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CONSTRUCTION KNOWLEDGE BLOG

October 31, 2011

Crossing the River on Trash
Filed under: Cool Projects — Tags: — nedpelger

When I was in Haiti, some waterways would be so filled with trash that you could walk over the water.

A much less disgusting method to use trash to help cross the river was shown in 50 Tons of Plastic Recycled into a Footbridge. Students at Rutgers and Cardiff Universities worked together to design and build a 90′ bridge made from used water bottles and other plastic trash. The plastic beams don’t need painted and should have a long life span. The photo below shows the attractive bridge that spans the Tweed River in Wales.

A Welsh startup called Vertech plans to use the process to make more structural elements from trash, reducing landfill space and making a profit. It’s another construction related business opportunity.

CONSTRUCTION KNOWLEDGE BLOG

October 28, 2011

Lime Green Hatchback and the Process of Life
Filed under: People Skills — Tags: — nedpelger

My buddy Jim Stuckey, P.E. shared this week’s Friday Fun video. Jim’s watched it dozens of times and laughs every time. It sure cracks me up.  It’s a thing of beauty.

httpv://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AEQw0ztvgZY

I got to know Jim when he left a VP job at a successful consulting engineer firm to become the Executive Director of Facilities and Technology at one of the fastest growing churches in the country. He took on a whole new set of work challenges because he believed it best invested his life.

That idea connected with me as I thought about my supper last night with my friend who just got out of a 15 year prison stay for selling drugs. My friend lived an intense life, both on the streets and in state prison where he reined as power lifting champion for years. As we talked about the struggles of transition, I thought about the process of continuity.

We tend to get more challenges, more work, more fun problems to solve as we successfully complete the ones in front of us. For example, if you can’t manage your personal time or money, don’t think you’ll do better in your own business. Get what seem to be the little struggles done right and you’ll have the opportunity to fight bigger battles.

If you think that you don’t want bigger problems to solve, that you dream of a life free of struggle or aggravation, don’t go into your own business. The rewards of running your own firm or being part of a growing firm are many, but carefreeness isn’t one of them.

Just like the Lime Green Guy in the commercial, we all get to select our own vision of beauty, of how to spend the currency of our life. I hope you don’t fall for the false bargain that implies ease brings happiness. Here’s to struggling, struggling well and struggling at the right things.

CONSTRUCTION KNOWLEDGE BLOG

October 26, 2011

How to Start a Construction Company with Limited Cash
Filed under: Energy — Tags: — nedpelger

As I’ve been writing lately, now’s the time to be planning your new construction venture. When the economy looks too good to be true and news articles are about everyone making money easily, it’s time to start looking for the fire exits. That time was a few years ago. Now, on the other hand, when every news story predicts gloom, opportunities are on the horizon.

I believe this winter will have more US contractors go out of business than I’ve ever seen in my life. As those firms die (often from overzealous new banking regulations), times will be tumultuous. Yet the time to plan for your new, efficient firm that does some thing better than anyone else is right now. If you’re already in that business, keep struggling through and building your niche.

Here’s a helpful video answering the question, “How can I start a construction company with no money?”

httpv://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lrp3o4NFjhI

The first question in any business venture needs to be, “Who will be my customers? Who will pay me to do something for them?” You need some time to work through the understanding of the things at which you excel and how that can be packaged into something that will provide great value to your customers.

Think creatively, not just about how firms worked in the past, but about how they may work better in the future. Spend time on the concept now. It takes effort to drive the dream.

CONSTRUCTION KNOWLEDGE BLOG

October 25, 2011

No Tangle Extension Chord Storage
Filed under: Electrical — Tags: — nedpelger

Here’s a handy trick of the trade that allows long extension chords (or other types of long lines like rope or tubing) to be stored in a way that prevents tangles and allows one handed playing out of the stored line.

httpv://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eaEv9wm6gy0

Lex shot me this tip from BoingBoing and the comments noted that this was just a standard crochet knot. That quickly turned into a discussion on guys crocheting (like Rosie Grier) and this comment followed, which cracked me up.

