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THE BEST CONSTRUCTION JOB
“The
best construction job I ever had,” a client once told me,
“was the bid I missed. If I would have been awarded that contract,
I probably wouldn’t be here today.” With the fierce
competition required to maintain adequate workloads, contractors
sometimes fight hard for projects they should be running from. I
am still amazed when a client considers a bid protest, after finishing
a bad project with the same unreasonable owner. Once, after asking
a client why he contracted with a party we had previously sued,
the client confessed, “I just needed to dance with the devil
one more time.” These things amaze me.
I admire my contractor clients for their entrepreneurial
spirit. Contractors are truly one of the last vintages of old time
business entrepreneurs. With hard work, skill, integrity, along
with plain old business sense, contractors often start with sweat
equity, and build business empires. Their success is attributable
to being comfortable with risks. Successful contractors appropriately
transfer, insure against, or develop the checks and balances necessary
to assume, the risks which conservative businessmen would not take.
These qualities must be admired.
Too often, however, contractors succumb to their
competitive instincts and take a job at any cost. Contractors must
resist these tendencies to remain successful in changing times.
The most successful of my construction clients, use discipline in
their approach to risks. Most of my knowledge about proper discipline
and management of risks has been instilled by working with these
successful men. So without taking credit for the origin of these
rules, I recommend that contractors, in all aspects of the construction
industry, adopt the following Disciplinary Rules in missing the
wrong jobs.
Know the party with whom you are contracting.
This seems obvious, but is overlooked more times than not. You must
know the entity with which you have a contractual right to collect
payment. You may be negotiating with a well-known Fortune 500 company,
but be contracting with an empty limited partnership. The limited
partnership usually will have no assets outside the land itself.
The construction lender will have the first lien on the land itself.
Your rights to collect payment will be limited to a company whose
only asset was foreclosed by the lender. Simply, if you elect to
contract with a party without available assets, your right to payment
cannot be enforced. You can resolve payment issues by obtaining
guaranties from financially solvent, interested parties. The construction
lender will have obtained these guaranties from the related interested
parties. Unlike the contractor, however, the construction lender
also has a first lien on the assets of the limited company. Only
the contractor is expected to advance money without security. If
the contracting party is a public entity, you should know its reputation
for paying or delaying payments, or for failing to pay retainages.
In addition to the financial conditions of the
contracting party, you should also know the contracting party’s
fairness. The contracting party should reasonably manage changed
conditions, promptly make decisions, and timely resolve controversies
that are inherent in the construction process.
Read your contract. You must
know the risks that are assumed by the contract provisions. If you
waive your right to changed conditions, or agree to assume the responsibility
for finding underground utilities, testing for soil conditions,
or measuring all existing dimensions prior to construction, you
will not be paid for extra work. You will not be entitled to payment
for rock that was not disclosed in the soils report, or for changes
required because the planned dimensions did not fit the existing
field conditions. To avoid catastrophic risks, you must first read
the contract and know the risks presented.
Price the risk assumed. If the
construction project includes extreme risks, either because of the
construction requirements or because of the contractual requirements,
you must include the cost of these risks in the price. Some of these
risks can be covered by insurance, and the price of that insurance
must be included in the contract amount. Some of these risks can
be assumed by additional management or manpower, but these costs
must also be included. You must make sure that the rewards of the
contract are worth the risk assumed. If you don’t, eventually
the costs of the risks will exceed any money accumulated from beating
the odds on prior projects. I am often told, “If I included
all the risks of this project in the price, I would never get the
job.” That is sometimes true. And sometimes, the best job
you ever had, was the one you missed.
Know the design professional controlling
the work. Many of the design professionals in the metroplex
are known for their integrity and the quality of their work. There
are a few design professionals, however, who are the “golden
goose” for lawyers. Although these professionals generate
work for lawyers, lawyers dread cases involving inadequate plans,
delays and numerous change orders. Inevitably, all parties lose
when plans are bad or the design is deficient. A contractor must
know the quality of the plans that govern the construction. If the
plans are bad, there will be costly changes and delays. Owners are
not receptive to paying large amounts for change orders that do
not enhance the project’s function or quality. If the owner
is merely obtaining what he thought he was getting at the original
contract price, he won’t want to pay for change orders. Further
compounding the contractor’s problem, an owner usually will
attempt to mitigate damages arising from inadequate plans at the
contractor’s expense. Contractors must either avoid construction
involving bad plans, or adequately price the substantial costs of
these risks.
In addition to the adequacy of the plans, you
should know the design professional’s reputation for (i) timely
responding to requests for information, (ii) providing remedies
when the unexpected occurs, (iii) reasonably handling change orders
when change conditions occur, (iv) considering alternatives or substitutions
that provide the same or enhanced qualities, and (v) not requiring
construction at a quality level exceeding the requirements of the
contract documents.
Recognize your niche. The construction
industry is broad. Most contractors have a competitive advantage
in at least one particular specialty. A contractor’s competitive
advantage may arise out of special knowledge or experience, developed
business relationships, special talents developed in a work force
or a unique reputation in a specialized area. A successful contractor
recognizes its competitive advantage in a unique market. That contractor
will capitalize on higher profit margins available in the niche
market because of this competitive advantage. A contractor must
therefore evaluate past successful experiences, business relationships,
and the unique qualities of its management and work force, to recognize
and develop a particular niche. You must then capitalize on the
opportunities presented in your niche area. There may be wisdom
in some diversification to avoid economic down turns in a specialty
area. A successful contractor will, however, continue to seek and
develop opportunities in the specialties in which the company has
succeeded in the past.
Appreciate and educate your work force.
Contractors are primarily providing a service to their customers.
The quality of this service depends upon the quality of the contractor’s
work force. Although the CEO will provide direction and inspiration
for the company, the company’s success is still dependent
upon the performance delivered by the entire team. Successful construction
companies appreciate and nurture their work force. Part of that
nurturing includes the desire to continuously improve and educate
the people that are the company. Education and training is a continuous
process. Therefore, you can never be satisfied with the status quo,
even when it is good. You must continuously invest in the education,
training and improvement of your work force.
Use moderation in growth. Seldom
do things remain unchanged. A construction company is either growing
or declining. Moderate growth is a characteristic of a healthy construction
company. Growth provides the opportunities needed for maturing and
improving the work force. If these opportunities are missing, the
most talented of the work force will seek these opportunities in
other companies. Moderate growth is therefore healthy as long as
it is planned, controlled, and continues to provide a profit that
corresponds with the risks assumed.
Conversely, a rapid growth assures undue pressures
on operating capital. Sometimes the results of rapid growth will
devastate a good company. Rapid growth also encompasses additional
risks associated with (i) acquiring large volumes of work outside
the experience of the company, (ii) acquiring work with little or
no profit margin, accompanied by extreme risks, (iii) having to
employ too many new workers, without adequate knowledge or training
in their particular skills, and (iv) over-taxing limited management
and control systems designed for a smaller volume of work. You can
avoid the catastrophic results of these risks by planning a healthy,
moderate growth for your construction company.
Having exhausted the wisdom I have learned from
others, I recommend you learn from the masters of risk management,
your peers.

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