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How to Create Your Construction Company Vision

TCBF

This article originally appeared in The Contractor’s Best Friend at ForConstructionPros.com.

Many contractors do not have a formal vision for their company. Is this a mistake?

I don’t know if it’s a mistake, but I think you will be clearer about who you are as a company and what you represent if you have a vision for your business. Maybe it’s coincidence, but most of the successful construction companies I am familiar with all have a formal vision statement for their construction company.

Recently a successful decorative concrete contractor shared with me his transition as a contractor. He shared his evolution of starting his business because he thought he could “do it better” than the contractor whom he was currently working for. After beginning his new business, however, he and his wife soon realized that they needed a strategy that would take him out of the daily workload so he could grow the business. To paraphrase his comments:

“Brad, it wasn’t until we actually sat down and developed a vision description that we began to feel more confident about what we had initially set out to do.”

I’ve heard this same sentiment from many contractors over the past 25 years. Vision is everything for a contractor. A contractor without vision is like a family taking a trip with no destination in mind…you never know when you’ve arrived.

I’ve addressed the benefits to having a vision in a past article. I likened having a vision that was more “compass like” rather than “GPS like.” But how do you actually develop a vision? Let’s take a few lessons from some contractors who have realized how critical having a vision is to their success.

1. “Vision comes from within your heart”

Developing your vision isn’t to be found in a textbook or by adopting another company’s vision. Vision comes from “within your heart,” so says my decorative concrete contractor. He admitted that when it comes to a vision for your company, it’s a “heart thing.” In other words, it’s what your heart leads you to believe is possible for your company to achieve, not being handcuffed by your company’s finances.

2. “Your vision may be just outside your actual reach”

Over the years many contractors have taught me that developing your vision must not be tied to some hard number such as revenue or profit margins. While we want to drive revenue and realize higher profits, vision isn’t necessarily financial. Vision is where you want to see your company in terms of culture, market dominance, reputation and customer satisfaction. The irony of developing a vision is that you may not actually ever achieve your vision, but the effort it takes to try and achieve it will thrust your company further than you might have been able to realize without the vision.

3. “It helps to write a vision statement; maybe rewrite your vision statement”

One learning point I picked up from a successful masonry contractor was his experience with writing several vision statements before he landed on one that he was to bank his future upon. Your vision may come from deep within your heart, but it helps to articulate that vision by putting your thoughts into words. Try just writing your vision thoughts down on a piece of paper and then look at it for a bit of time. Does it really say what you are feeling? If not, edit your statement. Don’t worry about grammar and spelling at this early stage, just get your thoughts down on paper.

4. “I think you need to share your vision with those who know you best. Can they understand where you’re coming from?”

If you are new to developing your company’s vision then share your early vision draft with one or two of your closest leaders. Get their feedback and thoughts but remember: others may not always understand your vision in the beginning. It isn’t due to their inability to read and understand the words; what they may not fully understand is the vision that only you can have for the company. Don’t panic! Stay true to your vision, but don’t be afraid to word it so that others can better understand where you want to take the company.

5. “Don’t worry about making it ‘perfect’; just get it written and then begin to share it with your leaders and workers…again and again!”

It is very important that you communicate your vision with your workers. The better they understand what you really want the company “to be” the more reason they will have to follow work processes and procedures to help reach the vision. The secret, however, to moving your company closer to your vision is to make the discussion of it common discussion. At company meetings, during personal discussions, over coffee or at lunch you should be prepared to make your vision statement part of the fabric of daily life. Every new company process or procedure should, in some way, support the achievement of your vision.

While your vision for your company is personal, you must share it with your employees in order to get everyone “pulling in the same direction.” Let me return to my decorative concrete contractor for sampling of some of the revisions his vision statement went through before he landed on the final version that he shared with his employees.

  • Rough Draft #1: My vision for my company is to be the first decorative contractor that is thought of by customers needing decorative concrete.
  • Rough Draft #2: My company will be the best decorative concrete contractor for customers in our market.
  • Rough Draft #3: We will be the preferred decorative concrete contractor for customers in our market.
  • Rough Draft #4 — Final Version: We will beTHE decorative concrete contractor of choice!

