In this episode of Built Different, we flew over to Nashville Tennessee, to visit Turner Construction to see how they’ve ingrained technology into every step of their workflow. During our visit, we got the opportunity to chat with VDC regional manager, Gary Chapman and senior VDC manager Cole Milberger all about how they win more work by building trust both internally and externally. During the conversation, we got deep into how Turner uses digital representations of their sites and why you need to get tech involved at the ground floor to see the best results.
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What are we talking about in these presentations? We're talking about building
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something, right?
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Why would you not include some sort of digital representation of the
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presentation or the
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building you're talking about, right? Anytime you're talking about this project
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that doesn't
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exist physically, we need to make it exist digitally so we can have a
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conversation around it.
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It really is just common sense.
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Welcome back to Built Different, a podcasting community choosing to approach
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innovation differently.
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I'm Grant Hagen, I'm Brian Mizorata, and we're on a mission to rewrite the
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narrative around what
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innovation truly means. Last season we did 12 episodes more focused on the
0:38
field.
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In this season we packed up our gear, joining teams in site trailers, offices,
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and even a few
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podcast studios where we focused on the executive level and how innovation is
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making an impact
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within their organizations. New this season we're introducing live streams to
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invite you
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to join the conversation. Also, we want to equip you by providing show recaps
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from each episode
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in our new Built Different download. Think different, be different, and build
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different.
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Alright, well welcome back to the Build Different podcast powered by drone
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employee instruction site. Joined it by my fellow co-host, Mr. Brian Mizorata.
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I'm
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Grant Hagen. Good to see you guys again. I'm joined with two. Oh man, I don't
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even know how
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to intro you guys because if I'm being really honest, I feel like I should
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probably start by
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saying friends first and then colleagues next and then potential co-workers
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longer down the
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road. We'll figure all that out later. With Gary Chapman and Cole Milberger,
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thank you guys for
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making the time. We are in their green screen studio. So if you're watching and
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not just listening,
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we are surrounded by probably 30 different production lights, a $1,200 tripod,
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which I didn't know
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they made them that expensive, and a good green screen behind us. Yeah, so
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thank you guys for
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making the trip here. So we didn't come to you, you came to us. That's right.
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This is our
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world. That's how we roll. This is my first time in Nashville. Brian, first
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time too. And he bought
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a nice looking cowboy hat the other night. He said he was. He said he was going
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to get one.
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It's the first thing I did right after the first day. Immediately was jealous
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of like I should have
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bought one too. But then we can't have the same cowboy hat. Or we could. Or we
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could. And we could
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wear it then. Well, come back tonight, right? So we'll hold you up to it. We
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are in between a
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great time out in Nashville. So we're going to have some fun here. So fellas
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one, thank you guys
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for hosting us. It's super fun. We, Brian and I just feel so lucky to be able
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to come out and get
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to meet more people where they work. And like I said, we are here in Nashville,
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which is just a
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really amazing city that you guys are building the skyline for. And it's really
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cool to see
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what Turner is doing here locally. So this is going to be fun. Yeah, forward to
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it.
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Well, we are curious to talk about a couple things, mainly in which. So we had
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a couple of
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Turner folks. Well, we had one person on from Turner. We had Anthony Hartke on
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from last season.
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And it was awesome because he really talked about what big projects and small
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projects kind of
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relate to each other and how you can take lessons learned from either, which is
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just super fun to
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hear. Turner, obviously huge company. If you haven't heard of Turner, then you
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may not be on the face
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of this planet. But what we're going to talk about today is really just this
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idea of how do you
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gain executive level buy in to technology? And what does that process look like
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Cole and Gary have just an incredible background and who we got to meet more of
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their folks on
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their team today from that executive level. It is really encouraging. Honestly,
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I was taking a ton
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of notes and just learning more from Paul, who came in from their office just
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to talk to the
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VDC team that we were all syncing up with. And that's what we're going to talk
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about today.
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But before we dive into that, I'd love to get a little bit of your guys's
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background for the
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folks to know that are tuning in, kind of maybe how long you've been in Turner,
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what your roles are,
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and then we'll get into some of that stuff specific. So Cole, do you want to
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kick us off?
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Yeah, love to. So I've been with Turner for past five years or so. I actually
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grew up in the
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industry. So my father and grandfather architects and they're firm and Hunts
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ville, Vama and specialized
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in ice rink design. Who does that in the south? I don't know besides my father
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and grandfather.
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But yeah, just grew up in the industry. So I grew up in CAD. I grew up in the
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whole,
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you know, just the lingo, everything with it. So when I went to Auburn,
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eventually graduated construction management and immediately knew after waning
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internships with
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Turner, but immediately knew I was coming to Nashville at Turner. And so spent
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the past five
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years here in Nashville locally and now started as an engineer and now running
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our national office
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in regards to VDC. And just had a wonderful fun time and strong or hard time as
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well in a lot of
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ways, but just a great time here with Turner and Nashville building, especially
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in the digital
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environment and helping our teams with that. Love it. Mr. Geary? Yeah, so kind
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of an opposite,
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appropriate, really, really opposite, which I think makes us a great team,
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right? So I actually
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came more from the field up. Current role is our regional VDC manager over
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Memphis, Huntsville,
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and again, kind of handing off Nashville to Cole. He's been taking that the
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last year or so,
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doing a great job there. But really our region is called the Mid-South, right?
