to, you know, the cool new thing.

 

You know, cause like, I mean, just like Andy, you were saying like these point clouds, right? Like it's hard to even get the hardware to handle them. You know, and then you got to have like a PhD in cloud computing to figure out how to run these things. So don't. Don't get too infatuated with a lot of this stuff.

 

Like figure out how you're going to realistically use it. You know, don't burn weeks on end, unless you have somebody dedicated for that to like, get these things done, right. It needs to be something that can easily integrate, you know, a watch and learn. I'll teach you all you need. Or, you know, half day training to get through some of this stuff.

 

Yeah. And Dylan, you had a guest on Tuesday, and I cannot remember the lady's name, but she was talking about efficiency. Right. And you know, all of this tech is, is gained, is geared to making us more efficient, but, but her quote, and I will never forget it. I might get a tattooed on my arm, but you know, you can, you can also efficiently suck is what she said and that it was wonderful to hear because I think a lot of this.

 

You know, it it's really cool stuff. Don't get me wrong. And when I, from, from my side of the, of the fence, if we can use it to truly improve job sites, to improve quality efficiency, all that sort of stuff, I'm all for it. But I think it could be really easy to go and buy $80,000 robotic dog. And does it, does it really help or is it just more clutter in, in the, in the matrix, you know,

 

Yeah.

 

And it was to hear Allie she's the executive director at Nika, and she also was instrumental in developing the Milwaukee one key system. So yeah, to hear I was recommended her to have her on the panel and I was blown away. She was awesome. She was awesome for sure. I actually, so I ended up watching that panel, unfortunately, not live because there was a couple of questions.

 

I'd love to ask everybody in there. But I actually, I sat in on one of her. I believe it was Autodesk university a couple of years ago. Unfortunately, this year went virtual because of COVID and all that. But the prior year I went in and sat in on one of her speeches and yeah, I have nothing but respect for her that she is an amazing person, but no, no.

 

And I, I definitely appreciate you bringing up the fact that tech is not for everything. There are definitely jobs. I actually just had a talk with one of my PM's and estimator today. Like. Don't use me. Trust me. I'm only at the company. The, the only reason that my job exists is to increase efficiency.

 

If I ever actually cost the company money in the long-term, I'm not doing my job. And so if you have a $20,000 little addition, renovation, or somebody just wants you to put up ceiling tile or reroute a little bit of duct in a couple of offices, Don't even come up to my office. Don't talk to me because it's, it's one of those things where it's going to cost me three days worth of time that I'm charging to your job, just to get your hand drawing onto the computer.

 

By the time we set up the project and get the backgrounds from the architect and engineer and all this and that, it's not worth it. You know, I know there's a big push to go paperless and all these job sites, digital for everything and all these buzzwords, it's like. Now, when was the last time that you've been able to go to a job site and you don't have a notepad with you?

 

You

 

know? Yeah. I mean, we, we carry eye pads, but on top of my iPad is a yellow notepad. You know, paperless, paperless is never going to happen in this industry.

 

There's two things on it too, as everyone who's ever gotten sued will attest to is there's a lot of shit that you need to write down that does not get documented.

 

Yes. There's a lot of those notepads that go right into the dumpster. They do not go to the scanner.

 

Yeah, I personally, I will never push tech just to push tech. It's one of those things where again, we are there to make a job site safer. First and foremost. We want everybody to go home at the end of the day.

 

Like laser scanning. Again, I'm not up on a ladder. I'm not on the scissor lift. I want to be more efficient. And that means doing the same amount of work and either a less time or be more work or better quality work in the same amount of time and C would be potentially faster, meaning yes, I may still have the same number of hours on a job, say with prefab, for example, but instead of having, you know, 20 welders out on a site, putting pipe together in the air, They're able to prefab all this back at site.

 

So instead of it taking six weeks out on site, we're actually only there for three because we had the other three back of the shop and a conditioned space where everything is at waist level. We have all the electricity we need, you know, that kind of stuff. So at the end of the day, I personally believe that the whole tech, the construction tech industry, you know, you have all these.

 

You know, different software. I know Dylan, Matt, I'm sure you've seen it. I know you guys have talked about it in the past where, you know, you got plan grid and pro core and you know, all these different apps that are out there. You know, I went to a, an industry where the guy, I don't even remember, it was several thousand dollars a year for this app.

 

Add on to, I think like PlanGrid or Procore where he's like, okay. Yeah. So now it's voice activated. I'm like, that's cool. But why, why don't you just teach your guys how to use the software the way it is like, to me, that would be a much better approach because you're actually instilling that knowledge into your guys rather than giving them a shortcut or a band-aid because they don't want to type like, to me that that just doesn't make sense.

 

And I think there's a lot of these buzzwords and people trying to solve problems that aren't truly there. So first we'll take that. I'm sure I'll get a lot of hate mail for, but right though, there's a

 

lot of fluff. There's a lot of armchair experts, but, but when the tech is great, like you mentioned the prefab, you know, those six weeks that, that your guys are in your shop building up duct are six weeks that my electricians are onsite hanging lights.

 

And when, when you get there, they're already out of your way. And as a GC, if I can, if I can stagger. Labor forces and, and workforces in my jobs like that. I can cut my schedules, right. Because I'm not, I'm not having everyone in the same room, tripping over each other at once. It makes it, that is true efficiency in my mind.

 

And it, my bottom line.

 

No, I absolutely. I, I remember there was a video I watch, and I really wish I could find the link to it. But I think it was someplace in China or Japan. Some someplace overseas, they put up something like a 59 story building and like 28 days because of prefabrication and modular construction.

 

I wouldn't want to sleep in it, but no,

 

no, but actually watching the crane go up. It looked like it was actually like massive Lego blocks. It was like eight foot by eight foot massive steel cubes that they were just stacking. And I'm like, ah, I feel like some sort of code violation is in there somewhere, but no, they call it a C.

 

Right. It

 

doesn't have code, but I mean, structurally there, things were, I'm sure like pretty well intact, right? Like you prefab all the four planks and. Like it's all structural steel. You do it in a grid. It was a, you know, long rectangle of a building. That's pretty easy to make structurally like sound.

 

So things like that I think are good. It's the rest of it, right. It's structure and architecture fairly like. In a building like that, where it's a literal rectangle, it goes straight up. Doesn't bend no curves, no nothing, probably interior as well. Like that's fairly straightforward to do. Now, I mean, peace side of it is going to be a different, different feel.

 

And even with like modular hotels that have been going up, so what they do for those is they still like onsite the core. So the, like you have to on-site all the stairwells elevator shafts. Like all those are still like onsite built, sorry, prefabbed. And then. They'll build the common like core for it, basically the route, the hallways for it, and the common core.

 

And then for the room pods, they'll crane those in and those stack on each other. And then they basically have a connector if you will, at the hallway to tie in you know, power and water into the room. But those that's really, I think for, for when we talk. Modular and that's, and this is I think, going back to some of the original stuff, but when we talk modular is like, that is a true way to do it.

 

You're going to have a combination of onsite, right? Dirt work is never going to go away. You know, utilities are never going to go away. Your stair cores are gonna to build those off sites, going to be a D I don't think it can be done. Not really. It's not worth it. No. And then you drop in the room pods for the rest of it.

 

You could do the same with classrooms. Like basically anything that had a common room or really you could drop rooms. But the core utilities, I think are those hallways are always going to need to be onsite bill, and then you can snap the connectors in for the rest of it.

 

Well, and I think even, even staying the rooms, for example, right.

 

I was on a really big hospital project, 300,000 square foot new tower that they're putting in. The initial concept was to do modular construction. So all the rooms, cause it's like a 300 bed hospital.

 

Yeah. And those are all the

 

same. Yeah. It would've been really awesome to do it. But the problem is, is that the site that they chose the company I was working for at the time, they actually went out and bought a brand new building.

 

Air was. Brand new to us in order to host all this modular construction, well, the GC didn't like it because believe it or not, 45 miles is quite a way to truck 300 rooms. Right? So then you have the logistics aspect of it. So then the GC also owned a facility about a mile away from the hospital. And that wouldn't work either because they found out that the road that the, that these would have to travel down, wasn't rated for that much weight.

 

Like it's just, there's other aspects to it than just. Saying that, you know, yeah. We're just going to do this offsite, not a big deal. You know, so I, the number one thing, and I've had this argument with 40 year union guys, 40 year open shop guys, it doesn't really matter. You've got all these guys who, if it ain't broke, don't fix it.

 

And that's really the way that our industry has been for the past. I don't know, 3000 years, but it's one of those things where the, one of the biggest arguments I have. From guys you know, in the field saying, Oh, you know, you're coming in, you're taking our jobs. And you know, we really want to do this out here and this and that.

 

I'm like, number one, I don't want to take your job. I want you guys to look at us as a tool in your toolbox. You guys are going to call us tools anyway, but I want you to, to understand that we're here to help you guys first and foremost, that can offer, especially if we start talking about prefab, right?

 

Would you guys really, especially right now in the middle of January, end of January in Michigan, you guys really want to be up on a roof throwing natural gas pipe up on that roof, or would you rather be doing it back in the shop where it's heated, you have a radio you can cuss and swear and do whatever you want inside the shop or, or, you know, you're, you're out on site, you know?

 

Yeah. There's still going to be site work, but you can. We have new technology that's out there that can help you do these jobs. I, they, I was actually listening to the other one that we did Dylan with Dan about robotics, you know, you're no longer worried about, okay, can I lift this six foot? I have to cut all my pipe down into six feet because this is what I can actually manhandle up there.

 

Why can't we do it in 50 foot chunks and just create it into place. So, you know, there there's benefits give and take on all sides of it, but. You know, I think we're, we're moving in the right direction. And one of the biggest things is trying to get that it's more of a mentality. I think that the hardware and the software and the process is there.

 

It's just trying to get that mentality for, especially a lot of the GCs that I work with. I'm not calling anybody out. I think honestly, it's an industry wide problem where you hear BIM for example, and you think faster, quicker, cleaner, and we have a pretty picture. That's fine, but you have to give us time to do that.

 

You know, we can't, you can't be having us design pipe after it's already been in the air and then tell us to go change it like that, that doesn't work. There needs to be an actual process change here. So, you know, again, I think we're going down that right path as an industry. We're not there yet. So

 

yeah, one of the, to come back to one of the early things that we talked about and.

 

I see this all the time and I get kind of peeved about it, but is, you know, that like there's no productivity increase in construction, right? Over the last, whatever. It's 2% what everyone forgets, because this is done by people that don't work in construction is the amount of increase in like content and stuff that goes into a building.

 

Right. Like, you didn't have internet 20 years ago. Like, you know, you didn't have security cameras, like all this stuff, you know, all your data security card, access card readers, like, you know, now the fire alarm system has 10 more things in it. You've got all this other all these other systems basically that you end up putting in a building.

 

You know, shit, we didn't have heat until like the seventies, right? Like HBC didn't exist.

 

The energy codes alone, you know, we have to do now just to meet energy code is, is it's borderline obnoxious, but I mean, it, it adds a huge percentage to any job,

 

huge percentage. And this is the thing that I get like super peeved about is, you know, they, they say, and I'm, I'm sure to some extent, right.

 

That like productivity is not totally increased, but there's also the point of like, do you know how complicated these things are? Right. And the, you know, you're not building with two by fours anymore, right? Like it's, you're in like metal studs and like the not only the. Technology and putting it together, but the building materials itself has changed, you know, in a lot, for the better, right?

 

Like windows, like little look at a window, right. Look at a glass like how complicated, you know, those are. Today, I think there's a lot of things that get left out of that like incremental productivity increase because of the basic they see building, building square foot. Right. That's the only thing that these journalists can measure.

 

Whereas if you look at like, what is in a building, that's a very different story. And I think, you know, from everybody looking from the outside in this is a very, like, it's a different conversation, right?

 

Yep.

 

Absolutely.

 

Andy, what I we're getting up on, on time here. If anybody's got a run, let me know.

 

But what, where do you see the industry heading? You know, this is one thing that I, I like to ask our guests. We asked on our panel earlier this week in. You know, we, we talk about you know, a lot of problems and there's a lot of things that, that Matt and I will talk about on here in episodes to come on solutions for a lot of these.

 

And none of them are cut and dry. Like, you know, there's very few that are cut and dry. There's so many nuances to it and to do it in a podcast is you know, can't quite do a lot of these things full justice, but where do you see the industry heading?

 

Oh, that is a very tricky question. There there's many, many ways words that come to mind.

 

You know, in the short-term I think long-term, you've got, there has to be some sort of change what that change is going to be. Exactly. I'm hoping and praying that it's for the better you know, like we've already touched on there's a massive labor shortage. We flat out, we're turning down jobs right now as an industry because we flat out don't have the manpower to handle it.

 

And some of the regulations that we have to deal with today that we didn't a year ago are not helping that as the, as the industry, but you know, flat out, we just, we need to make changes. We have the labor shortage and we're, I still see projects on the horizon that have been pushed off because of that labor shortage that need to get done sooner or later.

 

You know, and I know architects and engineers keep growing, which means there's more buildings being designed and, and renovated and fixed, or, you know, whatever they're Dylan, your side has a reason to exist. So that means that we're going to have work coming.

 

And there's, there's a shortage on that side too.

 

I mean, construction, even in the engineering space, what would you rather work on a phone or a building, right? Like. And I like electrical engineering isn't even taught HVAC is barely taught in like engineering schools. So it's a problem on the design side. And then most architects don't know how to put a building together when they graduate.

 

So. You know, like then they spend down that rabbit hole.

 

I'll do it. I mean, like until they pass their ERs, you know, that they're not an architect until they pass their, their areas, which are eight tests, which is like insane for how many tests it takes to get licensed as an architect in this country. But like, I mean, so realistically coming out of school, They're not even close to being able to be licensed.

 

So it's, you know, you, you graduate and then you're still working for. Six seven years to get licensed. And that's, if you're on an accelerated track to get in all your hours and you do a good job to get on the right projects and all that type of stuff, like getting licenses, architect is not a joke, right?

 

Like a licensed architect had to go through a lot of stuff to, to do that on the engineering side, it's a little easier. I'm not going to say it's any easier, but it's well, it's easier than the architecture, like they're eight tests or whatever stupid thing that they got to go through. So like, I have all the respect for anybody that's gotten licensed and done that path, but they coming out of school, you know, they don't know anything.

 

No that, I mean, honestly, like you just touched on there, you have architects and engineers who have to go through all the schooling. And I always considered it like their apprenticeship because they, they have to study on a licensed professional. It's obviously a lot harder than what, what I do as far as the licensing aspect.

 

I don't have an, a college education and I'm making, you know, pretty damn good money for what I'm doing. I'm not gonna lie. I mean, that's. That's one of the things is that because of the amount of efficiency that we bring to a company, we can bring that level of value to a company. But yeah, there's, again, I think there's something that needs to happen.

 

I think one of the biggest things that I really hope happens. Is that we flush out a lot of these buzzwords you know, I've done, I've done jobs in the past where you know, let's be honest. It, it happens. Numbers get shared after the bids and all this and that. I'm like, How were these guys even remotely thinking that that's an acceptable number, you know, they're coming in four or five times higher than the numbers that I sent out.

 

And I thought I was kind of high for like the amount of work that is being generated. And honestly, I think it's because they feel that they can, you know, because if you really think about it though, the amount of overhead and you know, the hardware and the training. Yeah. There's a value there in the experience and having that stuff.

 

You know, Matt, you guys don't have a laser scanner and you guys probably don't have an RTS layout station. You guys probably don't have the computers, but let's be honest. You can probably start up an apartment now for about a quarter million dollars and hit the ground running. And, you know, yeah. It's still a big chunk of money, but it's, it's reasonable for the level of tech that you're getting.

 

You know, but I think there needs to be almost a purge of some of the fluff in the industry. I think there needs to be a better understanding of what the process truly entails. How to use all this tech that we have, you know, you look at Revit for example, like our template that we use in my day job is we're continuously building it, but it's very in depth.

 

You know, we can take a look at our bill of materials, look at the model. It automatically generates a bill of materials. And I can tell you how much glycol that we need to add to the system based on a 30% propylene glycol mixture. Not a lot of people can do that in a matter of seconds. You know, but having that there, even that you're barely touching the surface of what rabbit can truly do.

 

Now there are shortcomings with rabbit. I won't even get into that, but you know, the same thing with Navis works and the coordination aspect and the point clouds and what we can actually do with the 40 and five D levels of information. We're nowhere near what this stuff can do. And it seems like every day more and more new toys come out and I'm like, guys, can we just figure out how to drive the car that we currently have before we throw another 9,000 horsepower into it?

 

Like. Let's be realistic here. I'd much rather have a software developer, or a reseller figure out a quality training program that actually applies to the way that the construction industry actually operates before they throw in more bells and whistles into their software, that we're never going to touch 90% of the buttons that are in Revit.

 

You know, so that's, that's personally what I think the industry needs to go now, whether it's going to, or not with the whole. SAS conversation and, and this and that and stockholders and that's, we're working on it.

Yeah.  I would love it if you guys that's my side, I mean, Autodesk, isn't gonna do it. But that's, that's that's me.

 

I mean, that's Kowabunga Studios. That's what we're. We're doing is all that, that side of it. Because again, like I go to these society for construction solutions meetings. I, when we did have them, I went to San Francisco and you get a lot of so that's where it started. Curtis with brick and mortar is the guy that started brick and mortar ventures.

 

So they're a venture capital firm that I'm blanking on his name, but the one of the Bechtel, Darren Bechtel. And so the head of, so Bechtel family funds a lot of it, Autodesk is involved in it. Good group of guys, but the thing that annoys me in a lot of these meetings is you get a venture in Silicon Valley mindsets to all of this stuff where it's exactly the things that we're talking about, where it's people that have never.