As you can see, it took four revisions to finally arrive at the final vision statement — and this is quite common. More importantly, notice that each new statement is shorter, more succinct, with each of the remaining words more powerful and descriptive. When writing your vision statement, remember, “less is more.”

If you have never completed the writing of a vision statement for your company I strongly suggest that you move to develop your own statement. If you are a leader in a larger construction company, perhaps responsible for a department, division or project, then you too should develop a vision for your area of responsibility. Using the same suggestions presented above, you can add more clarity, energy and successful performance for your workers by developing a vision that they can begin to work toward!

Good luck in developing your vision statement. This may just be the best thing you could do for your company and the people who are working to make your company the best in the area!

Brad Humphrey’s Leadership Boot Camp at National Pavement Expo 2016

A recent article posted in ForConstructionPros.com announced that Brad will conducted a unique, one-day boot camp at the National Pavement Expo in Charlotte in 2016. Below is an excerpt from the article:

 

“National Pavement Expo will host a full-day leadership “boot camp” in advance of the 2016 NPE in Charlotte. Conducted by Brad Humphrey, Pinnacle Development Group, the “Boot Camp Plus: Taking the Next Step in Leadership” will be held from 8:00 a.m. – 4:30 p.m. on Tuesday, Jan. 26. (The regular NPE event runs Jan. 27-30.) 

Allan Heydorn, conference manager, says NPE decided to offer this day-long interactive session because of the success of other NPE leadership sessions and because contractors indicated on evaluation forms that they wanted advanced leadership training. “There has always been intense interest in leadership seminars and workshops at NPE so we are offering this opportunity for industry leaders to up the ante where their leadership efforts are concerned,” Heydorn said. “This is an interactive session that will help experienced leaders take their leadership efforts to the next level.” 

 

 

We hope to see you there!

Registration for the Boot Camp Plus and all other NPE 2016 sessions will be open in July atwww.nationalpavementexpo.com.

10 Traits of a Successful Construction Business Owner

NOTE: This article was originally published on ForConstructionPros.com.

 

There are many traits I have found that exist among construction owners I have worked with through the years. Consider a few common traits that seem to resonate with many successful owners of construction companies:

  • They are self-starters; they take the initiative.
  • They are confident in their abilities.
  • They see a different way, “their way,” of getting better results.
  • They understand and take accountability and responsibility.
  • They are always thinking about their business…always!
  • They are normally a master craftsman at their specialty whether it’s flatwork, finishing, asphalt, sweeping, electrical, HVAC, remodel, decorative concrete, mason etc.
  • They are effective problem solvers.
  • They are fast thinkers, movers and shakers.
  • They tend to be less patient with people.
  • They find themselves “asking for forgiveness versus permission.”
  • They often, but unintentionally, bruise the feelings of others BUT are quick to apologize…and mean it!
  • They are focused on “getting ‘er done.”

While many owners will relate to some if not all of the traits listed above, the owner that has been “at it” for a while will also admit that he has matured through the years. Ten-, 15-, 20- to 30-year experienced owners will admit that while the fire to succeed is still burning hot, they have found that how you handle people, how you solve problems and how you view the customer has also evolved and matured. What used to get an owner hopping mad might eventually have turned into looking at how to prevent the cause for the problem in the first place. In past years their approach might have been “Just fix it and we’ll worry about it later.” Today, that same owner might say “We’ll fix this now, but let’s find out why this happened and let’s rework our processes to prevent it from reappearing.”

The construction owner is the “engine, jet fuel and lubrication” of his business. While he may continue to serve as the company president and a few other roles, it is in the role of the owner that the deepest satisfaction and disappointment is often felt. As construction owners mature I’ve noticed that they become more caring for their employees, wanting them to succeed in their jobs and in their personal lives. I’ve coached and counseled many owners on trying to be firmer with poor performers or workers who have serious personal problems. The construction owner simply has a big heart…and sometimes he allows workers to take advantage of his good heart!

