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How to Lead When You’re Not There

TCBF

Working with contractors across four continents I recognize a scary reality for many construction leaders: “Virtual leadership” (VL) has established its presence.

Virtual Leadership, for the contractor or construction field leader, is the effort made by leaders to be connected to several people or multiple jobs or projects — even though they can only be at one physical location at any one moment. For example, a regional manager, in any industry, may have multiple location responsibilities even though she is not “omnipresent” — present at multiple places at the same time. She will need to execute several efforts so she is informed and up-to-date on the happenings at each of the locations for which she has responsibilities.

Operating in multiple places at the same time is not unusual for a contractor. However, the consequences for not being accurately informed about the activities and developments at each of the multiple locations have reached a higher level of importance than ever. Let’s consider that:

  • There are fewer technically capable crew leaders so more crew leaders need “hand holding”
  • Information is in greater demand than ever and can be hard to get
  • Having needed information in a shorter amount of time — just in time — is expected of everyone connected to a construction project
  • The cost of poor decision making, resulting from not seeing things personally, can be very high
  • Because we have fewer capable leaders we must engage the leaders we do have to covering a greater number of jobs and people

Recently, a contractor called me and after sharing his frustrations about trying to lead more than one project concurrently, convinced me to share some of the same helpful techniques with others that I had shared with him. He says that the techniques are working for him, that he is much more confident and that he doesn’t feel as beaten down — like he is losing the battle.

In the hopes that you, too, can benefit from the techniques he is using, here are the seven suggestions I gave him. Be sure to tailor each of these techniques to better fit you, your company’s needs, projects and people.

VL #1 – Create a detailed schedule

Many contractors continue to struggle with creating clear and accurate work schedules. I’ve written about the importance of using a “look ahead,” whether it’s one, two or three weeks so I will not elaborate on scheduling here.

However, for the project leader — or multiple location leader — maintaining an accurate, updated and thorough schedule is the first technique that must be executed. Such a schedule should identify critical path activates for the different projects and locations and the dates that the leader plans to contact or visit.

VL #2 – Institute a “Hi-Lo” weekly briefing

This is actually easy to implement and can be your number one tool to staying in touch with your different sites and workers. Here’s how it works in its most simple format.

Each Friday your leaders of the different jobs, projects or locations are to send to you a one-page “brief” that consists of three to five highlights and three to five lowlights.

The highlights are to be written in a short, bullet-point format, providing you with just enough info to keep you posted. Most contractors and field leaders are experienced people who can sniff out whether there is more info to request or if there is a need for a follow-up call. Encourage your leaders to be honest, to keep their comments brief and to not withhold any information — good or not so good — from you.

Your job will be to respond to each of the incoming “Hi-Lo’s” so that each sender understands that you are reading his or her input. If you do have questions about any of the bullet point items, call the leader. If your concern is about negative news be sure not to get angry and start yelling at your leaders or you will be sure to kill the Hi-Lo effort.

Remember, it is a communication tool to keep you informed because you can’t be at every site all the time.

VL #3 – Set out tailored expectations & objectives

Each new job or project brings with it a set of needs. Perhaps the site is close to a residential area so that signage and extra precautionary “look outs” need to be posted to prevent accidents. Maybe a customer will be making weekly visits so additional safety and cleaning needs to be performed throughout the week. There might even be a restriction on work hours that must be followed due to a sound ordinance.

No matter the need, it is very wise to over-communicate your expectations for the completion of the work by documenting the expectations and by developing goals for the workers to achieve. Tailoring expectations and objectives will require more time from the contractor or construction leader to develop. But doing so can “create” as much as possible the work environment — giving the senior leader important insights he otherwise wouldn’t have without being at the site throughout the project’s life.

VL #4 – Access visual-based tools

Skype and Facetime are two tools, visually based, that I am depending on with increasing demand. Because I do a lot of coaching with contractors and leaders in about 15 different countries these tools are now a bigger part of my consulting than ever.

Contractors — who spend four, five, even eight hours a day on the phone — can likewise make greater use of incorporating the same two tools. I would suggest that some of those phone calls become a visual experience.