 

Built the things are done, the things that they need to do. So they're working on the flashy things where I, I grew up for all intents and purposes in the Midwest, right? Like Louisville, indie, like I grew up in the Midwest and the Midwest as you guys well know is you know, like figure out ways to do the work better.

 

Right. You don't need to flash; you just need to get it done. And, you know, that's. Like the way that the mindset that I'm taking for like our software products and the way that I would like to see the industry go is in tools to do the work. You know, like you don't need another, like virtual reality thing.

 

You don't need another, like, you know, a scheduling tool of something that no one's ever scheduled or construction project. Right? Like, it'd be one thing if like Matt, your estimated hours put a schedule together. Or, you know, somebody that's got 20 years of experience to like build a scheduling tool work with people to build a scheduling tool.

 

But that's been my beef, you know, with a lot of this stuff, any I'm completely like things do need to change, but from a. Developer inside of it. Like, I mean, things like what, like and all and FARO and all those guys have come out with, like, it's incredible. And that's like actual productivity. Like a total station is total.

 

It's a productivity, you know, piece of equipment to save time, like your as builts or, you know, to the hundredth of an inch accurate. Like you're not going to beat that. Right. A tape measure ain't even gonna come close. Right. It's a 16th and that's a guy with two good eyes. So. You're just not going to beat stuff like that.

 

Right. It's so there are definitely companies out there that are doing good work. But this is a total like soapbox thing for me is most software companies. And I mean, there's not many in construction, let's be real, but the ones that are in there are not developing tools to do the actual work. It's like, you know, adding a bunch of crap to your families or this or that, or, you know, like in Revit it's just a bunch of stuff that, that doesn't matter.

 

And yeah, there's a lot of things that you can do within rev. It's just like Excel, right? Like out of the box, it can do. A ton and ton of stuff that nobody really knows, but like, let's work on adding and subtracting here first before we, you know, do accounting formulas. So total, total agreement, like it does need to change in the process and all harp on contracts for a long time too.

 

That's I think a big thing that Matt and I have, you know, chimed about is contracts and that, that structure too. So you know, you're, you're preaching the choir here where we're in agreement on, on a lot of this stuff.

 

Yeah, definitely. I, you know, it's an industry, that's, that's so old, it's an industry.

 

That's, you know, we don't need a whole lot of help. Right. I mean, we could, we could theoretically survive doing it the same way we've done it for the last 3000 years. So the stuff that we've talked about today and the stuff you're doing, Andy, that, that actually quickly help. No, that's beneficial to us.

 

You know, it's, it's the flashy object syndrome that we don't, we don't need it. I don't need the dog that walks around and takes pictures. I keep bringing it up because I want one, believe me,

 

I'm saving up $80,000 to be able to have that dog go feed my dog in my backyard. That would be great.

 

Awesome. Oh, 50.

 

I might go ahead and do it, but, but I don't need it. I don't need it to increase efficiency. I don't need to, to motivate my guys, you know, it's, it's the artful blend of the human and the tech that, that I think a lot of those companies are missing that, you know, us here seem to really understand that and, you know, spreading this word is, is what's going to help you.

 

No. I absolutely agree with you guys. Of course. And I would very much welcome continuing this conversation because there's I, where would you guys like the list of problems I see in the industry,

 

your follow-up episode on that, but yeah, the thing too, like the, the training aspects, the things that we've hit on it's the construction industry is really getting hit.

 

Like. On both sides. You've got a, too many projects, right? Like people want to build stuff. We've had a, a glut of, with the Oh eight crash. So in those four years, really, till 12, nobody built what they should have. Right. What is with normal build cycle. So you had four years in the, like, Build up of demand.

 

So then we've been trying to catch up through all that building, you know, from residential to convention centers, to remodels, to whatever. And then, you know, 2020 was you know, pawn for construction. So there's another year of, of pent up demand. And then all the companies that couldn't withstand it. So then you had people leave the construction industry.

 

So you're getting hit with a lot of buildings. Need to go up one, two, you have. People believing the industry. Right. And this is on all sides, right? From stress, from all the stuff that we talk about, probably every podcast. And I'll continue to hammer on that. So you have people leaving the industry for like health reasons or like they just went out of business, whatever.

 

Yeah. Then you have. Like the company's lack of investment in training and everything else because this is the way we've always done it. What do you need? Follow that guy? He'll teach you everything you need to know. So it's really like a three, four or five fold problem in. Yeah. We'd love to learn all this stuff.

 

I don't have the time to do it. I can barely get the projects I have now out the door. When am I going to spend a guy for half a day, you know, to go and train on this thing? Yeah. It'll save us time later, but I don't have the time now to Kate.

 

I mean, that's exactly what we're doing right now. I'll be on my day job department.

 

We've got myself and one other guy and the other guy, I was able to snag. I've worked with him for almost a decade now. Great guy, very knowledgeable, but there's a lot of stuff that we have to do on the backend that can't really be charged to a job. And whether it be education or setting up templates or just training and figuring out, yeah, we've got quarter million dollars with the toys.

 

Now what, you know, we need to learn how to use this stuff. So what we've actually implemented is once a week, we sit down for two hours. It doesn't sound like a lot, but in that two hours of shut your phone off, you're not answering emails. Nobody's going into the office. Like, this is what we're focusing on.

 

I, we we've done it once so far and we've instantly seen a massive benefit from it. So yeah. I get speaking to your point, Dylan, I highly recommend it. You know? I mean, it's the same thing with, you know, bringing somebody in green. Who's never done this kind of stuff. You're not touching anything for two weeks until you go out and actually see what's going on in the field.

 

Right. It's overhead it's non-chargeable time. But think about the investment, you know, if I can't remember who it was that had made the quote of You know, what happens if we train these people and they leave, well, what happens if we don't train them and they stay, you know, it's, there's obviously different ways of looking at it.

 

And by basically forcing yourself to learn this stuff and to make the time to do it yeah. Your own or, you know, your, your GC or whoever you're working for. And they get pissed because you didn't answer his phone call in an hour, but, okay, well, sorry. I was in another meeting. Yeah, something simple as that.

 

So not that we ever lie to GC is math, but yeah.

 

You know, construction's always been feast or famine and it always will be, you know, that's just the cyclical nature of the industry and of the economy. So to take time now is to pre plan and prepare for those downturns is, is tough as hell to do, but it's super important because cause you won't survive the next, the next flip.

 

If you don't know, you'll be the guy who is the next story that, Oh, you know, it was sad. They, they used to be such a great builder, but now they're gone. Right.

 

Well, I look at that as, okay. Yeah. It's, it's hard right now. I'm putting in 70 plus hour weeks on this one project, but. And I'm taking two hours’ worth of quote-unquote overhead to, to learn this stuff.

 

When we do have that famine period, do I either want to be trying to learn something during that time or would I rather be trying to find stuff for my field guys? And my PMs actually be estimating saying, Oh yeah, we can do that. We as a company may or may not be doing anything, but I, as my department, I can certainly bring in money because we can outsource to the companies who are doing that kind of stuff.

 

You know, it's. Your pivot station,

 

you can pivot and you can keep eating.

 

Absolutely.

 

And then to double down in those troughs, right. That's the other thing I've never seen companies do that. I was always okay. You guys have extra time go and fix. Our template, go fix whatever research like in well as engineers too is like, okay, go write an article, right?

 

Like go put a piece out, go. I don't care necessarily what it is. Like, I, we need something I need to, you can bill it the overhead. I don't care, but like be productive.

 

Absolutely.

 

Matt final words.

 

Andy. I appreciate you coming on, man. This was a lot of fun. Dylan, I think we need to, we need to book a second show with him. Sometime in the future,

 

I can talk about this stuff all day long and, and, you know, especially with a guy close to home and you know, that's always, always cool too.

 

Hey, when we're finally able to go to a bar again, let me know. Well, we'll have to meet up. I actually used to live down in Jackson, so I know, I know that area relatively well.

 

All

 

right, well, beers are on me and Dylan. Maybe we can chip in and get you a flight.

 

Yeah, yeah. Might have to go to Windsor, but.

 

Oh, no. Whenever you guys want to talk again, I'm all for it. No, I definitely, definitely appreciate your guys' time. It's again, it's been awesome to be able to just talk shop with somebody who at least relatively understands what we're all going through.

 

And I mean, let's be honest, Matt, you can't probably have some of these same conversations with some of your subs. And I know, I sure as hell can't talk to my GCs the same way. So

 

no, it, it it's a cool platform. Cause we can kind of pull the filters off.

 

Yeah. Yep, absolutely.

 

Yep. Any, where can they find you?

 

LinkedIn, Facebook just Andy Zeller side company, precision turnkey solutions. So precision tks.com. Yeah, basically. If you guys can type in my name. I know there's actually an, I think an Indiana or Illinois football player who almost makes the NFL that has the same name. So good luck trying to find me, but no, no, I'm on LinkedIn, Facebook.

 

Yeah. Anybody's anything feel free to reach out.

 

Awesome. Any as great having you we'll definitely do a follow-up at some point talk problems and yeah, I went back to Travers and the Detroit area for is my wife's family is, you know, all across Michigan. So I went back for Christmas, but we do not like to, I mean, I'm in the snow right now, but.

 

Like you can play golf here on new year's day. It was kind of like the weather this year too. So we you know, we try not to, I'd rather go to like South, South in the winter if he has to numbered, but yeah, no, definitely. At some point we'll be back. We got a, we're a blue household, so.

 

At least I'm converted blue.

 

No green Oscar.

 

So, so I moved up in 94 and if I can survive the 94 and 96 seasons as a Husker in Michigan, many times. So. Yeah, no. So, I mean, I'll be back. I actually go back to Michigan quite a bit for, for different things. And that would be back for Ohio state game whenever those happen again. So sounds good. Right on.

 

All right, guys, this has been. Definitely probably our, one of our longer episodes, but a great episode on, on tech, on tools on laser scanning, BIM, really, you know, going through a lot of stuff.

 

I know we'll do a follow-up episode with Andy on. Problems. We you know, I think the three of us would be actually a good panel for that design side trade side, GC side of the table for that conversation and some of the problems, some of the coordination things that we have. And, you know, we'll, we'll do these live more often, so thank you everybody for, for tuning in and watching here, we appreciate you.

 

And that's going to be this episode of the construction corner podcast until next time.

Attitude of Gratitude

Hello, and welcome to another episode of the construction corner podcast. I'm Dylan, I'm your host joined by my blue collar. Bad-ass Matt, what is that, man?

 

It's a fantastic day here in Southeastern Michigan. We're uh, we're punching out and closing out a big project. So it's, it's a fun, but busy week here.

 

Dude, I feel, yeah, it's, uh, it's been one of those weeks for me too. Everybody seems that they want to have projects done this week, uh, whether they have the right material and information or not, they want to get designed out and done here. Uh, but first guys, we have an amazing guest. We'll do some, a little more, uh, chit chat here, but.  We have an amazing guest for you today, Luke Marcotte. He is the owner of electric, which is an electrical subcontractor that he founded back in 2014. We're super excited to have more and more people come on, podcasts that are, that are in the trades that are running their own companies and they can provide great experience and insight to this wonderful industry that we love to call construction.  So Luke, welcome to the show.

 

Guys. Thanks for having me. I'm happy to be here. I've been watching your guys' shows the past couple of weeks and, uh, yeah, I love the value you guys are bringing in and, uh, excited to be a part of it.

 

Awesome. We are glad you're here, sir. So Luke and I met. About a month ago now we, uh, we had coffee not far from my home office, and I gotta tell you, Dylan, his story is, is pretty bad ass.

 

Um, Luke, if you want to kind of jump in and just give us a rundown, uh, of where electric came from and, and how, how you start it and kind of where you're at today.

 

Absolutely. So I'll go all the way back to the early days. Uh, first off, the first question most people ask me is how did I get into the trades to begin with?

 

And it's not the same time as when electric near the idea for it got burned as well. And so I had two best friends growing up, but they lived about. 30 minutes, 40 minutes remain. And so we wanted to go fishing every day after school and weekends. And so my mom didn't want to drive me back and forth all the time.

 

So instead I just ended up staying there all the time and almost living with this spam. And the Stanley was very well off. I'm going to be able home and their dad owned a plumbing company. And so I started just kind of learning from him, watching, like what he did, he'd worked seven days a week. Uh, you don't have to do that, but he just did.

 

He loved it and took pride in it. And it was for the first time in my life, I seen the blue collar worker take pride in what they did and love it and like tell people how great it was. And he told me how great it was. And he told me this guy's like, you don't got to go to college. He's like, look, what I got is like, if I told you the amount of money that I made you.

 

Shit yourself. Like it's just, uh, it was just a really good, good upbringing. And, uh, I lived there for six years basically. And so, uh, when it came time, when I was 16 years old, uh, I realized that's when I needed to start making some money. Cause I had to pay for everything in high school, like phone gas, insurance, his truck, clothes, food, most of the time, all that cigarette I needed to get to work instead of just sitting in class.

 

And so I had an option. I was going to go into the trades is what I did decide about, like, what should I become, I want to be a plumber to start with. So it could be like this guy that was my mentor. But then I remember him telling me that if he wasn't a plumber, he'd be an electrician. And if I were an electrician, I would get to work on jobs with him and he could help me get my business going.

 

If I were a plumber, I'd be as competition. I wouldn't get to work on jobs with them. So that's the only reason I have an electrical company. Otherwise I'd probably have a plumbing company, right. So, uh, that birthed the idea for it. And even for like Christmas, my birthday from the time I was 14, 15 years old, I was asking for client electrical tools.

 

So that way I can start building on my tool pouch and be ready to hit the floor, hit the ground running when it was time for me to go. So, yeah, and then I basically knew I was going to have my own company pretty much my whole life. I've had businesses here and there, my whole life, whether it's wood splitting or buying, fixing flipping trucks.

 

And so it was just a matter of time now for me getting the licenses, the experience building up the tooling, the funding, the credit, all of that tough start, my company. And so really in 2014 is when I really started doing projects and really started like getting my feet wet while I worked for other contractors.

 

Uh, and I'd say 90% of my experience in a big commercial industrial. And that's what I really wanted to aim for. Like, especially in the long run longevity of the company, I want it to be. A big company across the country that does big, amazing projects. The ones where you drive by and you say, yeah, we wired that building.

 

So that's basically how it started from nothing all the way up until getting into the trades and starting the business basically at the same time. So I've been in it since I was 16. It

 

is, it's pretty impressive to hear a story where somebody starts a business, especially in a trade based business at that young of an age.

 

It's not, uh, it's not the most common path, especially these days. So, you know, we, we talk about it a lot here, but that's great to hear here. And then to see it come to fruition, you know, somebody who, you know, you, you gave the college thing a thought through and it. It wasn't what you wanted to do. And you've made an absolute killing out of it, doing it your way.

 

Yeah, absolutely. Like, and you know, I tell people this, not to like brag, but to hopefully inspire other people who are in the same boat. Like I was a D minus student. Like I wasn't a great student at all, like college. Like I had thought about it. I explored routes. Uh, I thought maybe going from marketing to whatever, whatever company I opened one day, then I would be able to.

 

Utilize that, but it's just like, school was not for me. I was not good at it. I couldn't sit there and I couldn't realize like just the five putting in all the work, not getting a reward out of it. That's why I never really played sports either, because if I'm going to work that hard, I'd rather get paid off of it.

 

And so that's why, like, instead of going to football practice, I'd leave at lunch. And, uh, cause I did solo work and leave a bunch and go work. I'd worked 40 hours a week on top of high school. I'd show up to school on my Hi-Vis shirt and my construction pants, ready to go boots. And that's what I did.

 

Like everybody knew me as that guy. So yeah, I just, school was not my thing. And so no use putting effort and energy into it. If that's not where I even wanted to go. And I seen someone else out here that showed me the shining lights of what it could be in this path and that's where I wanted to go. So I think it's about this.

 

And I ran with it.

 

That's awesome. There's a couple of things I want to pull out of there. One you had had a mentor, right. And had somebody to look up to early. Earlier in life, right. You had a nice example of what life could look like. You know, if you put in the work, put in the time and went through it.

 

So I think that's first and foremost, like one of the big pieces of this is that you had somebody to kind of set the foundation for everything that you're going to do moving forward. The next, um, thing that I want to ask is if you, do you ever take any shop classes or anything like that in high school or any like, you know, welding or anything with your hands?

 

Yeah, absolutely. So, uh, with the shop class, my school didn't have shop classes as a small school. I grew up in a town of about 2000 people, 2,500 people. And so my class and my graduating class had like 75 people. So since it's such a small area here in Northern Michigan on the grant drivers area, As they have this thing called the career tech center and all the schools around the area, they bus halfway through the day for the people that want to go to a basically trade school almost.

 

And so you're able to do that your junior and senior year and all these schools in the area. And so I opted to do that. And, uh, so I chose the electrical program, which thankfully they had, uh, otherwise I would have done it like a basic instruction course. And so then I would get on a bus and I'd go there and I started learning that way.

 

No, again, like I said, school, wasn't my thing. So I did that for sure. The six months before going and actually getting an apprenticeship job. But that's six months, a little things I learned there, like from the code book and all that put me years ahead of other people. But I, again, I was just so ambitious I needed to get going now.

 

So it's like, I still went there two days a week. I think I had to, for a basics classes to get my credits basically, but the other three days a week I would get to go and work halfway through the day. So yeah, I had a trades school and high school that I got to go to, so it worked out really well.

 

That's awesome.

 

Now for everyone out there, like. Walk us a little bit through in, in going and getting an apprenticeship. If, um, cause some people might think like you have to be 18 to, to go and do that. Um, what are, are there any other like requirements, anything like that and you know, for anybody out there, or that maybe has a friend looking to get into the trades, right?

