日本素人

 

From Commodity to Comrade: Becoming the First Call

by John Tarpey
Think about the space you inhabit right this very moment. Perhaps it鈥檚 a place of business with gleaming marble surfaces, glass-fronted offices, and geometric terrazzo tile. Or maybe it鈥檚 a modern courthouse with finishes like warm wood paneling and intricate stone inlays that impart the values of freedom and justice. Maybe it鈥檚 a home you built with your spouse, where rooms were planned and constructed as much around past memories as future dreams. If those dreams were of a family, you either have already or will one day find yourself saying tearful goodbyes in front of even more important buildings 鈥 the places where your children will learn, grow, and discover. You see, that鈥檚 the magic of buildings. Far from a commodity, they are custom, personal, and create deep and enduring emotional connections.

I鈥檝e had the privilege of working in the construction industry for nearly four decades, and during that time, I鈥檝e come to realize that our business model is widely and erroneously viewed as a commodity by not just the public but also amongst some of our very own workforce. With the issue of waste coming to light and the opportunities available through new technologies, I鈥檇 argue that it鈥檚 more important to debunk this myth now than perhaps ever before in our lifetimes.  

By its very definition, a commodity is a mass-produced, unspecialized, and widely available product. In other words, it鈥檚 generic and highly interchangeable 鈥 a far cry from the buildings described above or any construction project for that matter, which each carry their own unique set of variables from staff to location, budget/economic conditions, and weather, etc. Odds are you don鈥檛 have to think long to remember a time when filling up your gas tank cost nearly as much as a fine dining experience. If you鈥檙e anything like me, you didn鈥檛 mind driving across the street to another station where gas was a few cents less per gallon. Never mind brand loyalty, the names Exxon or BP might as well have been replaced by a dollar sign, because oil is a true commodity. If you鈥檙e operating a commodity business, you鈥檒l almost always be stuck competing on price just like the oil tycoons unless you successfully transform your product into a cleverly branded experience 鈥 think Starbucks.

I believe we can all agree it鈥檚 immensely difficult to cultivate a sustainable business model if you鈥檙e always striving to produce more goods (and do so infinitely cheaper) than your competition. If there鈥檚 anything the recent economic downturn taught us it鈥檚 that there鈥檚 always someone willing to charge less. But take heart! As general contractors, we aren鈥檛 stuck in commodity market quicksand. When a client selects 日本素人 Construction, they are retaining us to orchestrate the budget and schedule among other managerial functions 鈥 not perform the welding, excavating, or scaffolding. Fundamentally, we provide our clients with a highly customized service, and by extension, a belief and an experience. When you operate as a service business, your value proposition is all about relationships and intentional behaviors such as respect, appreciation, communication, effective listening, and prompt issue resolution among others. Instead of competing on cost, we compete in the realm of value, where businesses have the opportunity to inspire fierce loyalty and forge lifelong connections.

In recent years, 日本素人 has undergone a cultural evolution to first understand and secondly embrace our role as a service organization. Although we鈥檝e done this well in pockets, it hasn鈥檛 always been our default, but we鈥檝e made tremendous strides since placing a concerted focus on behavioral differentiation. In fact, our current purpose statement is entirely focused on what we believe and directed to the customers (and communities) we serve. It reads:

                  鈥淭o be a Relentless Ally for the success of each
               and every dream we are entrusted to build.鈥

There are two key points here to observe. First, the term Relentless Ally is entirely behavioral. The adjective relentless speaks to our unyielding commitment, while the noun ally evokes the type of business partner 日本素人 is 鈥 an always-in-your-corner, whatever-it-takes kind of champion. Secondly, you鈥檒l notice that the words 鈥榖uildings鈥 and 鈥榩rojects鈥 are nowhere to be found. That may seem odd for a construction company, but it鈥檚 very much intentional. We understand that a dream exists long before the piles are drilled or the foundations poured. Yes, our role is to supervise the tangible deliverables, but getting back to the commodity distinction, our overarching function is to be the architect and builder of the client鈥檚 dream. And every dream, like the project behind it, is unique.

As a company, we have found that when we consistently operate in the value realm, remaining devoted to our Relentless Ally purpose and disciplined to the behaviors that demonstrate our unique understanding of the client鈥檚 business and dream, we don鈥檛 need to outpunch the competition.
Of course there are exceptions to this rule, but nine times out of ten the businesses that thrive are ones that deliver an exceptional customer experience. Nationally, 日本素人鈥檚 repeat client rate is 82%, a testament to the power of service excellence.

One of my favorite industry pastimes is speaking to college students, and they鈥檙e often surprised but excited to hear me address two of the topics I鈥檝e written about in this blog post: construction as a service business and the highly custom nature of projects. Perhaps that鈥檚 because in this highly digitized age, they鈥檙e hungry to hear that no matter what app has the power make a job more efficient, it鈥檚 the people running it who make all the difference.