Well, then how does one go about “making a construction owner”? There are as many ways to be a great construction owner as there are construction owners today, but there do appear to be some commonalities shared by thousands of owners. Let me share 10 that I’ve researched over the past 20 years.

Construction owners must have:

1. An entrepreneur sSpirit

The true entrepreneur thinks her idea of how to get work completed, how to make money and how to be more successful is superior to others. While she is not necessarily arrogant, she is very confident in her approach. If a construction owner doesn’t believe that her way is better, her term of ownership is on a major collision course of titanic proportion.

2. Vision for their future

While the construction owner may not always be able to articulate to others what he sees in his heart, he is very clear about his future and what it will take to get there. This vision is more than seeing dollars made; it’s about how to go about making the dollars. It’s seeing his crews approaching work, planning out strategies, executing those strategies, solving problems, and achieving quality results when others do not.

3. Wisdom to balance the “Just do it” and “I’m in it for the long-term” emotions

This is truly the emotional center for the construction owner. One very successful decorative contractor I know recently shared with me that he has battled the constant struggle between doing things now, before another contractor can do it, and knowing that good results often take a while to realize. This is the daily conflict that can challenge an owner. The need to work with a promising employee, teaching him everything he needs to be successful while waiting for that knowledge to become instinctive. It’s like watching your kids grow up: you know that they are but it’s hard to see the growth on a daily basis.

Briefly, I’ve shared the railroad track analogy with many contractors and their leaders through the years. One rail of the track represents the short-term efforts, things that need to be done daily to keep cash flow moving forward. The other rail represents the long-term efforts. While the short-term rail often wins the daily attention, a contractor must not delay the long-term rail for long or face even greater challenges and struggles.

4. Desire to learn

I’ve never met a successful construction owner who didn’t get a thrill out of learning something new. In fact, most great contractors see everyday life as one big classroom. The genius of so many contractors through the years has been their uncanny ability to learn from just about any person, any situation, and from any other company. It’s the construction owner who can notice the way a restaurant owner has arranged her workers to provide the best eating experience possible…and adapt similar processes to his business. While the construction owner does view most of life differently, it is first his humility in realizing that he doesn’t know everything that leads to his great appetite for learning.

5. Engaging the “others” to grow and learn

This can be tough for owners to fully embrace. It’s the leading contributor to contractors who have not grown their company to more than eight to 10 employees. I actually had an owner approach me a few years ago at a construction conference that he no longer wanted to grow employees because “They just leave you and take all of your secrets to a competitor or start their own business.” While this can, and does, happen, to not develop your workers is to surely stunt your company’s intellectual, industry and profitable growth.

The successful construction owner realizes that part of excelling and expanding his potential is to engage other talented people. A great electrical contractor once shared with me that he viewed his primary purpose as finding those “others” who bought in to his vision for the company and to leverage them to execute their newly developed skill and expertise. A president and owner in a very large general construction company shared with me that he viewed his role, and that of other senior leaders, as “building up the people who are building our customers’ buildings.” The sooner an owner realizes he can’t do everything the sooner he will begin to achieve new heights of success he once only dreamed of achieving.

6. Commitment to a balanced scorecard perspective

When a construction owner first starts his or her business, her focus is primarily on getting work and doing the work. If she is lucky, she has a spouse or trusted individual who can insure that bills are sent and bills are paid, or she must face staying up all night to do the same. Over time, this reality leads to many contractors not being able to do it all and they fold up their business. The secret here is that owners must have a more balanced perspective of running their business.

An approach that I’ve shared and coached with owners for years is to look at their business with a balanced scorecard perspective. It recognizes the financial information as one area of their focus. But the financial is “balanced” by looking also at how they are meeting customer needs and expectations, how they are developing their workers to become more effective producers, and how their company work processes are creating a quality, lean and profitable result through getting work done right…the first time.

Certainly for the new start-up contractor there will be a heavy focus on acquiring work and completing the work. Yet this same contractor must spend time working on improving her worker’s efficiencies, improving their delivery of quality and turning customers into “raving fans.” This effort is better achieved when the owner sets goals and measurements for the company to monitor, posting areas of wins and losses for all to see, and then begins to address how to increase the winning experience.