 

Did this later in life, or even through this high school path, right. To where you're. You know, 16, 18, right. Haven't graduated or anything, but you're looking to get in and you're looking to start getting your, your hours and all that stuff so that you can build up for your licenses. Um, you know, what does that path kind of look like for everybody out there?

 

Yeah. So, uh, I actually do a lot of stuff, social media stuff on like Instagram and YouTube explaining how to get into the trades. Cause that's a question I get a lot is how do I even get started? Most people don't know. And you know, for me, I didn't really know either. Technically you're supposed to be like 18 is like what the world's telling you, I guess.

 

So I didn't really want to abide by that. I was just too hungry. I needed it to go now, especially cause like I said, I had bills I'd had like, had to pay, like I've had a credit card since I was 16. A little side note, just so I could start building enough credit so I could buy my first house at 18. And so I've had bills and all that stuff.

 

Since I've been 16, I had to get a job. So what I did is I literally just printed off resumes. I want to start knocking on electrical companies, doors in the area. A majority of them told me no said it'd be too much of a pain. I go, okay, well, here's where it comes into the fact of learning, how to leverage connections.

 

I had a really great connection with my fifth grade teacher. And, uh, I recognize I have a good rate memory too. I remember way back when that they had a company working at the school called her last name, electric, and I messaged her. I'm like, Hey, are you related to these people? And she's like, yeah, it's my cousin.

 

I'm like, Would you mind talking to him? See if I can get an apprenticeship? Like, yeah. It's like, like I guarantee you you'll sit down and talk with them, like sweet. So I went in there and interviewed them and obviously once you get in front of people and if you like have the charismatic. Whatever you want to call that you get in there and you talk to them, they'll give you a chance and it's easier than them just saying no over the phone or on email.

 

So anyways, he's like, yeah, sure. We'll give it a shot. And it was just a small company, just two guys work in there and they let me come in after school and help. And then they would even let me come in on weekends and help. And so that's how I got my foot wet and started, uh, and the electrical trade. Now, when I tell people is do something very similar, even if you're in high school, out of high school, if you're 20 years out of high school and you're in your forties, I don't care.

 

Literally just go talk to companies, go talk to people, knock on doors, bring a resume, whatever you gotta do. Just talk to somebody. And I guarantee you there's someone out there that's willing to give you a shot. Uh, so. It's as easy as just going out and talking to people and trying to lend yourself a spot and just say, Hey, I'm motivated.

 

I want to do this. It's not that I have to be here. It's I want to be here and that'll go farther than most people ever imagined.

 

Yeah. That that's huge. And, and learning how to leverage your network, learning how to leverage relationships. That's the single best way to get your foot in any door? I don't care what door it is.

 

Absolutely.

 

So one, so now, but not now that you've, uh, you've run this company for, for what? Seven, seven years ish. Now, um, how many employees do you have

 

currently? Uh, so we have 10 right now and then we're hiring probably four more in the next month, at least. And then if not more after that and probably a five, cause I've realized I really needed like a secretary now because answering the phone email is just way too hard for me while I'm trying to do everything else.

 

But, I mean, I imagine we'll be upwards of 20, 25 by the end of the year we got right now. So, are you still pretty, fully engaged in all aspects of the company and until you get some help anyway.

 

Yeah. Uh, so I don't do a whole lot of the hands-on work anymore. Sometimes I go out on a weekends more times I should still try to do, or even late into the evening.

 

Uh, so one of the. One of the mindsets that my mentor that owned that plumbing company instilled in me was the first 40 pays the bills. The second 40 buys the toys. So like work 80 hours a week. And so. I seen him work seven days a week. The whole time I was there, he was in his fifties made tons of money, but he still wouldn't work seven days a week to pride in it.

 

So I took it on myself to do the same and I just kind of like built habits out of it. So now it's like, if it's 5:00 PM and I'm sitting there and I wrap up all my office work and there's a job just down the road that I go do some stuff on the lineup stuff for the guys tomorrow and be like, okay, I'm going to run up there.

 

I'm going to get it all put together for them. I'm going to do a few things just to help progress things. So. Still trying to cut back from trying to work so much, but yeah, I'm, uh, doing everything except the field work is about the last that I do now. Okay.

 

I think that. Still having some. So I run across engineering, right. And doing big commercial projects. What you find over time is that the principals, the owners of a company don't know how the like, sausage gets made anymore. Right? So you, you run into, so having your, your hands still touching still like connected to the work till to how things get made to how things get done is hugely important.

 

Um, so often in design firms, especially because of the technology of how things get created, how drawings get put together, how buildings get modeled. It is changed drastically in 20 years. So when they came in, you know, it's hand drafting, right. 20, 30 years ago, still hand drafting then AutoCAD and then Revit and 3d.

 

And now there's a ton of tools and, you know, we build automation tools, but yeah, through that, like evolution, if you're, you're a principal, who's 60 years old, right. At 40. You know, 20 years ago, when you probably left the day-to-day work, it was hand drafting. So now over the last 20 years of you not being a part of a project, it has changed so drastically and you haven't touched anything, right.

 

You don't care how it gets made, other than it gets done that you're disconnected from it. So I still think a, um, Dabbling, if you will, or, uh, uh, touch back into it, a walk-in of job sites of laying things out of doing that, but it doesn't have to be like every day, it doesn't have to be every week, but it does have to be on a fairly regular basis to where you, you remind yourself of, of what it is.

 

And then to help that also helps us owners, as executives, as everybody out there in those leadership. And, you know, Doing other types of work and not the production work. It reminds you how to get things done and what your people have to go through to, you know, deliver a product, whether that's on the design side, whether that's a building, whether that's, you know, putting in switch gear, whatever that, you know, thing that your, your company is delivering.

 

It's great to maintain. Uh, Relational working relationship with how things are done. Um, and so often I think that gets forgotten as people move up the chain up the ladder within an organization, they forget how, how things get done or what it takes to get done and lose all like reference of time and

 

expectation.

 

Absolutely. Yeah. I totally agree. Cause I couldn't agree more. In fact, I remember when I was an apprentice. Uh, so after. I left that small company after six months, that was the first company I went for a large firm and they were like, uh, to put into perspective. I was the 68th employee when I hired in. And when I left two years later, there was 157 employees, I believe.

 

So I was like a fast growing big commercial, industrial, only company. We pulled like huge 600. Like we were on projects that were $10 million projects and things like that. Uh, and one of these projects was a really big project. And we had tons of fun. They're still the funnest project I've ever been out of my life.

 

And so the owner of the company, the president, and the head project manager, they both, uh, were talking about coming to the job, putting their tool belt on for a Saturday and working with us like nobody had ever heard of this. Nobody had ever seen these guys at work type thing. We were all pumped. I was like, Oh, I can't like I had a great relationship with the owner of the company.

 

I'm like, I can't wait to like see him with his tools on and just like run circles around him. Cause he hasn't done it in 30 years or whatever. Uh, but anyways, they never came and did it. And so it's like, that was kind of a bummer us. And we're like, man, like that would have been really cool. Even as far as like a respect standpoint from all the workers there now that they need our respect, but like just, yeah.

 

Picture how much that would pick up the, uh, the work place vibes and like the culture of the company and everything like that. So I've always kept that in the back of my head. And I always jot these things down when I see them through my apprenticeship. So that way, when I'm at that position with my company, I don't make the same mistakes.

 

So even when we're at a few hundred employees, I'll be sure to go out on the job site and help them out on a Saturday. I still got it.

 

It's hugely important. Cause you keep a pulse that way on your whole organization. And you know, up until very recently, I did the same thing. I'd be out there on Saturdays, digging holes or, you know, driving Bobcat, doing whatever had to be done.

 

I'll be quite, quite candid in, in the last year. Uh, we hired a really good superintendent, so I haven't had to do that nearly as much, but I still get my ass out on that site. Two or three times a week, I'm still there. I walk around with, with him. But on top of that, you know, I am very big in our subcontractor relationship.

 

So I'm constantly chatting with our electricians and our plumbers and our carpet and you know, everyone across the whole site, because once you lose that pulse, Then you're just an asshole in the office and, and just a suit at that point you are, and that your job sites will show it, right? I mean, there's a different culture.

 

There's a different vibe out there when people are working and, and you show up and you haven't been there in six months because everyone kind of clams up and they don't know what to do, but when you're there regularly and they know you not necessarily as a friend, but as a, as a coworker, really. Cause it's on a big site like that.

 

We're all coworkers at the end of the day. Yup. It, it just helps, I think, with the overall vibe, the overall culture of any project,

 

I believe so, too. Absolutely.

 

Yeah. In there it's, it's so much to, to walk around the office. Right. So in like design firms to walk around the office for construction firms, your office has the job site, right?

 

Like go out, see those people, you know, and do that on a regular basis. I couldn't tell you how many times. Um, so when one of the design firms I worked in, we had multiple offices and they had board meetings in our office every month. None of the board members ever walked around our office. Like none of them, I mean, they didn't know.

 

And we were a company of a hundred people. It wasn't like it was crazy. And in our office there's maybe 40, right. If it would not have been hard to, to walk around to say hello, to, you know, just show a face. Right. Um, But that, that didn't happen. And then most of the design firms that I've worked in that never happened.

 

Um, but in the culture shows, right. And it, it permeates through everything. So having that connection, um, having those relationships and then, you know, for like Matt was saying, you know, to, to go out, if you're a general contractor, I mean, basically anybody on the construction side, too. Form those relationships with all of your yourselves, all your partners in the business.

 

And the other thing that I would suggest that I've suggested it when I worked in design firms. Um, and this is actually going to be the first time that I talk about it here is as a, as a design firm,

 

we, we

 

never really formed as good of relationships as we should have with our construction partners. So.

 

And, you know, across the board, right. We'd work with all of them, uh, especially of size, but to have, get togethers, to do more things as a construction industry, in whatever town, whatever city that you live in to get together, whether that's even just at the young professionals level, right. People that are just starting in the industry to have those get togethers to.

 

To know people like, yeah, this buddy works over here at this construction company or this contractor or whatever. And having those relationships across all the bounds, you see that community within, uh, most of the contractors. Um, because I mean, again, they're all the same job sites. They're all working on the same projects together.

 

And I think the more that we could bring, um, that connectivity that. Hey, we're all on the same team type mindset to more and more communities to have design and construction. I mean, just like we're doing here, right. To have more of these dialogues, these conversations across in a, in a casual thing, right.

 

It could be happy hours. It could be whatever. Um, very simple inexpensive, everyone pays for their own drinks. Right. Type of events.

 

Yeah.

 

Yeah. That bring, bring everybody together. And I think, um, You know, this is going to be something I want to talk about more frequently, just as we've been doing this and coming across.

 

I think that this relationship, these, as much as we hang hammer on relationships, it's doing it in informal times. It's building it in, you know, at a happy hour, right. And maybe it's virtual, maybe it's not, but, uh, to get together with partners, right. That's what we all are at the end of the day from design to.

 

Construction, um, up and down the chain, right? Like everybody gets together and you know, you're going to learn something at those events, right. Whether it's how to design better, how to build better, whatever it might be. Um, that's something that, that I'm talking about now I'll continue to talk about, but I think more in it for everybody out there, right.

 

To do these in your, in your city, in your area. And to get more of these kind of informal, uh, relationships, happy hours, right? Who doesn't love the cold drink? Five o'clock on Friday, right? I think you'll get some, some people to show up, uh, at that point and it doesn't even have to be expensive. Right.  Miller light goes a long way.

 

Yeah. And like topping this off or what, uh, adding to this as, uh, the value of relationships that you build through all this. And it was a little story that you got to like, so after I left us all their company, uh, when I first started with, I realized I wanted to go and do bigger projects.

 

So I researched companies in the area that did big projects. And I found this one that I knew I wanted to be a part of because it was newer, had fast, big growth, which is what I knew I wanted to do at my company. So I figured I could learn a thing or two from them. Like I said, I was a 60th employee when I left and they were like four years old at that 0.2 years later, when I left, they were over 150 employees.

 

And so I printed off the resume for this place. I do what I do, and I basically told God, my, Hey, I want to go, I want to go work at this place. And then. That SA I was going to go in Monday and talk with them to apply, uh, on Saturday, me and my friends went ice fishing. And then I see this company truck at the park, at the boat launch at this take my time to shine.

 

And so I grabbed my resume and I literally go across this frozen Lake and I started knocking on ice. Shana's so, Hey, you're from this company. Hey, from this company, I'm just talking about it. Like, no, get the hell out of here. And I get to this one, Shannon. He was like that guy over there owns the company.

 

He's my cousin. I'm like. Yeah, jackpot. So most people would be scared at that point because they're like, Oh, this is a big, big of a big company, whatever. And I said, screw it. I'm going to talk to them mean it's just to me, I see them as another person, although a very successful and respectable person.

 

It's like, I want to learn from the stats. I'm going to talk to them. So I'm not going to Shani, like, how the hell do you know about, I was like, how old are you? I'm like, I'm 17. He's like show up Monday. You got a job. I'm like, wait, wait, I'm still in high school. And got to like the pain. I understand like your school to work.

 

So I leave at lunch and I come and work rest the day. Saturday and Sunday, you need to need me, need me late. I'm your guy. And so he's like, I don't care. It's like show up Monday. You got a job. And so from that point on me and him had a great relationship. Like I would stop by his office every time one to the shop.

 

And I would talk to him for a few minutes about fishing and all this stuff. And like, uh, there's been times where I was fishing down at some pier here and he showed up and we went to the bar to have dinner together. Like I got invited to his house to have a Euchre party or Euchre tournament and all this stuff.

 

And so like, we built these great relationships and everyday I went to work. I did not want to let that guy down. Cause I seen him as my new mentor, just like that guy of the plumbing company. And I would do anything to not let these guys down. So I worked like crazy and like, I always want the extra mile to make it happen.

 

But one thing I noticed is that like, although I could talk to him, like he was almost a friend when he came to job sites ever so often. Everybody else would be scared of them. And they'd be scared to talk to them. Cause I just haven't seen them before, like what you were saying. And so that's why I'm tying it back together now.

 

And so it's like other people they'd be like, well, it's like, you could talk to them, but you have his number. Like, you know how to talk to him like that. I'm like, yeah, I'm like, I built this relationship. So it kind of blew my mind that other people didn't think they had that same kind of access to them.

 

But why would they think that it was just never portrayed anywhere and nobody's ever taught that. So I was one of their. Best apprentices, but some people will told me not to brag, but it's like the reason why is because I always want the extra mile because I knew him personally. I knew the other project managers personally because he introduced me and he would tell the same story to them.

 

Every time he would introduce me to someone in the confident. And so it builds a great relationship and I did not want to let any of these guys down. I worked 10 times harder for it, and I guess it kind of showed. So definitely it's worth it to build those relationships with people. And I was. Brand new apprentice, 17 year old at this point.

 

Right? So it's like, even though it might not be someone leading a big prog check someone, it might not seem like it's worth your time to put that time and energy to as like an executive. Now it certainly is worth it because that person sees that and they work harder as they come up through the ladder.

 

So it's so

 

powerful. I mean, you just nailed it. It can open doors for you that you wouldn't even be able to imagine.

 

Absolutely. So I'm

 

going to shift a little bit here. Luke, I'm not going to lie. You're one of the more positive people that I've probably ever spoken with. And we've, we've talked a few times now.

 

Um, but I'm going to call your bluff on a little bit, cause I know you're in construction and it's not all sunshine and rainbows out there.

 

So what, what would you say has been been your most challenging aspect of, of owning your company so far and, and being in the field you're in.

 

Definitely had a lot of challenges.

 

Absolutely. Everywhere. There is a challenge. I've pretty much hit it and had to overcome it. I mean, it's definitely been no walk in the park. It's the zero part of this has been some kind of gravy train where it's like a smooth sail. Uh, so you know, it goes in levels for me. So like when I was first starting.

 

It was hard for me to buy tools. They didn't have the money for it. So then I started doing jobs here and there. And like, for people that knew me throughout the years, just growing up in a small town, they'd have me do little projects here and there. And then from there as we started to get bigger, I'm like, okay, well I have money now because I've been doing, I've been working 120 hours a week on myself.

 

So I got the tools, I got the money to fund the projects. Now, how do I get more projects? So I ran into a marketing issue. Okay. I don't know how to market at all. And so that would stump me for. Nine months to a year, something like that. And they will not figure out how to market and network and build relationships for the long-term.

 

So even if you don't get work now, maybe two years down the road, he gets the opportunity to do some work with that person. And then the sales thing. And it's always like one after another, just constantly building off of it. Each of these little skill sets as you grow, and it's like an ever turning revolving door as you go up different levels.

 

And so, but all of those have been. Trials tribulations, all of that. But the hardest thing, I guess that's probably been is the same thing other people run into as motivating people and getting people into the trades and also motivating people who have been in the trades to continue to try and do more instead of just leveling off and trying to teach people how to learn more and things like that.

 

So, I mean, that's something everybody runs into any kind of construction business is the people. Cause that's. Like this isn't something where we're selling a bunch of stuff. It's where we're selling labor of these people. So the people are the asset. They are the value. They are the greatest resource, if you will.

 

But it's just trying to get yourself in a mindset that even though they screw up a job, when they probably should have known better, you have to be like, okay, how do we fix it without pissing them off, making them. Quit firing them and things like that. So it's always the people that are the hardest part, but it's also the most rewarding when you see, when you put the time and energy into it and you see that flower blossom at the end and the person definitely leveled up.

 

They're going to like a whole nother whole nother game that they couldn't imagine. They make new income. They make better life. They it's just, it's great seeing people that you helped bring up to the next level, but it is, sir. And the pain and the hardest part I would say about that is the people that you have to learn to cut off to where you can't save everybody.

