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Week of March 8, 2004

Front Page

President's Message

* For Working Families, Affordable Housing Is in Short Supply

State and Local

* Builders Monitoring Progress of Florida Land Use Amendment
* Florida Builders Return Fire on Attack Against Affordable Housing Trust Fund
* New Web Tools Enable Associations to Share Information on Industry Challenges

Regulation

* California Study Cites Regulatory Toll on Housing Production

Construction Safety

* OSHA Construction eTool Provides Safety Information in English and Spanish
* Young Workers Prohibited From Performing Many Construction Tasks

Business Management

* Cleaning the Slate: Making a Good Publication Better

Member Dividends

* Seniors Symposiums Ensure That Builder Has Information, Insight to Enter 50+ Market

Green Building

* Green Trailblazer Tom Hoyt to Offer Green Tips at Conference

Multifamily

* Index Finds Condo Market Strong and Hopes Rising for Rental Apartments
* Improvements Sought in Low-Income Housing Tax Credit
* Liability Insurance Expert Among Speakers at Pillars Conference

Research

* HUD Web Tool Provides Advice on Energy-Efficient Home Rehabs

Building Quality

* Carpentry Contractor Receives Housing Quality Award

Small Builders and Remodelers

* How to Get That Final Payment

Labor

* Project CRAFT Helping the Local Community in Dallas

Building Products

* Vapor Retarder Receives Innovative Technology Award

Builder's Engineer

* Jeff Whitebear — The Best Sub Ever?

Building News Coast To Coast

Association News & Events

* Nominations Sought for Corletta Affordable Housing Award
* Dallas Does Its Designation Earners Proud
* Make Housing a Priority in Congress
* Program Provides Training in Media Interview and Presentation Skills
* Calendar of Events

NBN Back Issues

 

Jeff Whitebear — The Best Sub Ever?

I don’t normally use real names in this column. But today is different.

Jeff Whitebear owns a small siding company — maybe five employees. He recently did the siding and exterior trim on my house. I’ve worked with, and managed, hundreds of contractors in my career. It could be that Jeff Whitebear is the best of them all.

You wouldn’t guess it by his looks. Jeff comes to work in sweats and rubber boots. His hair is worn long, and shaving is not a priority. Far more important, however, is what he wears on the inside: a friendly smile and an ever-cheerful attitude.

Here is how a siding contractor (not the most glamorous profession) earns the Builder’s Engineer top honors:

  • The Bid. Jeff’s bid was not low. In fact it blew gaping holes in my budget. I explained this to him, and rather than blaming it on the architect or his supplier; or on me for estimating poorly, instead he offered money-saving tips. We negotiated openly and honestly to a price and work scope agreeable to us both. This is called win-win negotiation. In my book, it’s the only kind.

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  • Communication. Jeff went to great pains to keep me abreast of timeframe, costs, material status, problems, solutions… everything an owner needs to know. I never had to guess, and more importantly, never did I have to initiate the conversation.
  • Quality. Jeff understands the right mix of perfectionism and production.
  • People Skills. You are human — you know how you like to be treated. Is this how you treat your customers? Regardless of how much or little formal schooling Jeff has had, he is a master at human interaction. He worked cheerfully and tirelessly with my wife and me to ensure a thrilling final product.
  • Change Orders. As issues and problems arose, Jeff discussed each with me prior to doing any extra work or spending money. His change order prices were very reasonable — no gouging, skimming or bid compensating. Talk about thrilled! That is the kind of service that yields referrals.
  • Safety. One of Jeff’s employees thought it was cool to shoot nail gun nails around like bullets. This simply is not tolerable and Jeff warned his crew accordingly. When word got back that the guy kept doing it, he was down the road the next day. No B.S., no messing around.
  • Checking In. Perhaps most important of all, Jeff Whitebear himself was at my site every day. He didn’t necessarily stay there working, but he was absolutely on top of each aspect. As a result, my expectations were exceeded, very few mistakes were made and he finished on time.

The bottom line is this: Jeff Whitebear has the right stuff to be as successful as he wants to be. We can all learn by his excellent example.

Tim K. Garrison, P.E., M.S.C.E., of ConstructionCalc.com has authored a book and several short courses and lectures on topics relevant to builders. Reach Tim at timg@constructioncalc.com.
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