Because many contractors know their workers well, seeing their faces while speaking empowers the contractor to have a better feel as to whether his leader is confused, lacking in confidence or perhaps just flat out “covering his tail” by lying. Having access to the other person’s facial expressions can add much to a conversation, especially one that will be five to 10 minutes (or longer) in duration.

Setting up conference calls using video-conferencing is being used by larger contractors with increasing regularity and is becoming more cost effective, enabling the smaller contractor to begin considering its use also.

VL #5 – Establish regularly scheduled communications

It’s important that you establish a regular schedule for communications with any leader operating at a location remote from wherever you are located. Whether you use cell phones, video-conferencing or Skype, it is important to establish some regularly scheduled times for a formal communication effort.

Just as you would hold regular meetings if you were on the site you should create accountability with your remote leaders. To further support this effort you should also create a meeting agenda. It’s critical that when leading others, virtually, that you create as much knowns as possible. This effort, if you execute it consistently, will begin to build greater accountability, encourage teamwork and grow the responsibility taken by those at other locations.

VL #6 – Conduct regular project, job and site reviews

Depending on the size of the project or job or, depending on the experience level of those at a remote location, it’s very important to conduct a regular review. The review should be conducted either monthly or quarterly. For many contractors even a weekly review of jobs or progress on jobs might be a norm to establish.

The review should cover all of the participating elements that you and your leadership team deems critical to the success of the project, job or location. Don’t limit your reviews only to the following areas, but certainly the items listed below should be part of your reviews:

  • Safety status and needs
  • Costs associated with effort (against the budget)
  • Team-building progress (conflicts? turnover?)
  • Schedule updates and progress reports
  • Relationship status with customer, suppliers/vendors, sub-trade contractors, others?

Depending on your project or location you may have additional areas that should be addressed and discussed. Make the needed adjustments and incorporate them into your regularly scheduled review. Oh yes, have someone (not you) take notes on the review meeting. Then distribute the notes to those who participated in the meeting.

VL #7 – Set a goal for personal visits

Ok, we’ve presented a lot of impersonal techniques intended to personalize the leadership effort, but there is admittedly nothing that is better than a personal visit by the contractor or construction leader to their remote sites of operation. As some high-growth contractors and leaders can attest, as business growth demands more attention it becomes increasingly difficult to spend time “in the field.”

For most leaders this is an uncomfortable reality that they hate but realize that working “on your business versus in your business” demands more attention to business development, special customer visits, building stronger financial relationships with bankers, participating in more community events, etc.

If the contractor or construction leader does not schedule their week to include in-person visits to their different sites, then the daily issues and urgent requests will win out and there will be no time for personal visits. A plus to having a formal schedule that is followed is that this tool can provide a contractor with a reason to say “no” once in a while.

The schedule then becomes a good leveraging tool to use when those less-than-important requests are made that threaten to pull a leader away from more important duties — such as visiting a jobsite.

Now, nothing is easy about Virtual Leadership. I can almost promise you that you will never feel comfortable and that you will always be fighting the schedule and the clock to visit your multiple locations as much as you would like. “Get over it” and accept this internal conflict as the new norm. It is the sign of a growing construction business for owners to have such stress — but it’s also a sign that your business is doing a lot of good things.

Before we leave this topic let me express a few more personal thoughts and observations. First of all, equip your vehicle to be as “office like” as possible. Drive safe but utilize any “wireless” technology as is legal in your area. As already noted, contractors are on their cell phones for most of their workday. If you are driving a big portion of the day then you might as well make the communication process work for you and your leaders the best way possible.

Second, work extra hard at preparing your project, job or location leaders to take the right approach to being successful. People who lead need the backing and support of you and others. Be sure to educate them on the best ways to access such support without limiting their own efforts. In other words, don’t tie the hands of your remote leaders on things that they need to be free to execute.

If you do find a remote leader drowning in his remoteness…revive or replace him ASAP! We certainly should have a very good picture of what each of our leaders represent before we send them out, but we need to be quick to address those leaders who are struggling.

In some cases all the leader might need is a gentle word of encouragement (or a swift and instructive kick to the seat of their pants). In other cases the leader may need to be replaced … and replaced quickly before the project is almost beyond salvaging.