 

And so, unfortunately you wish you could, but at the end, we're all responsible for our own faults, our own successes, so that people that don't realize that, and they want to keep pushing it off onto the people. Other people you have to be like, I'm sorry, I did what I could. So see, we're moving on to the next person.

 

So. That's been a lot of hardships. Yeah.

 

And I, and I would agree with you. We we've dealt with the exact, exact same thing, the same scenarios and, and it is the hardest part of it. Uh, I think is, is, is the human aspect of it, you know? And you, you learn very quickly as a business owner that you're not just running a construction company.

 

You're also a counselor, a psychologist. You're, you're, you know, you're doing so much more than just. Estimating jobs or selling jobs and it, it can hit you kind of blindsided if you're not ready for it. I know it, it did that to me. I, you know, in my mind my background, it was just easy. I just, I'm going to go out and build shit.

 

And this is what I've always done. Well, now there's other, other miles that I'm responsible for feeding that that changes right away.

 

Absolutely.

 

one of the things too, that I think we always forget about in construction, or we have a, maybe a little work sense of is, you know, taking responsibility for things. Nobody wants to take responsibility for anything. Cause that means they got to pay for it somewhere. Um, but the more that we can own through a project, the more that we can, you know, take on the more.

 

We're going to benefit from it later. And it's, it's going to suck in the moment if something's like really, really bad, but you're going to get found out at the end of the day. Anyway, it might take a couple of years and a lot of court proceedings, but it will, it'll get found out, you know, at the end of the day.

 

Anyway. So a lot of this is to try to, you know, take. Take ownership of your piece, your part, what you can do to help and to not just point fingers, but to come up with solutions because at the end of the day on a project, if you can come up with a solution, yes, it might cost the owner more at the end of the day to fix it or whatever.

 

If you have a solution and not just problems, everyone is going to feel so much better about it. And you're less likely to get sued at the end of the day. Um, it's really what it amounts to. This is like bedside manner for doctors. Like I could screw something up, but if people feel good about it, you're gonna more than likely, you know, everything will be smooth through the rest of the process.

 

So to own it, but not point fingers, but to have a solution. Pricing, all that kind of stuff, ready to go so that you can present, uh, a solution and solve the problem. Because at the end of the day, the owner just wants to open their building. And we got to remember that, right. Get everything moving forward, open the way it should and, and to move on.

 

And that ownership just helps so much.

 

Absolutely. Yeah. Cause like, uh, I go back to, even when I was just an apprentice, like. I'd say you learn to crawl, then you walk, then you run, learn to crawl. And I was an apprentice and you know, you mess things up when you don't know what you're doing on a job site.

 

Sometimes it's a couple of times I had messed up a little thing here and there. And then, uh, the foreman would come in and it'd be like, Hey, who did this? And be like that guy over there, I didn't do it now. They're like, Hey. He said he wasn't even working in this room. They, everybody says, you're the only one, that's a room or something like that.

 

Like, Oh, you get caught with your hand in your pants and you realize that's not a good situation. I don't make you look good and nothing. And so let's say, let's say nobody had caught it and it went through. Somehow passed inspection or whatever, even failed inspection. And when you get to a point when you were still contract, you're supposed to turn it over to the business owner homeowner, then it'd be like, Hey, why is this electrical messed up?

 

Why is this room messed up in this apartment complex? And the contractor isn't going to say, well, one of our apprentices messed it up and didn't tell us, he's going to say, sorry. It's like, it's our company. It's our name. So I learned, I had to take responsibility for it then. And just man up to it and say, I'm going to fix it.

 

I didn't know how to fix it. Please show me how to fix it so I can, uh, and then same thing everyone's going to have to answer to the project manager. And the project manager is going to have to answer to whoever's above him or the vice president or a president. And so you have to take responsibility of it.

 

It's not really as much as like you should. It's kind of like you have to, because you can burn your reputation just by not taking responsibility on it. Even if you mess up Shannon, we all know that, but take responsibility of it and just. Fix it make it happen. And that can even increase your credibility, I guess.

 

Cause people are like, Hey, it's like he didn't beat around the Bush. He didn't try to blame it on a plumber's over there for hitting this conduit. They realized they didn't bury the conduits deep enough. Nobody double-check the electricians or whatever. So yeah, it's just like, you have to take responsibility.

 

Although a lot of people push it off. It's just. I got caught with my hand on my pants too many times. And I don't want ever, ever

 

want to be there again. It absolutely speaks to your credibility though. And you know, it's probably the same in most industries, but in construction, especially mistakes have monetary values associated with them generally.

 

And, and that stings right? When you know that you just cost yourself or your company or your boss w. It doesn't matter if it's 50 bucks, you know, but it stings. And when it's 60 grand, you know, that's things real bad. And that history you go, your ego gets bruised. Like you would never imagine possible, but you got to own it.

 

And that's how you move forward. And if you don't, you know, you get caught with your hand in your pants or you get caught, and it's a real bad scenario for you at the end of the day. You know, you own it though. And you, you move forward, you learn from it. You sure as shit, never do it again. That's, that's how this whole process has to work, you know?

 

Absolutely. Yeah. And like a good story off of this is after I left the big company I worked for, I worked for another smaller company and I strictly did like custom homes. And so I did it because I wanted to learn how to do homes. I was like, 10,000 square foot plus up here in Northern Michigan. I wanted to learn that.

 

So I went to this company now and I was like fifth point I'm full on for men. I'm running jobs. I'm estimating jobs, project manager, basically. And especially for commercial industrial, because the people at this company didn't know anything about it. And so anyway, I'm rewiring a pizza place in downtown traverse city and.

 

They have a pizza oven, like with stone oven, like one of those really cool ones. Yeah. I'm hooking it up. I'm wearing the place and all that. And then we don't want to test spot spotter, everything. And all of a sudden we turn on this $60,000 pizza oven and it goes like, Oh shit, shit, what just happened? And so then I'm freaking out, I test the voltage and it's a two Oh eight or two 77.

 

Cause then it has, there was a highlight in certain three-phase systems and the panel wasn't labeled. As a highly based system and since nothing else plugged in the building, nothing exploded on the second circuit. It's. And for those who don't know every, like there's a, B and C phase B phase is a high leg on that kind of transformed system.

 

And so a one block, one circuit that was on that B phase happened to be that pizza oven, $60,000 piece of equipment. And I go there and I'm like, Holy crap, like. I'm 19 at the time, it's like I'm a 19 year old project manager. I'm already doing more than I should be doing. I just exploded a $60,000 pizza oven.

 

First thing I did is I called my boss. I'm like, Hey, Jesse. And I explore this thing. I'm like, but I know how to fix this. I'm gonna figure it out real quick and I'll call you back. And so I ran around town and I bought like different motors and stuff to replace. And I basically rewired this pizza oven and we got it back up and running.

 

And like the owner of the BP, the place was there. Too. And it was used, so there was no warranty. So we didn't have to worry about that. Or else we would've gone a different route, but still I replaced it. Got it all working, change the circuit back over, cut everything off the beat phase. Recurrent. We're good.

 

But imagine if I would have just said, Oh yeah, we just exploded a pizza oven. I didn't do that. Someone else that like, I would have been fired right there. And like that guy probably would've sued the electrician company. That guy only had six employees. So it probably would have put him out of business, but just by taking responsibility and going and take initiative and not wasting time or waiting, I just want it fixed it.

 

And after it, and everything was good. Still got paid. So

 

case in point,

 

man, you nailed it. Yeah, don't do that. But it was a good lesson. Well, we're lucky on that one. Wow. And I

 

think it goes to the whole point of, of being optimistic, right? Being like grateful, having some, some gratitude on a lot of this stuff.

 

And to just be optimistic here, if you know, like, Hey, there's a solution to this. We build things, we fix things, right. There's a solution for everything. And to have that optimism. Through your projects, it's going to go one. It's going to go a long way to your personally going to be probably promoted faster than everybody else.

 

Cause you're good to be around. People want to work with you, your reputation gets built, all that stuff. And then three, right? You find solutions, right? If you're optimistic, you're always going to find a solution to whatever problem you're working through. And that goes a long way, um, to moving forward and your willingness to learn.

 

Right? So if you're optimistic, if you're looking for solutions and you're willing to learn, you're willing to grow, you're willing to get through something, um, which also hits on like training that most people training is one of the highest ROI you can ever do. Right? Like, especially in construction, right.

 

We're getting paid for what we know. For our knowledge and then the ability to execute that in the field. So like you talked about not knowing things, right? And it's going from apprentice to master electrician. Right. You learn more as you go through that. And training is something that gets so under valued, under sold.

 

And I mean across, I think any industry, any company, but especially in construction is that continuing education, the ability to continue to learn, continue to use new tools, technology, whatever it might be. But just understand that training is one of the, just highest ROI that you can do because we're such a people-based industry.

 

So I just want to put that out there that like, as you, as you move through the ranks, as you want the, to like, don't forget to continue to train your people, go through trainings. Um, and not just like the lunch and learns that nobody ever likes, but actual like, you know, real world hands-on

 

training. Yeah, absolutely.

 

I totally agree. I mean, I've done some training for everything. Like I got addicted to the, the mentor mindset. If you will. Back when I was started living with that one guy was a plumber and I was so lucky. He basically trained me how to even get into the grades, how to succeed in the trades. I've started trades company, et cetera.

 

And then from there I realized that I was outgrowing his knowledge. So then I had to go to that owner of that bigger company and use him as a mentor. So I can learn that how to. Uh, operate systems. And I have like all these like, systems that are basically copy and pasted from their company. It was like job codes and estimating and things like that.

 

I just asked questions. And so like you learn from these people. And so I'm using that as training. And then you get to a point where you're a business owner now, and that's where you joined things like RPA or apex and other masterminds. It's like, okay, well that's training for us, but then you also need training for the people that are doing the electrical work.

 

And so like, luckily, uh, Here in Michigan, you have to have a training, sorry, your electrical apprenticeship. So you have to have a training just even start and be through your apprenticeship. So that's good because then you can utilize that too, as an excuse, even to do training, teach people more and become a more competent qualified electrician and learn more of the science behind it.

 

Instead of just saying, yeah, I can run conduit from point a to point B. It's like, no, I know why we're running this conduit. Where would you rate me? It'd be find it an addict. For how many kinds of conductors you can find inside that conduit? So that's very valuable stuff and I believe everybody needs to not only be taught it, but also reminded it often because sometimes that like Senator Casey know for years to a boss duct for three years, and then when you get back there and you have to run cable tray for it again, you're like, Oh, what happened?

 

Like now it's constant reminders of it then. Yeah. You got to always be on your toes and ready to go for it.

 

So I think we're, we're kind of coming up on time here, Luke. So I'm going to ask you the big question that we ask everybody. What, uh, what do you see as the biggest issues facing the construction industry today and how do we fix it

 

again?

 

The people that's the biggest thing, like I said, that's like that's 90% of what any kind of construction company or construction industry is, is the people. And so what's wrong with the people? Well, not really bad. It gets even wrong with the people. I think it's on us. I think it's on the contractors, everybody that's in the trades above people that aren't in here.

 

And so we have to take on ourselves to fix these things, but we have problems. People trying to get into the tray. We have people with, we had problems with people trying to Excel in the trades and actually develop a real career here. Lot of people, they might even get into the trade for four years just to make enough money.

 

Until they have an opportunity to get into some other job, uh, when they re don't realize that there's more opportunity here, if they would just put the same time effort into this. And so we need to focus as us, as the leaders of this industry to train these new people, show them the opportunity to showcase what it's capable of.

 

Like, you know, I want to get for DT one day. I wish people that say, Hey, I wasn't electrician. I was a D minus in high school. I didn't go to college and I have this car, like, that's like, what I want to do. Most people would say, Oh, I don't want to be flashy, but it, what now plumber's house that I grew up grew up at.

 

He lived in a beautiful custom home on one of the most beautiful rivers in the country. Like the Lake was that it connects to is actually voted third, third, most beautiful in the country. And then, yeah, two houses down each way that were rental houses on the river. It's like, okay, that's pretty cool.

 

That's something pretty like impressive. And then not even as a business owner, the people that are in the trades, there'd be some guys you'd see a show up at a 2000 Ford focus. That's rough out of doubt. And they live in a trailer, nothing wrong with that. And then you'd see some people they'd show up in a brand new diesel pickup and they have like a great family and they have a beautiful home.

 

They just built a pool barn and all this stuff like and drink basically. And then you're like, wait, How did, how did you get that? And then you talk to them and they'd be like, Oh yeah, I'll show you now that you asked. But it's like, these people really need to do a better job as people being us showcasing this kind of stuff, showing like how you got this through the trades and how to get into the trade and how to come up through the trades and scale and climb ladder.

 

So I guess that's the biggest problem I believe is the people that need to come in here and find the opportunity. But the problem with it is that we need and how you fix it is we need to be the ones to take it on ourselves. And fix it, show them that, teach them that take time to teach them, even if it's sitting them in a classroom for an hour a week or every other week or once a month, and just show them how to climb the ladder and become better format apprentices, anything like that.

 

And so, yeah, I guess that's what I think.

 

I love that man, that that's probably one of the more thought provoking answers that I've, I've received on that question, to be honest with you, but you're so right. And, and it, it does fall on us. And I actually had that exact same discussion with my, my business partner recently.

 

And, you know, if we, if we have somebody on our, on our ranks that fails or that, that leaves, or that we have to get rid of a hundred percent of that blame is on he and I as the owners of this company. And that's the way we have to approach these things. And. I'm glad you said that, that it's a it's eye opening to hear other people say it too, but, but I think you're right.

 

You know, as leaders in this industry, we can talk about it all day long, but we got to do something about it and, and we're the ones that can do it. That's why Dylan and I are doing this show, you know?

 

Absolutely. That's why I do my Instagram and YouTube stuff as well. But like you go talk to any traits, many traits company and the world.

 

In the country, whatever it is. And they're going to say, yeah, I just can't find nobody that wants to work. Nobody wants to work these days. That's a quote. Everybody throws around really well. Why would they want to go work for you? What, like you, literally, the only thing you say is nobody wants to work for you.

 

If you tell me nobody wants to work for you, I'm probably not going to want to work for you either. It doesn't sound that great. But now if you show them what you can get off of the work that you can build and what you can build that kind of career in life. You can build up this company. Yeah. That's going to sound pretty cool.

 

I'd like to come work there. That's why like two problems. I said that we've never had electric is getting work and finding people to do a bird. Literally I can't fund jobs and fund projects and fund equipment fast enough to take on all the projects and put people to work. And it's new people. It's experienced people.

 

Like my goal with this company is I want to be across the country with it. Big company. And I have people like in San Antonio, Texas, and California, and Las Vegas and Utah and Pennsylvania, all these places that are like ready, gung ho to like put a crew together and start a branch. They're ready to go.

 

That are like qualified for it. They work for other companies as project managers and they want to do that. And so like, I have no problems getting people into the trades. People reach out. To me daily, trying to get into the trades and how they should like buy their first tools and like finding an apprenticeship and which trade they should start.

 

Things like that. I have zero problems with it, but it's because have you ever watched my Instagram because I'm always at div on there. I'm showing people how great it is. I'm showing what you can build out of. I talk about the experiences I've had and the stories I have. And so people are like, yeah, that actually sounds kind of cool.

 

I'd love to try it instead of saying, Hey yeah, nobody wants to work these days. They're all lazy. So. I take it on yourself a hundred percent,

 

man. I love it.

 

Yeah,

 

you're really a gala you put out, but Luke, where can people find all this great stuff that you're putting out on Instagram? YouTube? What, uh, what handles should they look up to go

 

and find you at Loopsy market?

 

You do that's that Instagram same thing. And then I'm here on LinkedIn as well. Uh, so getting more active on LinkedIn, but I'm like active 99% of the time, Instagram. I usually post daily stories on there. Just stuff that I'm going through and like little ideas I had. And even if I've had to like sit down one of my form and a talk with them, like a serious talk I'll share what went on in that talk.

 

So other people that have the same problem learn from that as well. So.

 

I like it. I follow you. I'm going to keep doing it. I learned something every day, man.

 

Thanks.

 

Awesome guys. Well, Luke, it's been such a pleasure having you on the show here. You know, I think the, the big takeaways that we can all have is really take, take pride in your work.

 

Go out there, take pride in what you do, be be optimistic. Um, And you get what you put out, right? If you put out positivity, if you put out good things, if you exude optimism on your projects, People are gonna want to be around you. People are gonna want to come to work for you. They're gonna want to do good work.

 

We are going to want to go the extra mile. Uh, versus if you say that nobody wants to work here, we can't get anybody. Uh, our people suck, right? Like you're going to effectively manifest that in your life. And so many, uh, ended up doing that, right? If you only see problems, problems are the only thing you're ever going to get.

 

If you only see solutions, well, life becomes a lot easier if you, uh, if you just see solutions. Any, any last words,

 

Luke? No, I think that's all from me other than just thanks for having me on the show. I really appreciate it.

 

Glad to have you on man. And hopefully we can do it again someday.

 

Yeah. Look what we're doing.

 

Awesome

 

guys. Well, I'll go follow Luke. Go. Bring somebody else in the trades and you construction, we need more great people. And then to talk about how great this industry is, you know, we're doing it here, but we can't do it alone. We need everyone out there to really talk about how great an industry construction is.

 

The beautiful things that we build. And really the world that we live in is all done through, you know, our, our designs, our builds our execution, and, uh, we couldn't have it without construction. So we need more great people into this industry and it's on all of us. To bring them in. So that's this episode of the construction corner podcast until next time.

Communicating to the Field

Hello and welcome to the construction corner podcast. I'm Dylan joined with my now luxurious and new cohost, Matt veteran, Matt. What's going on,

 

man. Luxurious and new that's a new one for me. That's a nice title. Thank you for that. So it's a good day today. How about yourself, sir?

 

It's been one of those days, man.