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And it consists of
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those three business units. And man, we do everything under the sun when it
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comes to building digitally,
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right? We, of course, do our BIM coordination. That's got more automated over
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the years, really.
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So it's allowed us to free it more time to integrate, you know, robotics and
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drones and reality
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capture and, you know, tracking a lot more than we used to just focus on BIM
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coordination. So
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started off, you know, doing a lot of survey work in the field, you know, maybe
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12 or 13 years ago,
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joint Turner about five years ago, and focused more on that integrating
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technology role, right?
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BIM coordination is what we're going to do. It's going to always be there. It's
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going to be our
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bread and butter. But as that gets more automated in advance, it frees a lot
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more time to integrate
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things like, of course, reality capture and drones and partner with companies
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like Drone
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and Floyd to really get that kicked off the ground. So really the last, say,
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three years,
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probably pretty heavily. We've been focusing outside of just BIM coordination
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and what else
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could we do besides just coordinate in 3D that, of course, opens up a lot of
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different doors.
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Love it. Brian, do you have any thoughts over there? No, I just
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just still thinking about kind of a couple things I heard this week and let's
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just get into it.
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Let's just get into it. Let's just get into it. First, one, do you guys hear
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any little buzzing
6:27
in here here? It's just mine. I think it's probably my headphones cool. Second,
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so the reason we're
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out here in Nashville, one, we've talked a lot about the difference between
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partners and vendors
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on the podcast. I would say our relationship with Turner is clearly more
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partner than anything,
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probably. You guys help us to find what that looks like. You guys invited us to
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come out to
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your VDC summit of just your kind of mid-central team. Honestly, it's been
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super encouraging to
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hear more from your guys' team, how you guys collaborate across the country.
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Then again, to
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hear from folks in your leadership team really talk and brag on you guys as
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individuals and
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the team and what work you guys are doing. I want to dive into that a little
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bit specifically,
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of talk about the relationship that you guys have with your leadership team
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here locally in Nashville
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and what kind of that's looked like. Give us a little brief history because I
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know the story,
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but it's fun to when you were telling me earlier today, Gary, about just how
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you had to win them
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over and to transition a little bit from maybe being a doubter and having it be
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the first line item
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cut to now being, I can't imagine not having you as a part of some of these
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pursuits and not only
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that, but also executing the job. Maybe start to use some kind of names, what
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your relationship
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was and how it started and really where it is now and what you guys have been
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able to help with.
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I'll take the first stab at it, right? But it really, you mentioned they were
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believing in us,
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right? But really we brag on our leadership because starting from the bottom up
8:03
in the top
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down, a lot of people want to convince your superintendents, your field staff,
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really in our opinion it takes our leadership pushing that down. And you heard
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today from our
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general manager, Paul Lawson, and I think he's a fantastic example of how it
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used to be. And
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you can take someone that really looked at VDC and virtual building and digital
8:24
building more of
8:27
the sales mode of what we're going to do one day when the technology is here
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and taking his
8:32
perspective. And now he is like, I mean, you heard it from his own mouth today,
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right? He said,
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this is how we do business. And that wasn't an easy change. And it takes those
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kind of raving
8:44
fans and those success stories that can't happen overnight to really change
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that mentality from
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your leadership because that's not their job. They're not out there in the
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boots on the ground,
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they're out there winning new work, they're out there making sure that our
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people still care
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and our people are happy. So it really takes people like Cole and ourself and
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our department to put
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those use cases in front of them, right? And go to work and try to convince
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them that, hey, this is
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how we should be building, how we should be operating for a lot of different
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reasons. So
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it's definitely changed. It took about three or four years, but I think we're
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in a good place now
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for them to really see not only from us showing them and the technology getting
9:24
them excited about
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it, right? But they're seeing it actually happen on our projects. They're
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hearing superintendents
9:29
that are 50 years old that are like, hey, I don't care how we do it, right? But
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we need these people
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involved in our project all the time every day. So them hearing that over the
9:38
years, I think it's
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really just kind of put trust in our leadership. And when you have trust in
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your leadership, right,
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you have a lot of doors that can be opened. And you really are not bottlenecked
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to the possibilities
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of what you can bring to the table. And that's something I think it's just it
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takes time, but we're
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there as a company and as a region. And man, it's it's features really bright
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for a lot of quick
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adoption and technology. And I think it's you heard it today from our team.
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Yeah.