I knit on the trolley down where I live. Maybe I do get shunned by the guys… but ladies love it and it’s a guaranteed conversation starter.
What’s more manly: looking ‘cool’ in the front of the guys, or constantly getting chatted up by beautiful women? 😉

So keep learning new things and don’t be too concerned with looking ridiculous, you may even get chatted up.

CONSTRUCTION KNOWLEDGE BLOG

October 21, 2011

No Plumbers Like That on My Jobs
Filed under: Plumbing — Tags: — nedpelger

Here’s a 30 second smile, just what you need on a Friday.

httpv://www.youtube.com/watch?v=C_RLXfxtouE

And some more Kohler fun that may be more appreciated by all my female readers.

httpv://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xV_a3a4T4_M&feature=related

CONSTRUCTION KNOWLEDGE BLOG

October 20, 2011

Building 15 Story Hotel in 6 Days
Filed under: Cool Projects — Tags: — nedpelger

I’ve seen some time lapse photography videos over the years that impress and amaze. The group that gets together and completes a house in a weekend is fun to watch. The video below, though, of a hotel being built in Changsha, China shows a 6 day period that astounds.

httpv://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ps0DSihggio&noredirect=1

Notice the use of offsite built panels to speed the construction. Some of the other Chinese construction details for structural steel fascinated me as well. The Project Manager triumphed in this project, which was completed last year. Remember this video the next time you’re about to say some construction milestone is impossible.

CONSTRUCTION KNOWLEDGE BLOG

October 19, 2011

Who Shouldn’t Start a Construction Business?
Filed under: Construction — Tags: — nedpelger

If you know you could perform your job much better, but aren’t going to for your (pick one) jackass boss, low wages or company that promotes idiots, then you shouldn’t start a construction company. Customers are harder than all the above annoyances. The folks that excelled for their previous bosses tend to do well in their own firm. The complainers, malcontents and brilliant guys that won’t waste their efforts without appropriate rewards go bankrupt.

If you can’t manage your personal finances and are always on the verge of fiscal ruin, then you shouldn’t start a construction company. The same self control that allows folks to make their ends meet in tough situations cause prosperity in business.

If you are a liar, a chisler or a theif, you shouldn’t start a construction business. In a small business, reputation rules. The poor character and bad moral choices you made in your previous jobs probably won’t change when you run your own business. What will change, though, is that others can much more easily avoid you. Word spreads quickly about bad behavior and no one has to use your firm. In short, good character pays.

So, it’s a great time to start thinking about your own construction business, but not for the knuckleheads described above.

CONSTRUCTION KNOWLEDGE BLOG

October 17, 2011

What Skills Do I Need to Start a Construction Company?
Filed under: Construction — Tags: — nedpelger

The Construction business consists of three main items:

  1. Get Work
  2. Do Work
  3. Keep Score

Let’s start with the middle one. You need to have experience producing great results. If you achieve mid-level results for your current boss, don’t bother going into business for yourself. To succeed, you need to be that guy that already succeeds in your current job.

That doesn’t mean you need to be a master craftsman or have the highest technical skills on the jobsite. You must be competent in your trade and your crew needs to exceed expectations in production, quality, safety and schedule. If you can’t manage a crew to successful outcomes, don’t go into your own business. Put another way, you must be a leader. That means you take charge and others follow.

Most guys contemplating a construction start-up feel confident in their ability to do work. If that’s true for you, then consider your ability to get work. Don’t be afraid to say the S word here. You need to do Sales. That doesn’t mean telemarketing skills or the fast talking of a used car salesperson. Construction Start-Up sales requires the ability to initiate contacts, be organized with follow-ups and accept rejection. It sure helps to have a winning personality (to be someone that people tend to like), though you don’t need a specific personality type. To be successful in getting work, you need to be a bit creative, organized and willing to deal with fellow bipeds.