 

Some, some good news, some bad news, some You know, weather changes snowing like a bitch here.

 

It looks like it out of your back window there. It's just freezing cold here in the low twenties and windy as all. Hell.

 

Yeah. Well, So, I mean, I used to live in the Midwest too. And one of the things that I think it's, it's really funny.

 

So out West, you've got like, just these huge microclimates right. Are all these microclimates. So I live at 3,500 feet. I go 10 minutes down the Hill. It's probably just raining right now. And if I go 10 minutes up the mountain, it's probably snow and even worse than it is here. That's pretty wild. How's are the driving conditions out there then?

 

Is it pretty treacherous? Yeah.

 

Yeah. I mean, so it's definitely like very mountainous roads. They're pretty like curvy mountain roads. So right now I mean, most everybody that like drives Jeeps and trucks out here, like I'm driving a car for the most part. So it's, you know, two wheel drive, not advise.

 

We're in the Midwest. Like, that's the thing, like when I lived in India, you could totally get around with a two wheel drive, you know, vehicle for the most part.

 

Yeah. Not, not where I'm at. We moved kind of out into, to the rural sticks, a little bit to get some property about six years ago. And there is no way to reach my house without driving down about two miles of the absolute nastiest, dirt roads I've ever seen.

 

So when we moved here, I've always had a truck, so I've been fine, but my wife had a minivan and the minivan was great back in the, in the suburbs and, you know, got great mileage, had movie screens for the kids and all that nonsense. It lasted about a year and a half out here. And the poor thing was falling apart.

 

It was just, it was ripping apart at the seams. So now we have two trucks.

 

I think that that's like every construction guys thing is drive it till the wheels fall off.

 

Pretty much. Yeah. It just sucks. Cause I never have a clean truck.

 

Yeah. Yeah. That's a, again, like a. No man's vehicle. It needs to be, you know, go to work Monday through Friday, you know, take the kids to practice and games on Saturday and then get a church on Sunday, right?

 

Yeah, exactly.

 

Well, so at least, you know, we got power back. That's the other big thing here. I was without power the last like three days, so, Oh wow. From wind storms. If it's not one thing it's another, you know, here in the mountains.

 

So are you on a generator backup at all or are you just out of luck?

 

So we, we bought a generator a couple of years ago, but it's, you know, the extension cord extravaganza is what we're running.

 

Gotcha. We've got a little gas one, but it, it pipes right into our circuit breaker, but it doesn't power our whole house. The main item being our furnace. So when power goes out in the winter, we burn lots of wood.

 

Yeah. Yeah. That's for us too. All right, man. So with, you know, and guys, we're going to do these kind of little intros here.

 

Just feels good to be talking to somebody else on the show and not just mean getting right into it. But for today's topic, Matt and I thought that we would be talking about communication with the field, you know over the last year with COVID and everything. You've, you're limiting people that are on site, right.

 

It's a big, big issue that everyone is dealing with. You're only trying to have required personnel. So you're, you've got to really increase that communication between. Office the field, your project managers, your coordinators, like everybody up and down the chain. So we thought that talking about communication between office and the field and really just everybody, right?

 

Because your project managers probably aren't on one project, they're on multiples, they're driving to multiple sites and this has always been an issue if you will. But with COVID and with job site restrictions have become even more right now. It's not just the office. It's home offices. Main office field multiple job sites.

 

So wanted to bring this kind of, you know, into the forefront and then really talk through some of the best practices and things that we've found to be. Extremely beneficial. So I guess with that, Matt, I'll let you lead off on, you know, your take on communication with the field. And I really just, this means communication in general.

 

So obviously communication is key across probably all facets of, of any business. You know, from my side, we have, you know, Obvious communications with clients and owners that that have to be kept up. We have to set expectations in the very, very beginning. You know, we have to be the experts providing knowledge.

 

We have to be responsive, all that good stuff, but when it comes to my field or to any field, I guess, really it is so mission critical to be able to have clear, concise. And, and correct communication with my team, because like you mentioned, we're, we're all running in different directions. We're, you know, we're looking at a few projects at a time, at least, and it's kinda like, you know, my guys out in the field know what they're doing.

 

They're all very well qualified to do what they're doing, but it's kind of like being out at sea in a boat, you know, a good captain knows how to steer his ship. He knows how to use a compass. But it's a whole lot nicer when you've got somebody on shore, you can kind of bounce ideas back on, and if you need help, if you need directions.

 

So that's kind of how we play it at, at Schaefer construction. And you know, it's just, it's gotta be strong communication. It's gotta be quick because we don't have time for the, you know, the dribble all day long. But we also gotta be able to solve problems and it comes down to that. That's the biggest key is, is.

 

Good communication helps solve problems, help keep things moving.

 

One of the things, and those are all fantastic points. One of the things that I want to add that often in construction and really, I mean, this goes to most, anything but often in construction is we tend to have shorthand for different things.

 

And we need to be sure that we're speaking the same location. So your you know, Northwest corner, Could be, is it plan Northwest? Is it actual Northwest? Is it, I mean, there's really, those are the two, but you know, looking at a set of drawings, you know, in the fields, the people in the office are looking at it and, you know, Northwest plan versus actual Northwest are.

 

Two different things, or it could be two different things. So it's important to be clear and that type of communication, which might mean that your, your email, your phone call, whatever is longer, right? You gotta expand upon what that is to make sure that everybody's talking about the right location. But that's, that's critical is to make sure that in that clarity, it, your clarity might mean that it's longer not

 

shorter.

 

Yeah. And you know, it's funny, two of our superintendents are, are also firefighters and in the fire world, they have names, you know, and I'm not a firefighter. I don't remember what they are, but they'll talk to me about, you know, the alpha wall or the, this and that. And they know exactly what they're talking about and where it is for me.

 

I'm always grabbing them saying, hold on a minute, let's, let's speak English. You know, w which, which part of the plan are we looking at here? And. You know, we, we kind of bumped into those a little bit, but you know, technology helps a lot with that. We, you know, we have a lot of, not necessarily new tech, but we've brought a lot of technology into, to the field to kind of link back and forth so that it's, it's a lot easier if, if both my superintendent and myself are looking at the same drawing at the same time when we're having these conversations, it just, it helps keep things clear.

 

Yeah. And I mean, like, don't be afraid to FaceTime granted, you know, the site that you're on for internet and all that kind of good stuff, but like, don't be afraid to FaceTime or send the picture to, you know, do a zoom call and share screen and go through all that. Information, right. Know, far, often it's been a phone call and then we're, you know, we're each looking at a set of drawings, the office and the field, and hopefully you have the same set of drawings that you're looking at and, you know, go from there, but being able to share a screen and saying, Oh, that's, that's different than what I have.

 

Really goes a long way in helping that communication to be clear. I dunno how many times, you know, it's, Hey, what title block do you have update? Are you there? Yeah. And that's, that goes a long way too, is to, again, clarity, he can expand that, right? If you're looking at drawing set dated, you know, whatever versus, or, you know, version, whatever Can go a long way and making that communication clear.

 

Yeah. And you know, I come from the days when I was building houses, we had, we had the old Nextels, you know, the big walkie-talkie bricks. And, and at that time, you know, that was, that was pretty cool. We could just, you know, be peep and buttoned to anybody's conversation at any point in time and, and demand answers.

 

But what we use now is, I mean, there's, there's lots of apps out there. There's. There's tons of different options. We use one called field wire specifically, and it's, it's similar to like a plan grid if you've ever seen that. It's not as robust as pro core, but it also doesn't cost nearly as much as pro core, but w with dealed wire my guys in the field have it all loaded on their laptop or on their iPads rather.

 

I can be in the office. We can pull up the same drawing and in real time they can be, you know, circling areas of the plans. And within seconds it pops up on my monitor and you know, or snapping pictures and pointing arrows, do doing all that stuff in an almost real time. So the possibilities are almost endless and the communication breakdowns.

 

Have don't get me wrong. They still happen. But what we've cut down in them significantly by, by investing in some of this, this tech for the iPads.

 

Yeah. And I mean, there's a ton out there. You mentioned three really good ones. You can do the same with like blue beam, creative Bluebeam studio for markups.

 

And you can have your own so with the applications that you talking about and field wire, that's usually like an internal. Thing with fuel wire. So I'm not familiar on field wire, but can you share markups and stuff would be owner or on a project? Or

 

how does that work? You can we pay for it? So with our, our licensing, yes, you can, you can export drawings so you can Mark up a drawing, attach photos, put it in report.

 

You can do lots of cool stuff. The only downfall with field wire. And I hope they're listening. Cause I think this is bullshit, but if you. If we go to email direct an invitation, say to an owner or a sub for that matter, that's not already licensed. They will tack that new user onto our licensing and charge us the monthly rate the second day, open it so we can give an owner access, but now all of a sudden I'm paying for their access, which maybe they can work that out in a future update.

 

Yeah, cause with like Bluebeam studio it's, you know, whoever has the Bluebeam studio license pays for it and then, you know, can share it with anybody. They just need to like download Bluebeam use it or to log into the studio session, which you can do, I think, mostly online. So that typically works out and most, most donors that are at least.

 

That I've dealt with typically have blue beams, which not like a huge, huge issue. You know, at least an owners that are dealing with like construction documents all the time. They typically have blue beam. So like a Bluebeam studio session is pretty easy. And especially like during the design phase, it's great tool to make sure that you get feedback from everybody.

 

And then it's all logged within like a studio session and you can export all the comments, everything from every sheet which makes it pretty nice to have as a, you know, simple markup tool for all intents and purposes on, on the Bluebeam side.

 

Yeah. We, we have not dabbled into Bluebeam yet. I've run across it on a couple of projects, but by and large, we just haven't.

 

Yeah, for a long time, we didn't use anything. It was paper plans and, and emails and, you know, and then that was it. Or, or taking a picture with your phone and bouncing it back and forth. So in our eyes, we, we made a huge leap when we invested in field wire and it's, it's relatively inexpensive for what it does.

 

And, and in all honesty, I'm sure we're only just scratching the surface of the capabilities of the software of the app. But we use it. Like I said for communication on a daily basis is great. We've automated all of our forms. So all of our daily reports, our time sheets, expense reports you name it.

 

We we've automated those and, and input that. So they're, they're all built into the app now. But it really comes in handy doing punch list type work. So we can very easily communicate to our subs, to the owner. And you, you circle the area on the plan. You can take a picture of the deficiency. You can put a quick description, you can tag it.

 

The possibilities are really endless on that end. And it's super helpful.

 

Yeah, I've done a few punch lists. This was years ago cause I've used a bunch of different stuff. When it comes to punch lists because being an engineer on the child side, it's whatever the, the GC is using on the project. So we've used a plain grid to do it, which works out pretty well.

 

And you can filter by discipline, all that kind of stuff. Use Procor we've used just a few others over the years. And and some of it is to just like walk in with the GC and there, they got their iPads. They're putting it on their system. And we just go through, so it's all done. You know, we're not taking a license or anything.

 

And just walking through as we go, they do the assignments. And that works pretty slightly for a punch list. You know where we're walking, it, it might take, the walkthrough might take an extra. Say an hour or two to go through and make sure everyone's typing out everything as you go. But it's like when I get back to the office, I don't have to spend the next three hours, you know, typing up the punch list or handing it to somebody to do it.

 

It was all just done in the field and it, I don't think it. I mean, so one of the projects I punched was like a 40,000 square foot dorm. When GC would walk in with a iPad in it, it might've taken an extra half hour, hour. It wasn't, you know, crazy then than it would've been for me to like, you know, hand-write everything

 

out, right.

 

Let's go back with your Nelo and you you're a yellow notepad. And. Try and remember

 

it all. Yeah. Yeah. Or take pictures and make sure that you pick the right picture linked to the right thing and then format it back in the office and where we were formed. We had to. To do punch lists to then, you know, get somebody to proof it, so then send it.

 

So that was a, that was a big deal. Cause then when you, when you got back to the office, you're done, right. It was already done. The subs had it instantly you know, and everybody could move forward and they weren't waiting on a report. They weren't waiting on whatever. And I think that's a, that's a big step forward in a lot of these punch list items, especially when people are trying to close out a job, you know, you want that.

 

As quick as possible. And while everyone's still there before moving to the next job.

 

Yeah. And from a financial perspective, a lot of our contracts won't allow us to release any retention payments until that punch-list has done. So the quicker we can be through that, the more efficient we can be, the better it is for everybody across the board.

 

Yeah, and I mean the biggest thing and a little more past this, but the other thing that I, I found that was most often that we had to knock was OEMs. Those were like the biggest things, engineers that like, we wanted to make sure all of our maintenance people had or the OMS. And that was the last thing to ever get submitted.

 

They would finish punch list. Well, before an ONM was submitted. You know, and usually those could have been done months before close. But that's, that was like the one thing we were typically very big stickler score.

 

Yeah. We'll butt heads on that because I'm, I'm part of that problem. And, and, you know, we're, we're very organized on our closeout, but sometimes getting all that sort of stuff and the warranty information, it, you know, in my mind, by the time we hit that point in the project.

 

Yeah. I'm already gone. I'm running in the next project and you know, it, it's, it's a, it's a breakdown in our system for sure. Cause you need it. It's it's definitely important, but that's one of those ones where we're still trying to keep up with.

 

Yeah. And I mean, like, I've just done enough lead projects too with like commissioning agents and everything else, and they're looking for them and then, you know, their maintenance guys are involved and especially cause most of the projects that like I was heavily involved with where we had, it was repeat client, right.

 

It was a university system. It was a. Healthcare system. So I dealt with the same four people all the time on that's five minutes. So closing out, I mean, it's, it's different if you have. You know, like you're dealing with developers or, you know, clients that probably either don't care or it's a one-off. But with, with clients where you're dealing with the same poor people, you know, in the same maintenance staff, all that kind of stuff, and they want to get up and running Asia is just something that we always ran into.

 

So we were, because we knew our clients were big stickler sport, so, but again, like. It's all in the communication pieces of it. It's, you know, in commercial instruction, there's so many forms. There's so many things to fill out that, you know, if you're, if you're looking to move from residential to, and I don't know how many here we have listeners that are in the residential side, but commercial, you know, it's, everybody understands.

 

There's a lot of paperwork, you know, you can do a residential project with like 10 pieces of paper and be totally fine. And commercial not even close. So it's, you know, like everything guys is making sure that your paperwork spilled out. You both the, for the engineering side, like OEMs were a big thing for us, right?

 

As well as like punch lists for, you know, Matt, you probably have some other things that you're a big stickler on that we, we didn't care about at all. Pardon.

 

Yeah, our daily reports are huge. And I will bark at my guys endlessly about these because you know, there's a huge amount of paperwork. Like you said, everything is, is checks and balances.

 

Everything is documented. That's one of those documentation items that we insist on because God forbid, if something happens and. You know, we get pushed back once in awhile and they go, it's, it's a pain in the ass. It's all this extra work I've got to sit down at the end of the day. And, and field wires helped that because they can actually kind of work on their daily throughout the day.

 

They, you know, as things are happening as trade show up, they just tap, tap, tap, and it's added. But our concern is as GCs as owners of this company obviously is that it's not, if something comes up tomorrow or even next week, it's in seven years when. You know, something breaks down, something happens. And if I find myself in a courtroom and they're asking me what happened on January 21st, 2021, and it's 20, 28.

 

I can't remember yesterday. There's no way I'm going to remember, you know, that far along. So to be able to have now it's electronic, but even a paper copy of, okay. Here's what happened. We had five masons on the site from this company we had. 10 carpenters on the site from this company, they were doing this, this and this.

 

We had these deliveries, we had all of this equipment and it's Bulletproof at that point. So that is our, our internal kind of sticking points that we, we stomp our feet about quite frequently.

 

Yeah. And again, like the communication, the documentation is so, so critical and I cannot stress this enough. I mean, new and experience everybody like this is, this is a big deal.

 

So it's, you're never going to be questioned on what happened yesterday, for the most part like you, you know, or last week, nobody cares, but you will be questioned about it seven years from now, 10 years from now. Right? When the roof leaks, when you know something broke and it's, you know, the 12 year Mark right before warranties, like that's when it's going to happen.

 

Not. Not next week, not at substantial completion, you know, it's going to be some point after that. So it's, it's important to understand the criticality of it. But over a longer time horizon, not something that's, you know, next week, next month. Heck probably not even next year. It'll be five, 10, 15 years from now.

 

Yeah. You know, we, we kind of joke, but you know, we offer what we call inside our one-year lifetime warranty. So, I mean, we, we operate on relationships. We operate on repeat clientele. So within reason, you know, at any point in the future, if something goes wrong, we're at the very least going to, going to try and rectify a situation at the very least.

 

So to have records, to know who to talk to At some point in time to know who to point at, or, you know, grabbed by the collar and dragging to the office. It's we gotta have it. And you know, that's frankly, that's why I personally hate running projects myself. We're, we're actively recruiting right now for a project manager because I hate all the paperwork.

 

I like the conceptual side of it. I like the front end all the record keeping it's necessary and I will, I will stand up for that in front of anybody, but it's. It's tedious at best, but it's necessary.

 

Yeah. And I mean, the, this goes into hiring a little bit and finding the right people in the right seats.

 

You know, you need somebody as a project manager as a, you know, site super to, to care about that type of stuff. Right? You need somebody that, that cares about the details. They don't, they don't need to be, you know, business development. They don't need to be chatty Cathy. Right. They need to be the people that.

 

You know, make sure all the I's are dotted. T's are crossed, you know, signatures are where they're supposed to be and do every day. Right? You need somebody that's super detailed oriented to be in those positions and making sure that, you know, not only core values, but that they're a fit for that type of personality.

 

And far too often, I've seen that. Not. Fulfilled in companies. You know, that it's the next promotion, right from You know, maybe your project engineer to project manager. Same thing happens on the design side where they're, they're a great engineer. They should not manage projects you know, or great something else.