Leading your people while you are not physically present to lead is still a growing requirement. Like most change that is thrust upon us, embrace it with your eyes wide open and consider making the virtual effort as personal and effective as possible. There are no easy solutions but there are many techniques that can greatly improve the results. Be patient as you adapt and as those leading in “far, far, far away” locations adapt. Allow your remote leaders to voice their frustration, realizing that some venting is Ok, almost medicinal, and can allow the leader to exhale the bad things while inhaling some positive support from you.

You want to lead and grow your business, right? Well, along with the growth will come changes that you may have never considered — yet that you must make. If you’re in this mode today…Congratulations!

Hang in there and put these seven techniques into action. If you’re not quite there with living your leadership virtually, get ready and begin to prepare yourself and your other leaders…it’s just around the bend.

Good luck…from one Virtual Leader to another!

 

This article originally appeared in ForConstructionPros.com

Get to the 2 Minute Drill!

2 minute drilToday’s construction leaders are consistently on the go. From time in the office, to meeting with clients, and time spent in the field, the demands of the industry limit the available time employees have to gain the insights and development tools needed to grow.

That’s why we’ve created a new tool: The 2 Minute Drill. The 2 Minute Drill is based off the premise that everyone has 2 minutes!

To see the different categories currently available with the 2 Minute Drill, click here. You can also purchase or rent 2 Minute Drill videos here.

Let us work with you and your company to create custom video series to benefit your employees. The Minute Drill provides a series of easy 2 minute training and development videos that your employees can watch at their leisure – either on the computer in the office or on their mobile devices on the road and in the field.

We want to empower you to provide an additional outlet to reach your employees. With more being expected of this industry in terms of time and delivery, construction employees need as many options as possible for their professional development.

The 2 Minute Drill can do just that – developing your employees and instilling the company’s values, all in in a simple format for anyone in your company. For contact and cost information, please download our sales sheet.

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Contractor New Year’s Resolutions and How to Live Up to Them

TCBF

 

This article originally appeared in ForConstructionPros.com

 

The history of making a New Year’s resolution is actually quite old, beginning back with the Babylonians who made promises to their gods about giving back to others what they had borrowed or stolen. The Romans living during the glory days of the Roman Empire were required to make a promise to the god “Janus” (from which the month “January” derived) and their “Caesar,” that they would have to fulfill or pay some consequence of retribution.

The tradition of making a New Year’s resolution has continued down through the ages and has become more symbolic than actual focused commitment for many people. Who hasn’t made a New Year’s resolution, such as:

  • Losing weight
  • Reading more books
  • Taking more time off to relax
  • Spending more time with my kids
  • Completing that remodeling project on the house

On a personal level, making a New Year’s resolution can often end without having reached the desired result. For a contractor, making New Year’s resolutions can be similarly positioned, resulting in the same lack of achievement. Consider some fairly common New Year’s resolutions that many contractors make:

  • Calling on more prospects per week
  • Raising prices for work performed
  • Not allowing one customer to be “my only” customer
  • Giving employees a bonus (or larger bonus) next year
  • Conducting more training for employees throughout the year
  • Insuring that “Crew Huddles” are conducted twice a day…every day
  • Insuring that the Next Week Look Ahead is completed…every week

All of the above efforts are worthy of our commitment, but how do we create such things and then have the confidence that we can actually achieve the intended results? May I suggest a few tips that can turn your New Year’s resolutions into reality?

Let’s look to a few efforts you can easily make that will move our New Year’s promises to bona-fide goals that have a much higher chance of success. Then, we’ll present a few New Year’s resolutions worthy of your commitment as a contractor.

Moving New Year’s resolutions to goals

  • Record the resolution and keep it visible to you at the office and in your vehicle.
  • Put some measurement to the resolution; specific normally outperforms hope.
  • Create three to five action steps to bring your resolution to reality. Most New Year’s resolutions fail to have a realistic and written action plan.
  • Share your resolution with a trusted peer, mentor or friend and give him or her permission to hold you accountable to working your action plan.
  • Set a reward for achieving your resolution at the same time you develop your action plan. This reinforces your “want to.”