The Keep Score part scares many would-be entrepreneurs. It shouldn’t. Though the tasks are different from sales, the organizational skills are the same. The administrative portion of a construction company can be set-up well with some expert consulting advice. In fact, by utilizing new technologies such as cloud computing and smart phones, you could easily be operating at a more advanced level than most big firms. So if you can get the work and do the work, you can learn to keep score well.

Remember, when considering the construction industry, smart and fast beats big and slow.

CONSTRUCTION KNOWLEDGE BLOG

October 14, 2011

My Blackberry Isn’t Working: A Tech Primer
Filed under: Computers in Construction — Tags: — nedpelger

I’ve mentioned several times that the Blackberry smart phone platform seems to be dying. As iPhones and Androids have soared, Blackberries did nothing. I loved upgrading from a Blackberry to an Android over a year ago. In fact, with our new phone apps, we aren’t even developing for the Blackberry. This week brought even worse news, as a three day Blackberry outage infuriated users.

But it’s Friday, so take a few minutes and watch this hilarious clip. Trust me, you need a laugh today.

httpv://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kAG39jKi0lI

CONSTRUCTION KNOWLEDGE BLOG

October 13, 2011

Don’t Scare Your Customers: What We Can Learn from the NetFlix Boondoogle
Filed under: Public Relations — Tags: — nedpelger

I love innovation, but have learned to be careful with how I introduce it to my customers. Any construction project usually costs our customers big money. So our customers tend to be a bit anxious when dealing with us. Then the reality of how many projects over-run costs and schedules (and have quality or safety problems) and it makes sense that our customers should be cautious about construction spending.

So we want to innovate, but we want to not scare our customers in the process. We need to think about the changes we plan to institute from our customer’s point of view. NetFlix provides a great bad example.

In case you don’t know the back story, NetFlix has had the golden touch in video distribution. By providing low cost rentals through the mail and online streaming, they helped shutter many video rental stores and put a big dent in the DVD sales numbers. They had millions of loyal customers who liked their process.

They decided to raise prices and screw around with their customer’s options. Within a month, the regular growth of NetFlix turned to a mass exodus. The founder and CEO sent me this message:

“Dear Ned,

I messed up. I owe you an explanation.

It is clear from the feedback over the past two months that many members felt we lacked respect and humility in the way we announced the separation of DVD and streaming and the price changes. That was certainly not our intent, and I offer my sincere apology. Let me explain what we are doing.

For the past five years, my greatest fear at Netflix has been that we wouldn’t make the leap from success in DVDs to success in streaming. Most companies that are great at something – like AOL dialup or Borders bookstores – do not become great at new things people want (streaming for us). So we moved quickly into streaming, but I should have personally given you a full explanation of why we are splitting the services and thereby increasing prices. It wouldn’t have changed the price increase, but it would have been the right thing to do.

So here is what we are doing and why.

Many members love our DVD service, as I do, because nearly every movie ever made is published on DVD. DVD is a great option for those who want the huge and comprehensive selection of movies.

I also love our streaming service because it is integrated into my TV, and I can watch anytime I want. The benefits of our streaming service are really quite different from the benefits of DVD by mail. We need to focus on rapid improvement as streaming technology and the market evolves, without maintaining compatibility with our DVD by mail service.

So we realized that streaming and DVD by mail are really becoming two different businesses, with very different cost structures, that need to be marketed differently, and we need to let each grow and operate independently.”

He went on to say that they started a new company called Qwikster and that most of their customers will get shunted to this new company. Now most customers don’t like the idea of being shunted, especially without being consulted. So a lot more customers left, then this email came, not from the CEO but from the NetFlix team:

“It is clear that for many of our members two websites would make things more difficult, so we are going to keep Netflix as one place to go for streaming and DVDs.

This means no change: one website, one account, one password…in other words, no Qwikster.”

The take-away from the NetFlix saga? Think deeply about how your customers will respond to changes and innovations. In even simpler terms: Don’t take your customers for granted. They do have other options.

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