 

Right? They're a great manager, but you know, don't let them design anything. You know, it happens both ways, right? Where some people are much better at management and getting everything done, clearing the path for the people to do the things that they're great at. So this, it really goes to in all these, like with communication too, right?

 

Somebody that's good at communication should be in the seat that needs to communicate a lot.

 

Yes, definitely. And another one of my big pet peeves, as far as communication goes to get back onto that is I have to know what's going on at my jobs before my clients do. Right. So if, if there's an issue that comes up, which happens, I don't know, every day something comes up, I have to be aware of it before my clients do, because the worst thing that can happen in my eyes and from a credibility and, and responsibility standpoint is if a client or an owner calls me and starts asking questions about.

 

An issue on site that I don't know about that, that degrades confidence so rapidly and in a, in a business that is built on you know, no like trust a hundred percent you can't afford to lose any confidence or trust that you've gained. You worked so hard to gain. So that's a big it's not a sticking point because our, our guys in the field are very good about it.

 

But it's, it's hugely important that they have to let me know immediately if it's, if it's something of substance, I don't need to know if, you know, Johnny put the wrong color, paint on the wall, go ahead and just fix it. But if Johnny knocked over an HPAC unit with a sky track and we've got a hole in the building, now I need to know that immediately so that I can prepare and do damage control on my end before it becomes a bigger problem.

 

So let's dig into like, Albums, you know, like that are in that similar vein of, is this going to go two ways and it's, there's nuance in here, right. Of you need to know. But at the same time you also need to have a game plan. And how, how bad is it? What are you doing to fix it? Right. It's one thing to make the call and, you know, something happens.

 

But at the same time, like you need to have a. In place, you need to start moving forward to fix that. A specific thing versus just raising, raising the red flag and then sitting there, right. That doesn't quite quite work. So it's, it's nuanced and like, Hey, you know, we're, we're on it. We're we raise the flag, we're on it, we're doing this you know, keep me updated type of thing.

 

But maybe walk through a. A scenario or a make believe scenario, if you will. And something that's, that's come up that you've experienced like that, man.

 

So you just nailed it. And I guess I misspoke, I don't want my guys to call me with every little thing and I surely do not want them to call me with problems.

 

I want them to call me with solutions. Hey, Matt, this happened, this is how we're already working to fix it. And. If I don't agree with it, I'll voice my opinion, but you know, I'm not just here to be a sounding board and to fix everyone's problems. We all have to be leaders of our own areas. But a good example I can think of is in 2019, we were building a carwash for a client and it was about us high end of a carwash is I've literally ever seen the owner spared, no expense.

 

I mean, Over the top great owner where for a group project, but it was, it was an expensive carwash it's carwash still, but really expensive carwash. So it was designed with with attic trusses. So there was storage space up above everything, so they can store their chemicals and paperwork and whatever.

 

The engineer designed it with attic trusses, spaced 12 inches on center. Which is absurd. And I don't know that the last time you'd been on a wood-frame job site, I'm no huge guy. I can tell you. I have a real hard time squeezing between trusses that are 12 inches on center. And I'm probably one of the smaller guys on my job sites.

 

So we're loading trusses up. There's no room to move and they get done with the entire wing. It was kind of an L-shaped building. So they got down with one of the legs. And I get a call from my, my then superintendent who is no longer with us. And he tells me that the doorway is on the wrong side. So basically basically in a nutshell, they put about half of the trust is a backwards.

 

I didn't know about it until the owner already knew about it. So the owner called me first asking what was going on. Then I called my superintendent. He told me, well, yeah, this happened. And this happened, what should we do? I said, well, Mr. Superintendent, you tell me, what should we do? How are we going to fix this?

 

Because I'm an hour and a half away, you're there looking at it. You'll let it happen. How are we going to fix this? And unfortunately on that project, we had, you know, a few issues like that, and it boils down to a lack of communication, a lack of. You know, chain of command communication where, you know, this owner was very involved.

 

Rightfully so. So he was out there probably more than I was sometimes, but for my guy to be talking with the owner about something like that, something major before I even knew about it, it really, it stirred the pot in a bad way. It eroded confidence. It, and it just caused a lot of problems kind of throughout the project.

 

Yeah, and this there's a, I can go a couple of ways in this one. You know, the communication chain, the two is how important, like review is through a process, right? So. Yeah, communication for sure. Up and down the chain, like as things are happening going, and I don't know how many walls I've either heard or seen built that were just raw.

 

Right. And then everybody gets mad when you got to tear them down. They're not in the right place or they didn't have the, you know, the wall section wasn't right. And at that point, a lot of people are probably pretty bad, but it like has to happen. So it's, it's not only, you know, the communication up and down the chain, but like, don't be afraid to review as things go along.

 

Right. So they get to the point of. Very expensive returns. It's never an overturn we're in construction. We build things so you can try it again, but you know, it's the, to not be afraid to have that communication and like, Hey guys, let's, let's just double check this, make sure that you know, or something doesn't seem right here.

 

Do we need to make the call to somebody? Right? Whether it's the architect, engineer, the owner, somebody. You know, if something doesn't seem right, because more often than not, you know, the team, and I'm saying that as a full thing, you know, owner architect, engineer, so GC, like everybody's more than willing to like, come and look at something to make sure it's right.

 

You obviously don't want to do that for everything. Like it's like overboard. But then it's like the boy pred Wolf, but you know, people are more than willing to, to make sure that things go right or to do a sample. Right. You see the masonry all the time. You know, they build a small little test section.

 

Hey, is this good? This is what you want to see. Or mortar color and all that kind of stuff. So. But don't be afraid to have that for a grade to their disciplines. Like, again, don't be afraid to make the call or put up a sample or anything like that to have something to go by moving forward on the project.

 

Yeah. Because so much of construction is it's really a, it's a blend of art and science right there. There's finesse involved in everything. It's not just banging hammers or, you know, stacking steel and. There's a delicate balance there. So you want the guys on site, the superintendents to be watching everything you want them to be buttoned in and reviewing and asking questions when appropriate, because there there's two things that are our most expensive on any project.

 

One is rework and the second is guys standing around because they can't work. And, you know, as it as a quote unquote paper GC. That is one of our biggest jobs is to make sure that it's, it's a well tuned orchestra out there that everybody's got space. Work sites are prepared ahead of time for each trade.

 

There are not guys stepping over top of each other, but all that comes down to communication on the superintendent side and. So when, when they wake up, they can successfully do that and orchestrate it and stay involved and keep their eyes on, on what progress is being made. Ask the right questions.

 

Things go a lot smoother. Cause nobody wants to do it again. Ever. It's costly. It's inefficient. It kills schedules, it kills budgets. But then on the flip side, nobody wants that superintendent that won't shut up. And that is constantly yapping in their ear and, and asking them to check things and redo things.

 

And so, like I said, it's just this delicate balance and not everyone can do it. I've seen guys go out there and nicest guy in the world, you know, I I'd be friends with him, but from a superintendent standpoint, they just can't hack it because they don't have that. I joke with my guys. And I said, you know, to be a good superintendent, you got to have at least a little touch of asshole in your personality.

 

You got it. You got to be able to be rude sometimes because you know, construction is still an old man's or an old industry, you know, there's, there's rough grizzly guys and girls out there that you question their work and they're going to bark at you, but sometimes it's required and like any good. Pack of wolves are pack of dogs.

 

You gotta build the bark back and some guys just can't do that.

 

Yeah. And boiling down, like some of this in the communication side of things is you need to have like some of the best projects that I've been on is. It's not no communication, but it's minimal, right? It's communication at the right times at like an OAC meeting, right on our architect and cm. Like those are the, you know, those are good points to bring everything up.

 

And then, you know, maybe you hear stuff every little bit between there depending on what's going on, but like the smoothest projects I've ever been on is you just hear about stuff at the OAC meeting. Everything's on track. It's on schedule. Nothing broke. And, and those are, those are great projects, right?

 

Or the other ones that I've had that are maybe more complicated, I'll still say they were great projects, but I had maybe more frequent communication. So as the engineer record with the electrician, since I'm the electrical engineer with the electrician and their foreman, because. You know, stub is, it was a complicated project, complicated renovation, and they just wanted to make sure that, Hey, for this thing, can we do this?

 

Yeah, man, that, or no, we need to do this. Right. And that type of communication is also great. You know where it's a question answer or, Hey, can you come and look at this? Sure. You know, can I be there in the morning? Yeah, we'll be here. You know, those are, those are also great forms of communication, but the biggest, like the best projects is OAC updates, you know, monthly meetings with everybody and it's, it's going great.

 

But if projects are more complicated or something went wrong you know, I want to hear directly from the sub or whoever prior to that meeting so that when the owners in the room, you know, everything's worked out. And nobody's blindsided nobody's, you know, caught off guard or mad at the other party for not, you know, telling somebody whose responsibility it is to help fix it.

 

Right. So again, come with solutions or, you know, in those like OAC meetings, Hey, we had a problem here. This is what we're doing to fix it. We're on it. Right. That's what the owner wants to hear at the end of the day. But the, the team I'm saying that as you know, GC. So engineer, you know, design team, everybody needs to be on the same page going into that meeting and nobody should really be caught off guard and the owners should be just adequately updated

 

for sure.

 

And you know, most of the field communication can just stay in the field, but nobody works their best when they're caught off guard. Right. I mean, it happens all the time. You got to think on your feet, that's that's part of life. But I would much rather be able to prepare for a meeting, even if it's just an hour before then be sitting in a meeting and have a bomb dropped in my, in my lap and have to deal with it then.

 

So, you know, unless it's catastrophic, most of the field communication, I don't need to know about you know, I, I like hearing when, when my guys or one of our subs will reach out to. Our architect or engineer to try and hash things out or talk things through, especially before they're looking at it saying, well, that looks wrong.

 

You know, they catch it ahead of time. I love hearing when they're having those talks and then, you know, whether they like it or not, it always gets back to me somehow, but it's a way nicer conversation when I'm on the phone with my engineer and he's saying, Hey, by the way, you know, so-and-so called me last week.

 

We worked through this and that, and it was really cool to see him being proactive and it solved. A potential issue before it was an issue. Perfect. I can't ask for anything better than that because, you know, again, I keep going back to the, I play project manager right now a lot. I shouldn't probably be doing that and I don't like doing it.

 

So the less I have to spend on the daily stuff of a project is the more time I have to go find the next project to make sure that we're not just eating today. We're still eating. In a month in a year, in 10 years.

 

And that's the important thing of knowing what your role is within a company, right? As an owner, you've got very different responsibilities than, you know, somebody who's an employee, right?

 

Like that's a different vibe, but to know, to know where your, your role is and, you know, ultimately at the end of the day, we're all in sales, we're all in business development and especially in construction, right. If you're you're You know, day laborer or you know, an apprentice or, you know, even a journeyman through that in the trades.

 

And you're nobody likes working with you. Well, one of two things can happen. You're either going to get fired or to your company will get not necessarily fired, but your company will no longer be picked for those projects. And you'll eventually not have a job because the company goes out of business because nobody likes working with you.

 

So we're all in the business of sales and to make sure that, you know, up and down, like the communication is good and you're not, you know, overly dickish to anybody on the site, right? Like there's always some little ribbing here and there, you know, guys, but you got to know where that line is and it takes some not only self-awareness, but awareness of others and what their tolerance for a rib is you know, and where you just stay clear of it.

 

But. You know, job sites, right? You gotta take your legs if you're going to get them. So don't, don't give them with, can't take them and, but understand that like everybody's in sales, communication is really key to this whole thing, right? In field to the office. Everybody up and down, you know, no matter what your role is with on a, on a job site, within a construction firm than a design firm, it's, you're still in sales, right?

 

It's if the client doesn't like working with you, your company goes away. And like for most of us, our companies are one, not big enough to where you have a lot of people to work on different projects or with specific clients. And for the most part, most clients aren't doing work all the time. To, you know, warrant a particular team for particular client.

 

So it's, it's, he's like that you know, keep on in mind and, you know, a good recommendation goes a long way in the construction industry.

 

I love that reputation is everything. I literally just had a meeting this morning with a, a prospective business development guy that we may, we may bring into the organization and.

 

And I had just that conversation with them that, listen, we're a small shop, small organization. We are a sales based organization, which means that everyone from the top to the bottom and side to side is a salesman salesperson. We we can't feed the beast unless we can and find new leads and convert them into projects.

 

So yeah, you nailed it. Everybody's gotta be a salesman. Everybody's gotta be always of that mindset, that the conversation you're having today with whomever, it could lead to the project we're building tomorrow. You never know, especially in Southeast Michigan, but I assume it's, it's like this, you know, nationwide, the construction industry is it's, it's almost incestuous.

 

It's so small, you know, there may be hundreds of companies. But everybody knows everybody, everybody hears everything and it goes outside of construction. It starts spinning off into the owners and the, you know, the different shops and, and, and everything. So to keep that sales focus and to keep your reputation is, is absolute key.

 

We actually started a program at Schafer where we. And won't get into all the boring details, but we pay guys for lead for qualified leads. And if that eventually turns into a project that we were building, we basically offer a commission, not on the gross profit. So it incentivizes our guys to always kind of have that in the back of their head.

 

You know, I could sell the next project and it could be pretty lucrative. You know, if you sell, if you bring in the right type of lead, it could be very lucrative.

 

So I have a, a really interesting story on that. So from a, and this is all communication guys, this is straight up all communication. It's who, you know, in construction, you know, as a, I don't care who you are design GC, like anybody within the construction field probably have 10 clients, right?

 

You're not, we're not selling books and widgets on the internet. You know, we're doing things in real life. And, you know, as a design firm, as a whatever, like one I'm just in one office, right? Like, so as a, you know, some of these larger firms that got a hundred offices, you know, and then each of those offices have probably 10 clients, but by and large, you've got, let's just call it 10.

 

Oh for easy numbers, but it's like 10 clients is what you have, right. That are millions of dollars into your organization. So it's all in network, you know, and out of those 10 peop organizations, you probably have four GA contact people. So you're talking, let's just say 50 people. Right? So again, your list does not mean to be a mile long, 50 people, maybe double it to a hundred, right?

 

It's not a huge list of people that you have You know, to make a very successful construction company design or engineering or anything, it's truly not that big. So the power of network is I posted about on LinkedIn the round table that we're having this Tuesday. So it'll be today on LinkedIn and.

 

Friend shared it. And somebody contacted him. He and this guy in particular is not in the construction industry. He's just adjacent through it. He's part of the entrepreneur network and RJ that I'm a part of shared it. He called him and was like, Hey, tell me about this construction thing. It turns out he works for one of the five biggest contractors in the world.

 

And his like uncle owns it. So. You never know where this stuff is going to come from. And okay. Like doing the right thing, putting your best foot forward. And especially when you're talking sales in particular and this again, it's all communication guys. I don't care if it's through the field, through somebody else to, you know, buddy in the barbecue, you know, drinking beers.

 

Like it doesn't, it's, it's the same. Right. Be who you are. Show up the same show up. You know, nice, good attitude, you know, goes a long way and all this stuff, but you just, you never know where it's gonna come from doing the right thing for somebody who knows who they're connected to and you can, it comes back, you know, and don't worry about the time or when it's going to come back.

 

Because again, in construction, we all know that the long game, right. We're talking about five years from now, when they're ready, they remember that conversation they had with, you know, somebody somewhere. So just remember it's a very long game and show up, you know, with who you are in everything that you do.

 

And it's going to it'll pay off in the long run again, it might be hell going through a project sometimes, but just know at the end of the day, like doing the right thing is always gonna pay off for you

 

at some point. Yes. And stick to your core values. You know, we're, we'll probably do an episode someday here on core values alone, but it's.

 

So powerful and your reputation is everything. It can take you years and years and years to build your reputation and it can take seconds to destroy it. And you know, there's another saying that I try and teach my guys and I teach my kids too. And then if you do really, really good for one client and really impress them, they might tell five of their closest friends, their closest context about how great you are, and there'll be a champion for you for sure.

 

That same client, if you piss them off or you do something really bad or, or you've really performed poorly, they'll tell a hundred people and that's, that's just life. So just stick to your values. You got to communicate effectively, you got to be open and honest and ahead of things. And it's all about preserving reputation in this industry.

 

Yeah, it guys, you can go back to didn't have a set on core values with Kevin tomorrow of Roseville, Rocklin electric. And in the last year he Forex his company, you know, and that was with moderate growth by sticking to core values and keeping the right people on he could've grown mower. But his top line revenue was four X.

 

And they'll probably do 10 X this year. And 21. So again, all by sticking to core values, having good clients, good reputation, taking the right projects, saying no to the wrong projects. So it, it matters not just to bottom line, but you'll probably feel better at the end of the day, too.

 

Definitely.

 

Hey guys, I think we have probably beat communication to death in this episode. There's a ton of tools out there for you to use. You know, Matt mentioned field wire, blue beam playing grid. Pro-core tons of great solutions out there for communication from office to field, doing daily reports close outs, punch lists, everything and anything in between.

 

So again, you don't have to be the sharpest techno technologically to understand these tools. Not, you know, hire somebody in their twenties to figure it out for you and get your own. That's really what it amounts to. Right? It's like training your grandma to use an iPhone and now they can't put it down.

 

You know, figure it out, like go and get some training. All these companies are more than happy to do training or, you know, there's qualified vendors to help you through all that. So find the tools, use the tools. It'll help you to communicate effectively and understand that there's some nuance through everything that you do, right?

 

Construction is just as much art as it is science and increasing your communication abilities, your ability to talk and email effectively goes a long way. Matt. Is there anything else that you want to add to close us out here? I,

 

I think you nailed it, Dylan. Only thing I would add is that if, if anyone still has one of those Nextel walkie-talkie phones, I would be all about resurrecting it.