7. Humility to leverage strengths and delegate weaknesses

Traditional construction owners were primarily craftsman, experts at their trade. They often grew tired of taking orders from others and decided to be their own boss. However, once they began their new business they often tried to perform the other needed roles but simply were unqualified for the other “jobs” and failed.

I’m not so sure that today’s new construction owners are craftsman only. In fact, a growing number of construction owners have come from nontechnical backgrounds such as finance, sales, engineering etc. No matter your background as an owner, always strive to position yourself to the areas of the company that you know best and look to place others in those roles that they have the skill and experience to execute.

8. Recognition of the “new” and openness to incorporate the same

Ok, I’ll probably step on a few toes on this observation but it’s still true. The “new” can be new trends in marketing, technology, industry, quality, client relations, finance, bidding work, software, etc. The list is almost endless.

An owner doesn’t have to be “cutting edge” on every new tool or product that surfaces, but he does need to be open to what some of the new ideas, processes and products might do to strengthen his firm’s efficiencies, improve safety or run the work more profitably.

Many of the “new” things can be screened by more than the owner. For many contractors, it is their employees that often bring back to the owner a new discovery learned from a competitor or presented at a recent trade show or conference. It is the owner who then needs to assess how the “new” will benefit the company and how they can incorporate the “new” as cost effectively and time efficiently as possible.

9. Full attention on the company’s financials

Over the past 25 years of working with construction owners I have found that while the owner might not have completely understood his own company’s finances in the early days, he soon became very skilled at reading Income Statements, Profit and Loss Statements, Balance Sheets and Cash Flow Statements and he understands what the numbers mean to running his business. The owner must recognize trends and future struggles based on the numbers that appear to be in play.

As the construction owner grows his business and the hiring of a company controller or CFO becomes important, the owner must continue to give his full attention to the company financials. His focus on this very critical area of the company will point him toward making offensive decisions to grow the business at some point in time and be just as critical at defensively pulling pack in areas where the company needs to steer away.

10. A never-ending desire to see success

Actually, I think the biggest and most common trait shared by the successful owners I’ve met through the years is that trait that never seems to tire. The mind of a construction owner is always turned on and working around opportunities, solutions and “what we can still do.” They can dream, discuss and decide till late in the night and then be fresh as a daisy by five in the morning, ready to knock out another day of “living their dream.”

The never-ending desire is not spent on wasted efforts but all the more focused on seeing success in how the company plans, executes, acquires new business, gains greater market share and improves customer satisfaction. The owner never tires of seeing promising employees finally “connect the dots” after struggling with making needed improvements. In the end, the owner energizes others to work harder, work smarter and work faster because “we have much to do, before the other company does it!” The owner, while still desiring to experience personal success soon grows to enjoy more the successes that his employees realize, knowing that such sharing of success will strengthen his company to carry on with winning attitudes and an unstoppable work ethic for years to come.

It is the owner who must be solidly in place, comfortable in his own skin and even more committed to the role that he needs to play within his business. If you will allow me a bit more time, let me very briefly bring this article to a close by providing what I think are good principles to become a great construction owner.

  • Never say never!
  • Hire only employees who “want” to work
  • Keep dreaming…and infect others with your dreams
  • Know when and how to walk away from opportunities
  • See failures as learning opportunities…and grow!
  • Swallow your pride and learn from others
  • Take time to think and plan strategically
  • Commit and demand field excellence through planning
  • Be quick to listen, praise, forgive and slow to anger!

I know that there are a hundred other great principles, but you can start with this list and add your own. Be proud of being an owner but not so proud that you are the smartest person in your company. Hire those “above you” in intelligence and experience and leverage them to be their best. These folks will appreciate you more for it and will work their hearts to death to make you proud of them.

Construction owners, maybe more than any of the company roles, understand the importance of keeping their eyes up, focused on positive opportunities and always quick to encourage good things. Commit today to challenge yourself to take your own leadership to the next level, embracing many of the items presented here in this article.

Here’s to “living the dream.”