Now, you have found out by reading this far that creating one or more New Year’s resolutions is really nothing more than setting goals. First, a word of caution about setting goals. Many contractors have sincere intentions when setting goals, but many of these same contractors fail for two simple reasons:

  1. They set goals that really are not that realistic to reach due to any number of reasons including the lack of resources.
  2. Most contractors who fail to achieve goals — personal or company — fail due to the lack of a well thought out and planned action plan. They simply do not have a goal “road map” to follow and can easily be distracted.

Let’s turn our attention to a few New Year’s resolutions that may very well be worth your attention, resources and documented commitment. I’ll share with you five resolutions that can put your company on the right track to success and assist you getting off to a great start next year.

Five New Year’s resolutions for contractors

#1 “I will commit to reviewing my financials weekly: weekly/year-to-date budget, profit & loss sheet, and cash flow statement.”

Come on now, knowing your financial situation is critical to running your company. Most of the contractors I work with are well aware of the importance to staying on top of their finances. Seeing trends, potential shortfalls or increases are all important.

However, even the best of contractors can get sidelined to dealing with critical issues involving customers, poor performing workers, family issues, etc. It’s important to have your financial needs for information set up at the beginning of the year and then have weekly reports provided for review.

Create the format and consistency early and you’ll be successful at maintaining this first resolution for the entire year and beyond.

#2 “I will conduct a weekly communication meeting with my immediate staff every Monday.”

Fall down here and you fall back into the pit of confusion, miscommunication and poor results. Communication meetings alone will not eliminate all of your problems but will reinforce clarity and correcting faulty thinking, planning or actions before they happen. Call this New Year’s resolution what you want, just be sure to hold your weekly staff meeting every Monday…no exceptions!

#3 “I will see to an accurate schedule being created and maintained.”

Oh boy, now I’m really getting into some kitchens with this one. I’ve never had a contractor or senior leader of any construction company disagree with me that scheduling is first and foremost something that must be done. Yet some of these same contractors and senior leaders become frustrated when schedules are not executed due to weather, poor performance, special customer requests, etc.

Scheduling isn’t just the document or the white board with a bunch of tasks and locations assigned. Rather, it’s a thinking and discussion process that invites a mixture of what is needed to accomplish the schedule with the possibilities for interruptions.

It is in the discussions about the possibilities for interruptions that back-up plans can be created and scheduled.

Be committed to a “look ahead” of some rolling time frame (one, two or three weeks) and schedule your future. Then share the weekly updates with those impacted by and executing your schedule.

#4 “I will see that a preventative maintenance program is developed and monitored.”

Much of the downtime that takes place in the construction industry is due to equipment, vehicle and tool breakdowns. It’s simply amazes me the number of specialty contractors who will forego daily and weekly check-ups and inspections to ensure that the “tools of their trade” are in working order.

Postponing that oil change on a vehicle or delaying checking the lubrication and water levels on equipment is inviting disaster of a major and profitable consequence.

Develop a thorough “PM” plan (i.e. document) for every vehicle, piece of equipment and tool of importance to your work and assign individuals to personally inspect and audit that such efforts are being executed.  In the heat of working it is only natural for workers to not stop long enough to inspect their equipment and tools until there is a total breakdown.

#5 “I will personally meet with each employee once or twice a quarter.”

As the owner or a member of the senior leadership team, you must reach out to each of your workers. Certainly it’s easier for the contractor of five to 15 employees to accomplish this action but you might be surprised how many small contractors still do not visit with each worker.

If your possible employee contacts are in the hundreds then certainly adjust your amount of contacts accordingly. BUT, don’t miss the primary point here: build up the people who are building your company!

It is your employees who are executing work that customers either love or will never buy from you again. It is your employees who are creating the reputation of your company that might take you to higher levels of success or require years of repairing. It is your employees who can be just a great leader’s effort away from providing you with more joy, pride and fun to lead than you could have ever imagined.

When you recover from the merry holidays and the New Year’s fireworks take the time and really consider just what you want from this new year. Don’t just think about what you would like to realize this next year…write your New Year’s resolutions down on paper and put some critical thinking to developing plans to reach those resolutions.

You want some real fun?  Get your company leaders to set out three to five of their own New Year’s resolutions, following the same guidelines presented earlier.

Here’s to turning your New Year’s resolutions into the greatest year that you’ve had as a contractor or senior leader.  Go for it!