 

Cause I still think they're cool.

 

Yeah, between that and Nokia block phone, I don't think you can destroy them.

 

Yeah,

 

guys, that's going to be this episode of the construction corner podcast. Again, remember to tune in today. So the 26th of January, 2021, we're doing our round table. It's going to be live on LinkedIn.

 

So mine (Dylan's) LinkedIn page or on my, Kowabunga Studios, Facebook page or Kowabunga Studios, YouTube you can go into and live, make sure to submit your questions and we'll have a good episode talking tech from everybody within the industry. So guys, that's this episode of construction corner podcast, and we'll talk to you next time.

Dealing With Stress on The Jobsite

Episode #110: Dealing with Stress on the Jobsite

 

Hello, and welcome to a, another episode of the construction corner podcast. I'm Dylan, I'm your host and guys. So moving forward, we're going to have a brand new show for you. Basically, it's going to be brand new show and still The Construction Corner podcast. But the change in format is going to be one that I hope all of you are going to thoroughly enjoy.

 

So we're going to have a cohost Matt Vetter, who was previously on the show. So you want to go back and listen to the episode I did with Matt, learn all about his story, what he's doing at Shaffer construction. You can go and check all of his stuff out, but moving forward, Matt, you're going to be our new co-hosts.

 

So welcome to The Construction Corner Podcast.

 

Dylan. Thank you. I'm super excited, man. This is going to be fun. And I'm excited to see where this takes us. It's going to be kind of a neat ying and yang with you being on the design engineering side and me being on the construction side.

 

So here we go, which is why I think it would work out really well.

 

Absolutely

 

cool. So, all right guys today, Matt and I, we've been. You know, we hear things that are going on in the world. You've probably got some crazy stuff that's going on your job sites, let alone the rest of the world, but we wanted to kind of open up it's going to be a little bit of a can of worms, but we think it's important.

 

And the thing that we want to talk about today is stress, stress management and coping with stress. As the construction industry, one of the biggest. Four suicides, which we'll do another like mental health show at some point in specifics for construction. But in coping with stress is kind of the big topic that we wanted to talk about today.

 

And how it applies to you in your life and how we can I'll let you kinda start it here on. Maybe ways that you've been dealing with stress here lately. Like what's, what's some of the tactics that you've dealt with just in your, let's just say personal life first, and then we can dive into you know, the job site side of it.

 

Yeah. So, you know, personally there there's all kinds of stuff to be stressed out about these days, you know, coming off of the last, almost 11 months of the year, the strangest new world that I could ever imagine with COVID to everything going on in politics and, you know, potentials with the economy. I think it's, it's really easy to get overwhelmed and to let some of this stuff build up and, you know, it can, it can build up to an unhealthy point real quickly, you know?

 

And it's, it's relevant today. It's relevant tomorrow. I think it'll, you know, there's always going to be something, but I think we need to kind of pick apart. How to, how to break it down and at least limit the effects personally first. And then, then outside in our, in our peer groups, in our, our, you know, business groups, employee groups, or whatever it may be.

 

I think it's, it's incredibly important to get it to the surface.

 

Yeah. And that's, it's a super good point. Right? You gotta be able to control yourself first, write your own internal dialogue. What you're consuming, what you're. Kind of reading if you're within you. And because a lot of that, you know, let's just say that things aren't good at home, right? Like you're having in this.

 

I mean, again, these are tips, like we're talking about like a COVID world, virtual, whatever. But this is applies really in any, any time, any decade thinking at all that, if you're having, let's say problems at home, like your, maybe your kids are acting out or. You're just having marital problems or whatever it might be that tends to bleed over into the rest of your life.

 

Right? So if you have problems at home and then you go to a job site and somebody says something to you, and it didn't come off super good. You're probably going to react poorly to that thing. So first and foremost, get your own house in order. Right. Figure out your own personal stuff. You know, why are you reacting to things poorly?

 

What's wrong in your life? Are you going down too many rabbit hole, correct? The lack of internet, black bowls, Wikipedia loops, you know, whatever that might be for you. Are you going down too many of those and that just, you know, put you in a bad head space and it takes some awareness to go through that.

 

But I think that that's the first and most important thing. Before we get to like the job site and how you're act to other people.

 

Yeah, for sure. I think, I think at the end of the day, those personal sides of it are probably the easier ones to fix in most cases. You know, if, if you're, if you're having a problem with your spouse, we'll work it out, you know, communicate more.

 

If you're having problems with your kids, figure out what's going on. The, the Wikipedia and the internet. Rabbit holes that stuff's just not healthy. You know, you I'm guilty of it just as much as anybody else from time to time, but I've really tried to, to segregate myself away from some of the chaos out there for the last couple of months, at least because it'll eat you alive if you spend too much time on it.

 

So I guess I think that, you know, those sort of things are pretty easy or easier at least to control in a way. And, and to at least to start, start making it better for yourself.

 

Which then leads to the job site. And one of the things that I always came across is in, I mean, and this goes to both sides of the fence that you feel you got to respond immediately, right?

 

You feel that you have to respond quickly, you know, everything's in a rush, in a hurry and you might send something off without thinking through it. And that one that causes undue stress. And you're like, I got to respond and you're, you know, like. Junkie, right. Trying to send that, send that email, right.

 

Respond to that thing have inbox zero. And that just causes a lot of anxiety when, you know, it's more than likely like an hour is going to be okay. Right. Like you were in a meeting and probably didn't even see most of those emails. Nobody like, you know, you weren't worrying if they really needed you to call you.

 

Even then it can take some time. So I guess Matt, for. How you deal with this on the, you know, since you're on job sites more often than I am these days you know, what are some of those maybe job site approaches through like one email? I think that's probably the biggest one.

 

Email's huge. And that's a really hard one for me personally, because, you know, as an owner, I, I spend a lot of my time in, in my office.

 

And so I'm always in front of the email. It's really easy to get wrapped up in as soon as your, you know, your computer dings to go and quit, whatever you're working on immediately go find the email and but you kind of nailed it. If, if it's really that important that it can't wait an hour or, or even half a day, someone's going to call me.

 

And if it's, if it's critically important and I don't answer my phone, they're going to call me again and they're going to call me again. And, you know, frankly, that that's one of the, one of the rules I have with my kids and my wife is that. You know, I don't answer my phone all the time when they call me during the day, but if anything's ever wrong, call me again and keep calling.

 

And if I see my phone going, you know, going nuts, I'm going to pick it up pretty soon. So. But I guess back to my point of email, getting on the job sites for me is difficult because I'm there. I want to be engaged with my superintendent and ends with the subs with, with everybody there and checking out progress and whatnot.

 

But I find myself all the time doing the, you know, the one hand, a dance with my phone, trying to type and answer emails as I'm, as I'm walking around a job site, which. Isn't the best example to set from a safety perspective, but it also just isn't necessary, but it's so easy to fall trap to that. You know, there's nothing, I I've never received an email that was of such grave importance that it couldn't have waited, but to try and teach yourself that and, and, and discipline yourself to do that is, is pretty difficult.

 

I think, especially this day and age, you know, I'm, I'm a little older than you, but. You know, I'm still of the mindset where when I came up through school originally in high school, we didn't have all of this. And, you know, as I've grown professionally, we've had email, we've had smartphones, all this neat stuff in our day, but I've seen kind of both sides of it.

 

And sometimes you it makes me wonder, you know, maybe we, maybe we have a little too much.

 

And I think that comes to, so there's a few things that were really good in there. One was safety, right? And paying attention to the thing in front of you, which also leads into productivity, right? Like if you're focused on the thing in front of you, you're going to do great job on that and you're not going to have to come back to it.

 

And that also means that you're, you know, the jobs that you're going to be safe. So you're going to work in a safe, aware manner of the thing that you're doing. Which again allows you to do it right the first time and not have to come back to it. So I think, again, it's focus, it's clarity of thought it's being present, where you are and aware, especially on a job site of everything that's going on around you.

 

If you're looking at your phone or lost and where else, right. Focused on what you're doing, you know, there's a lot of things that can happen, you know, in an instant especially on the job site.

 

Yeah, and I will go ahead and I'm personally guilty of if I see guys doing what I just said, I do all the time. I'll call them out for it. You know, this last summer we had an instance where one of our iron workers was walking around on a roof. He wasn't clipped in and he was on his cell phone and. I kind of poked my superintendent and said, somebody needs to handle this now because otherwise I'm going to handle it.

 

And it doesn't usually end well that way, but you know, stuff like that, we, we can't have it to think of the, the disaster that could happen in a blink of an eye by being so foolish as to be, you know, texting or checking an email on a rooftop. You know, it's just, it's crazy to me.

 

Yeah. And I mean yeah, recently in the news, I don't know if you saw this.

 

It was on construction. Dive that a, I think he was a steelworker at sofa, the new stay in there in LA. Yeah, they have a super cool new like jumbo card. Have you seen them?

 

Yes, it's, it's pretty wild.

 

Huge. It's like a Volvo that's. I think it's 10 yards wider on each side of the field 4k, each side, you know, big Oculus.

 

But they had a guy that was working at sofa. I don't know if he, well, he obviously wasn't clipped in, but fell off the roof and died at sofa. So it's stuff like that where you know, luckily those are getting fewer and fewer these days than some of the construction projects. Yes. Years past. But I mean, they, they still can happen.

 

Yeah. And you know, it always makes me kind of smile and wonder at the same time when you see those, those old pictures of the guys, you know, building New York city, the black and whites, and there's, you know, 15 guys sitting up on an IB. 300, some feet in the air eating lunch with no, no ropes, no harnesses, no nothing to see where we've come to today.

 

And, and you know what, while when injuries and incidents happen, they're terrible. But like you mentioned, luckily, they seem to be fewer and farther between.

 

Yeah, I mean, so I think a lot of this in. You know, dealing with stress is the topic of the day, right. And comfortable with stress, but it's also a lot of stress and self-produce, you know, by trying to respond to email by trying to do too much at once.

 

And you know, I get it right. There's a lot of projects, a lot of people that want stuff, they want it now. But more than likely they don't need it now. And a lot of that, they, they say ASAP, but you know, deep. And this might be the question ask, when do you really need it? You know, when are you going to use this information?

 

Is it in two days? Okay, can I get it to you tomorrow or in two days? And I think that it's not necessarily pushback, but those pointed questions aren't always asked to see when people actually need information.

 

Definitely. And again, I keep throwing myself under the bus, but I see myself doing this with my, with my guys, with my employees a lot, you know, I'll especially come end of the month when I'm working on invoicing and monthly reporting and I'll fire off an email and I'll sit here counting the second. It's like, well, when am I going to get my answer?

 

I need this now. Realistically, I'd probably have a few days before I actually need it. But I've kind of. And a train myself in my head. Well, this is important to me, so it's gotta be important to everybody else, even though it, it really isn't, you know, I need my guys realistically to be focusing on what they're doing and producing and building buildings.

 

So there there's definitely a there's some give and take to it.

 

Yeah. And I think that it's important to remember in like receivers emails, especially like three hours. There was one, one guy, one owner that we work for a hospital system that he, he had very odd, like hours that he worked. So he managed all the construction for this hospital system and, you know, hundreds, millions of dollar’s worth of stuff, but he would work.

 

Kind of in the mornings and then like the afternoons you'd spend it with his kids. Right. He'd go to all their stuff. So for about like two, three o'clock till probably six was like a dead zone for him. Cause he was with family, but then you would get emails from like nine and 10 o'clock or two in the morning.

 

Right. That's just when he was working and going through stuff, but it was convenient for him, but he didn't expect the response to am. It was just when he was working through stuff. So it's to remember that a lot of people are different work hours. They have different times. They have different things that they work through stuff, and they're sending it.

 

They're sending that email out because that's, it's on their mind. It needs to get done. And it's just a checklist for them. But for you again, like when did they need that information you can respond? You know, probably within a day works for most people. You know, and it's a timely response to everybody.

 

So that you can move on with, with everything else, but just kind of understood, especially like off-hours emails, you know, it's somebody that's thinking about it. Right. They finally got to it. They've been in meetings all day and they just needed to send it so that it didn't get forgotten about. But it isn't for you to respond to immediately they're by and large, not looking for a response, you know, can

 

I that's exactly right.

 

And it's hilarious because I do that, you know, my days get, get swallowed up with meetings and, you know, I get scatterbrained my, my best ideas come when I'm in the shower. So if I don't remember it again, you know, it'll never happen. And I can always tell who our newest employees are because you know, I'll start rattling off emails at 10 o'clock at night, sometimes.  And by no means, do I want them looked at or thought about until the next morning, but all of a sudden I start getting responses from somebody and like, Oh boy, now I feel bad. Cause I'm taken away from their, their family time. But you know, sometimes it's just a, it's just a brain dump for me. I get it out of my head now.

 

Cause if I don't, by the time I wake up in the morning, there's a whole new list of stuff going on and I'll never remember, but it, it, it, it certainly it's amusing to see when you start getting the responses.

 

Yeah. And I think that's, you know, for everybody out there it's so remember like in corresponding with your teams to like let them know, right.

 

Like even putting a PS in there, like, Hey PS you don't need to respond to this right now. Right? Like it's okay. Or just getting this out of my head, that type of stuff to just let everybody know, like, Hey. You know, answer this eventually, if it needs an answer. But it couldn't be just like, I need to get this out.

 

We'll talk about this, like on Monday or whatever.

 

Yeah. And I've told my guys, you know, all of our employees that after five o'clock, six o'clock don't respond to anything from me. Don't even look at your phone. If I need you, I know how to get ahold of you. And if there's a building on fire, I'll get ahold of you and it won't be through email that's for sure.

 

So just put it down and unplug and you know, that's kind of one of the best coping methods I've found. I think when dealing with job related stress, especially is just, you got to force that unplug and I force it on, on. You know, our, our employees at Schaefer construction I don't force it on myself as much as I should, but it makes a huge difference when you can, you know, pick a time, whatever time that may be.

 

Just turn the phone up, shut the laptop, engage with your family or a book or whatever it is you need to do, but put the work out of your head. Cause it's, it'll still be there regardless in the morning.

 

Yeah. And for. Most of us, you know, listening, right. Leadership roles and management roles. We're, we're paying more to think we are to do.

 

Right. And if you're your stress is, or if you're stressed, you're anxious or not thinking clearly, right. You're going a million different directions than your thinking mechanism. The thing that you're ultimately really paid for, right. And thinking of new ideas, ways to execute. What the team meets, do strategy plan, all that stuff, moving forward.

 

You're not going to be as effective at what you do, not going to be as great at it, which means you're going to be less likely for promotion or the next thing that you're looking for. But ultimately like people in management positions you're paid to think, right. You're not paid to necessarily swing a hammer or bend pipe or dig a ditch.

 

Right. Not to say that you can't, but you're paid to think so. All that being said, like reducing the stress, increases your creativity muscle. Right. It allows you to just daydream about stuff. So like for you, Matt, as an owner, right. I am too, like, we think about our business all the time, but it's in, what's next in a creative space.

 

Not necessarily in like, what emails do we need to send, even though I'm sure that, you know, that comes up too, but it's always in a more creative function. And I think we, in the more that we're in that, right. Is that, I mean, has there ever been a time that you've been creative and just pissed off?

 

Like it doesn't happen? Probably not, not, not creative in the right way anyways, you don't come up with the best outcomes when you start thinking and you're, and you're angry to begin with.

 

I think in business too, especially from the ownership side, you know, some stress is good. I want to make that really clear too. I think that if I lived a completely. Quote, unquote stress-free existence. I'd be bored to tears. You know, I like the chaos of, of construction. I've been doing it for a long time now, and I kind of thrive off of that, that lack of monotony, I guess.

 

So I, I think, you know, stress is not always a bad thing. You just have to be able to control it and. And you don't want to get to the point where you're so stressed out that you can't really think clearly anymore. You just want enough stress just to keep you kind of in the game and engaged. So you're not just, you know, walking around in the clouds.

 

Yeah. And with experience comes a lot of like knowing in a workout, right? Like, you know, you have the solutions, you know, to work out. And a lot of the, you know, especially when I was younger in the field, like. You know, the world was ending, right. If we can solve this thing and do it now, when in reality, somebody who's got a lot of work to do to fix whatever probably wrong.

 

So you can take a day, right. And think of a solution,

 

especially that's your dog. Yeah. And you just nailed it. 90% of what I do is solve problems and. I've come to learn and to truly believe in that, like you just said, there is always an option. There's always an answer. There's always a solution. You may not like it, it may sting, you know, in, in construction, you, you know, there's, there's problems that come up and mistakes made that they sting really bad to the bottom line, but there's always a solution, you know, there's a way to fix it.

 

The world's not gonna end. But yeah, as a, as a young guy out in the field, swinging a hammer and you know, if I framed a whole wall in correctly or, or use the wrong size nails, which I have done a time or two in my early days, it seems like that's it. I'm gonna lose my job. I'm going to be, you know, homeless and poor and hat and have any friends for the rest of my life.

 

But you know, you get your bumps in your bruises, through experience and. You know, I'm at a place now in my career where you just got to kind of shake it off. There's nothing worth getting real excited about any more excited in a bad way. There's nothing worth getting pissed off about,

 

yeah, this not just sprays maybe a few months ago now, but so app to construction, you got to care.

 

But not that much, right? Like you gotta, you gotta care, but not that much, right? Like you got to care about, you know, doing the right thing and putting your best foot forward. But in, for a lot of us, you know, the ultimate decision is up to the building owner, right? It's out of our hands, you know, all you can do is present the best options you can.

 

And then let it go. Right? Relinquish the quote-unquote outcome. It's okay. Here's the choice. Now we move forward, right? So you care cherry to present options that are good options either way or just, you know, pros and cons of whatever we're presenting. Like, Hey, this, this is going to cost you a lot more.

 

This one's quicker and cheaper, dirtier, right? Whatever. And then you put them on the table. And it's, it's ultimately not your choice for the most part. Right. All you can do is present the options. So you've got to care, but not that much for sure. And that's actually a strategy that I started using. Cause like we've talked about before, I'm really heavily rooted in the, in the pre-construction side and estimating and sales and you know, at some point you got to realize that I'm not the one making up prices for a job. I'm not the one who is making a, a project cost. What it costs, all I'm doing is compiling information, putting the appropriate data to it, and then showing you here's, here's what it is. Here's option a, or option B. I'm just a delivery agent at that point in time. And if you can actually convince yourself that it makes the selling side a lot easier.

 

I think it's to remove your own on financial bias, right? So we all have a innate financial bias, right. But this is the whole thing, like making sure your own house and stable. So if, if you know, $5,000 is a lot to you personally, and you're building a $20 million building and you get a $5,000 change order, it's not that big a deal, right?

 

That's a rounding error. On that project, you know, now obviously they add up over time. So again, you've got to care, but like, not that much, you know, it's, it's not where it's, you know, digging tooth and nail on. And I've seen it. I've been there, you know, fighting over a thousand dollar change order. It's like we wasted more time dealing with this change order then it's worth

 

definitely. We, we see that all the time. And it doesn't matter if it's a $20 million project or a $200,000 project. And, you know, you just got to weigh your options and weigh the way the intrinsic costs of what you're actually looking at, because those are usually worth a lot more than the change order itself.

 

You know, if it's if it's somebody screw up, you know, if a, if a subcontractor screwed up and miss something, Our goal is we're going to try and help them. You know, we don't want those guys to eat it usually. I mean, there's certain circumstances that come up and you gotta do what you gotta do, but you know, in the subcontractor world, especially w where GCs.

 

So we have a lot of stress. We have a lot of, a lot under our plate or on our plates to manage, but we're not putting out that giant capital stack that our subcontractors are. You know, those guys are the ones that. They buy out a project in the very beginning and their front end for all the material, all the metal studs, all the dry wall, all the screws and everything.

 

So in a weird way, I mean, believe me, I don't like losing money. I like making money as much as the next guy, but it almost hurts them worse. You know, the subcontractors cause, cause they're already so extended. So we have a little bit of leeway to. To help with that. Usually as long as, you know, the, the pre-con guy's done his job right.

 

And things are set up appropriately. So, you know, we, we ride our fair share of change orders and we back charged when, when it's appropriate. But at the same time, we always try and, you know, use that team mentality and help them out if we can.

 

And this is this is a very, very variable point point for everybody.

 

So on the engineering side, especially architects there that you're dealing with subs primarily, right. That's who you're burying. Everything goes to the GC, but you're dealing with like your, you know, I deal with the electrical contractor. Right. When I'm on projects, the architects probably dealing with the, you know, wall and ceiling and door contractors to there or masonry or whatever.

 

And so knowing that like, okay, this change where, you know, that comes through and reviewing it, and this all goes to stress and how you manage this. I know we're getting into some weeds here, but it, if you're going to worry about that thing or tie this guy up, You know, now this sub is going to be super stressed out because now they're, you know, they probably already did a bunch of work.

 

So they put out a bunch more labor there. They had to pay their people. They're out, you know, Probably at least 60, if not 90 or 120 days on, you know, their stuff, right. Just in billing cycle, they bought the material, they did the work, you know, now they're getting paid on a 90 day cycle from the time they purchased material from the time they're getting paid.

 

I mean, that's just how it works. So they're, they're already, you know, at a a hundred days, like think of you didn't get a paycheck for a hundred days and now you're holding it up more because you don't want to re you know, review this or you want additional. Whatever and not to say that, like they need to have their paperwork in order, they for sure do.

 

And, you know, ask justification or whatever, but understanding like especially smaller dollar amounts like that can mean a lot to that contractor. You know, are they're getting held up on pay for, you know, another 30 days. Cause that's a pay cycle. Not, it's not, they're going to get paid in 10 days.

 

That's not how it works. They're gonna get paid on another 30. And this is the thing I, you know, primarily on design side, nobody understands these pay contracts. And for sure, I didn't, you know, working in a firm cause it's not something we ever dealt with. And I think there's just a big disconnect on the dollars and how these approvals need to happen.

 

Because again, you're not getting paid like on the 15th, right? Another 30 day. A cycle to, to make that happen. So you go past like the end of pay apps, right. It rolls. So the next one, it doesn't just get like amended and the last one. So it's always some of the things about it. Yeah.

 

Go ahead. It's it's way different than, than residential in that sense. Right. Residential, you know, you could always go to a homeowner and say, Hey man, look. I missed the boat on my invoice. I know it's only the 10th, but can you cut me a check? And as long as you've got a good relationship, you'll probably be okay.

 

You know, we're dealing with corporate entities or municipalities who have, you know, bylaws and ordinances and how these things work. They literally can't just cut a check whenever they feel like it. So, you know, we're, we're sticklers for that for paperwork and, and it's gotta be it to us by. This date and we send our invoices by this date.

 

And if you miss that boat, I don't feel bad for you then I can't help you. But as long as we all work together and you get your stuff in order, it usually works pretty smoothly.

 

Yeah. Again, it's just like one of those other, you know, stress points is finances and the money to make sure that, you know, everybody like for.

 

Most everybody, right? Like Matt and I aren't on this train anymore, but you're going to paycheck. Right. You're getting a consistent, steady paycheck. And you don't have to worry about like any of that stuff. But as owners, you know, it's a ball game, right? You worry about cashflow. You worry about, you know, did we invoice correctly?

 

Or, you know, we get receivables in on time. All this stuff. So it, it very much matters. And again, like, I know most of you are, are disconnected from this, but it'd be like, thinking about not getting a paycheck for three months, but still working. Right. You still gotta go to work. You still gotta pay your bills.

 

You still gotta put gas in your car, but you don't have a paycheck for three months

 

and you still got to be efficient and you still got to like what you're doing and you still got to keep producing and it's a tough road to host sometimes. You know, and you kind kinda hit it. The, the stress that, that we deal with on the owner side is a whole different type of stress than the stress on the field side.

 

You know, it all can add up to unhealthy levels in the same kind of mechanism, but there's just, there's very, very different stressors that we face or that I face certainly in the office versus what the guys out in the field are seeing. So it. You gotta be able to have that healthy balance between all of them.

 

Yeah. And it's not to say that one is better or worse than the other, right. Stress and stress in the body manifest pretty much all the same. So with this guys, like understand, like you can feel it right. You can feel it in your body, on what's causing stress, you know, you can see, or maybe you can't see, but people around, you can see, like, if you're.

 

You're drinking more than you should. Right. You're take more painkillers and you probably shouldn't be right. Or whatever that might be for you. You know, your, your coping and other ways that isn't healthy or is outside of your, let's say just norm. So trying to check that right. He see how you feel.

 

Are you just like anxious and you know, like angry too much? Like where you're just like thinking. You're like coming through withdrawals because you don't have your phone or something on you. Right. Like we all know those feelings and not to get too touchy feely in that. But like you just, you know, within yourself when, when those things occur, right?

 

No, when you're not focused, you know, when your mind is somewhere else. Right. And just to give yourself a gut check. But yeah. Going for a walk, getting outside, doing things that you enjoy, right. Watch a good movie. You watching comedy. Those are all things so like help deal with stress in whatever form you might be dealing with it in.

 

And you also got to remember that it's not taboo to talk about it. You know, I, I, I try and chat with my, my guys frequently and make sure, you know, I, I, I do those personal gut checks on them, you know? Cause you can learn a lot. About how somebody is doing internally in a quick conversation, especially once you know, somebody pretty well.

 

So, you know, we, we talk frequently and that's a lot of times what my goal is, you know, Hey, are you okay? Are you, is this working out for you? Are you pulling your hair out? You know, we I I've got a superintendent right now, who's in the home stretch of a project and we always kind of laugh because on the, the front end of the project is where the project manager in this case me is going crazy.

 

You know? And now you've got 60 days to buy a project out and see how bad things really got screwed up in the estimate. Well, on the flip side, now, my guys in that home stretch, he's got 60 days to get this thing done, done, handing the keys over to the owner and right. In this case, you know, it's not a, a horrible contract that we're up against, but, but mentally in his case, it's a horrible contract we're up against.

 

So he's, you know, he's killing himself, you know, figuratively out there every day. And I know he is, but we've got to have those talks and chats and you know, sometimes I'll force him off the job. I'll just say, that's it. You're, you're doing a great job, but go home, get out of here, go, you know, take a half a day or whatever it needs to be and go get your head straight.

 

You still got to have fun.

 

Yeah. And you'll, you'll find, you know, if you've ever gone on vacation, right. The days leading up to it are probably some of the most productive you've ever had. And then like, you know, the office didn't burn down when you were on vacation for a week. Right. It's still there when you came back.

 

Yes. It's still there in a pile of emails too.

 

And again, but like nobody, right? Like they knew you were on vacation. They either dealt with it or didn't, you know it, and then you can answer them. Right. And then both emailing. It probably takes you an hour to go through all that stuff and find everything versus, you know, taking you four hours.

 

Cause you would have been checking email. Then distracted then pack, email and distracted on the next thing. So it's probably more efficient to just bulk go through emails, right? Sit down at one point and blow through them all than it is to, you know, check it every 10 minutes and you'll feel better about it.

 

Definitely. You will and vacation and time away from the job time, you know, just relaxing with your family or friends or whomever is it's so important. Personally, I just got to a point where I was even able both financially and mentally to unplug for even a couple of days. You know, it, it's been really difficult to, to walk away from a project in, in years past, and finally kind of.

 

Over that hump. I think at least to Lee where, you know, I can take a week a year or whatever it needs to be and, and leave. And I have enough confidence in my team that stuff is still going to be moving forward and, you know, nothing is burnt to the ground too bad. And, you know, we, we built a team. We hired competent people and we all have skills and confidence in each other.

 

And you know, once you, once you get there, then yeah, you can walk away and. Just getting away from the day-to-day it erases stress. I mean, I don't know how it can't, you know, get to a beach or go for a skiing vacation or whatever you're into and, you know, give yourself some time to unwind and then, you know, you come back better for it.

 

Yeah. I mean, there's all kinds of things to do. Right. And it's whatever you love, you know, whether that's fishing, hiking. Skiing mountain biking. I mean, there's a ton of things to do. And just as simple as getting outside, right? Leave your phone in the house and take a walk for half an hour. An hour does wonders.

 

Yeah, definitely exercise too, that I found it really helps me personally anyways. And you know, I. I think we both done 75 hard. I think you might be doing it again, but 7,500 is a program for those who don't know that Andy Frisella kind of spearheaded came up with, but I won't go through all of it, but it involves a lot of exercise, a lot of self-induced exercise.

 

But going through that and forcing myself this summer to get in that routine it has been tremendously helpful for me and, you know, yeah. Do I like waking up at four 30 in the morning and going down to my home gym. Absolutely not. I hate it, but I feel fantastic when I'm done. And I know, you know, it's just such a stress killer and confidence booster that I think everybody should do that.

 

And it's hard, especially, especially for the guys that go and work manual labor all day, you know, to, to explain that to them like, well, I know you're out. Beating yourself up all day long, but you should really hit the gym afterwards or before you'll feel a lot better. And I, I do think it's the truth though.

 

I remember years ago it was one of my, it was my first job out of college. I, this was probably a year into the job and I had my first like solo right. Basically. So I was. I'd been kind of sorta lead, but this was my first time, like going alone, doing all the data collection. So we did art flash studies.

 

So we were going into industrial plants and this happened to be in Columbia, Missouri, and it was an automotive plant. So they made parts for different cars. So they were you know, supply chain for car parts in different ways and sorts. And the electric that I was working for or working with he was just jacked.

 

He was huge. And part of that, like, you know, so as an electrician, right? Depending on the day on a lot of stuff or like you fixed everything and you're, you're good sit around drinking coffee, but which is in a plant situation was what you want. Right? You don't, your guys are sending coffee. That means you're making money and nothing's broken.

 

Yeah. A little different than in construction, but With that, like, I mean, do is just huge. But what he was saying is like, I just, I feel so much better. And this was before like, I mean, years, years before, so it's like 10 years ago. So this was before like 75 heart came out or any of these programs, it was, you know, like going to the gym was kind of, sort of something people maybe did.

 

And I was just like, I feel so much better, like going and lifting and. You know, eating, right? Like it just feel better. I was like, Oh, that's cool, man. Like, awesome, good for you. Right. And this was like, when I didn't know any better. And now like, you know, I run stupid distances and all this other stuff that, you know, and again, it doesn't have to be like going and lifting like 400 pound, you know, deadlifts or bench presses or squats.

 

Like again, a simple 30 minute walk on flat ground does wonders.

 

Definitely. Absolutely. I grew up the same way. All the, the, you know, the meatheads, I, it never made me, like, why would you go and spend all this time in the gym? And, you know, I'm no big buff superstar by any means, but I get it now. And, and I, I make a point to take that time for myself.

 

And that that's really the key, I think, too, is, is taking the time for yourself. Yeah. Whether it's just walking, whether it's doing that crazy nonsense that you do and running for hundreds of miles or, or just going to the gym, you just take some time for yourself, you know, every day and every little bit you do helps.

 

Yeah. And I mean, again, like I know guys that go fishing, right? Like just sit there and cast for an hour. Right? Like it doesn't have to be. Like, we're not talking to anything crazy here, right? It's something that just take you away from everything that's going on.

 

Well, Matt, any, I guess any other points that you want to add here on some ways to cope with, with stress and then I'll give us a wrap up.

 

You know, I think it's just important to talk about. I think it's just something to keep on top of mind. You can't ignore it because it won't go away. It's not specific to our industry by any means, but, but we surely have a lot of it in construction and, and in all facets of construction from design to all the way through to building and, you know, just acknowledging it is a big step in the right direction.

 

And as long as we keep talking about it and you know, people keep. Taking care of themselves. I think we'll all be better for it.

 

Yeah. I mean, guys, this is a, it's a big topic. I mean, it's close to home for me. Like I got shingles projects which is completely stress-induced. So to me like this, this is home, I've known, I'm known of guys not.

 

So some of the guys that I've worked with had heart attacks So one of my bosses did one of the guys under me did one of the other guys on that team before I came to the department, like how to a stroke? Like I've seen it been around, it, experienced it, right? Like I didn't have a heart attack or stroke, but shingles is still pretty bad, pretty painful.

 

And it lasts for like 10 days. So it's. One of these things that it's super real people, you know, manifested in different ways, whether it's they're drinking too much, they're, you know, their body is fighting for attention and, you know, with heart attacks, which is, you know, an extreme example you know, strokes, not eating right, right.

 

Into much, take out whatever. So learning how to relinquish this and. You know, not worry about sending that next email, don't worry about like, you need to do it. I'm not saying don't, but I'm saying like, they can wait, you can put it to the side. Nothing's gonna, you know, catch on fire. Right. It's going to be okay.

 

And the more that you can, and I have that feeling and those, those are the people that lasts a long time in this industry. Even keeled, they don't, you know, like they'll get to it, get done. They don't worry about it. And those are the people that, that lasts a long time in this industry. So, you know, if you want to last, if you want to stay in construction, those are the types of things that you're going to have to do to survive and not only survive, but to thrive within the industry.

 

You know, you don't get phased by much. It's okay. You'll survive. You'll get through it when it happens. And, you know, it's all gonna work out in the end.

 

Absolutely. You still got to have fun in life.

 

Yeah. Yeah. All right, guys. So again, with stress, talk about it, you know, to Matt's point talk about it, understand that it exists.

 

It's a real thing, and you need to find ways to manage it the best you can, especially in construction. And don't be afraid to talk about it, you know, whether that's. People on your team, your spouse, friends out at the industry and maybe have a, you know, little more lax job, whatever it is, right. Find ways to deal with it.

 

Go fishing, take walk. It's all gonna be. Okay. The other thing that I wanted to bring up guys is so next week the 26th here, January, we're going to do a LinkedIn live. Construction tech round table. So we're going to have I'm hosting a, the round table. We're gonna have people from all different walks of instruction and talk construction tech.

 

So some of the industry leaders we're going to have somebody from Nika, somebody from the wall and ceiling association. We're going to have a couple of subcontractors architect another GC and. Talk, everything, construction tech. So you want to tune in, it's going to be noon Eastern 9:00 AM Pacific.

 

It'll be live on LinkedIn. Other platforms are TBD at this point, but we'll for sure be live on LinkedIn. And we'll get that out to you. So again, if you're not following me or Matt on LinkedIn are all of our links are in the bio here. So you can tune into that next week, noon Eastern nine Pacific on LinkedIn, Matt, anything else you want to add to close us out for your first?

 

Co-hosting second appearance on the podcast.

 

First show, man, this is, this was fun. And I, I want to promise everybody that not every episode is going to be this heavy. We're going to, we're going to have a lot of fun too, and getting to all things construction and I'm happy to be here. I'm glad you brought me on board.

 

And I mean, I appreciate the heck out of it.

 

Yeah, for sure, man. And then like moving forward guys too, we'll do some of our own round tables, the podcast it's going to be you know, a little more let's say talk, show type moving forward. You know, Matt and I might have some solo episodes move forward to some of the similar things that you've seen, but definitely going to be more of a round table conversations from tech to subs, to specific things on job sites to design.

 

I mean, we'll cover the gamut and you're going to get hopefully a fair and balanced overview here with with somebody on the design side, even on the, the GC side.

 

Awesome looking forward to it.

 

So guys, that's going to be this episode of the construction corner podcast. We got so many great things here ahead of us moving forward.

 

So we'll, we'll see you and talk to you guys next time.