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Yeah. I mean, there was definitely something I heard actually twice and the two
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different people
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kind of said it, which was, you know, how did this go from something that was
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just used to win work,
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but now it's used to do work. And I think that's like a huge milestone shift in
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any kind of technology
10:19
team, right? Like when the field's mandating it themselves and their projects
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is also like a
10:23
huge milestone turn. Yeah, I mean, you're hearing from people that don't even
10:28
know, probably had
10:28
opened a model. I mean, our upper up they they're not in, you know, a 3D model
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every day, but but
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they know that we need to do it that way every day. And I'm just glad that you
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guys got a chance
10:38
to hear hear from a few folks outside of VDC today. Yeah, totally. And I think
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that the most
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encouraging part is that you you can walk away from that conversation and know
10:47
that that's not
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just something that gets talked about in a presentation. Like you can you can
10:51
feel it in the room. I mean,
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Cole, like, pretty sure your name, I wasn't keeping it tally, but it was like
10:56
probably every other
10:57
phrase or statement was like, Oh, man, if Cole isn't there, these the owner was
11:01
like, how do we do
11:03
this job without, you know, you as an individual and tell me a little bit about
11:06
like your kind of
11:07
background in that or just like working on that relationship with an exec team,
11:11
because you can
11:12
come in and kind of have your own preconceived notions of like, Oh, these guys,
11:17
they're just
11:18
here to use me to be a part of a sales pitch. And then we're never going to
11:20
touch that job again
11:21
to like, where it is now, where you guys are at and being fully integrated into
11:26
a lot of these
11:26
teams and needs of what gets the job done. Yeah, absolutely. I think that first
11:31
of all,
11:31
the biggest thing was having the opportunity to get into the presentations in
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the first place,
11:35
because like, I mean, we weren't. So actually we were, especially we were only
11:39
providing content,
11:40
and they weren't even inviting us there. And that was like one of the biggest
11:44
milestones that I
11:45
think we crossed was making sure that we were in the presentation, because we
11:48
were talking earlier
11:49
today, you're talking like, you asked the question, what are your clients
11:53
asking, like, what are
11:54
their expectations when they come to us? Oh, you should be building this way.
11:56
And we're like, Oh,
11:57
well, well, here's a realistic path. And that starts with the relationship that
12:02
you have with
12:03
them that starts with, you know, I'm not the BDE person making contact with
12:06
them outside of
12:07
the presentation beforehand. But once we get to RFP stage, and we're there in
12:10
front of them, it's
12:11
they're bringing us VDC to the table to the first reaction with the client, and
12:17
they will sit down
12:17
and have conversation with us. And that's been the biggest, biggest change. I
12:20
mean, since day one,
12:22
since we've been in the presentations, number one is not only if our client
12:25
relations gotten better,
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but when they come to it, the clients are also expecting us to do that. And so
12:32
it makes it
12:33
easier for it to happen because when they see those costs or the non if they
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don't cost anything,
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it's just something that we're doing already. Whatever it is, when they see it,
12:41
it's already
12:41
expected. So it helps our field teams, no brainer, it's a thing to do or
12:47
and then obviously as well, I'm not going to go in front of the client and
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pitch something that
12:53
is not possible. Like, that's just not who I am or I feel like Turner is. And
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so when we go to
12:58
those things for pitching real things, we like to call that Hollywood BIM. I'm
13:02
sure a lot of
13:03
people have heard that phrase before, but we used to call it pretty BIM pretty
13:07
bad. That's the
13:08
right term. I think pretty BIM. That's nice. Do you remember, Cole, like the
13:13
first time you got
13:14
kind of asked to be a part of some of like the presentation or just even the
13:18
pursuit of product?
13:19
Because like, I can imagine for the folks that are listening, they're like, oh,
13:22
well, we never
13:23
get asked to be a part of it. Like, we're the ones trying to kind of beg and,
13:26
you know, get in front
13:27
of projects early enough to show what we can do. But like, I think that's a
13:30
really important milestone
13:31
that you touched on is like, hey, when you get asked to be a part of some of
13:34
these pursuits and
13:34
projects really early on to help communicate where VDC can be helpful, like
13:39
give some encouragement
13:42
to folks of maybe that aren't in that position. And maybe what you like, you
13:45
were able to kind of
13:46
do and see to get to that point to help in the pursuit phase. Yeah. So first of
13:51
all, I forgot
13:52
this part of my background. I started off as a disc jockey way back in 2007. So
13:58
now I'm on edge
13:58
to know what that and how that is going to fit in here. I know, I know. But my
14:02
point is, or what
14:03
I'm going with this is I've been in wide entertainment for like the past 10, 15
14:07
years. And so putting
14:08
on a production is like every part of the day of my life. Sitting here with you
14:11
guys and talking
14:11
to you guys, not in a bad way, but it's a production to me. Like, I'm serious.
14:14
I want to put forth all
14:15
my effort to it, etc. Same thing when I go in these presentations with our
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clients, with our people,
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like the same thing. And so, you know, the biggest conversation, the biggest
14:25
thing I talk to,
14:26
talk to my guys about is take everything with it as a presentation. Always go
14:32
with that use case
14:33
and always talk about why this is important to being a builder. I mean, we
14:37
preach that today as
14:38
all VDC is about building and being a builder and being a digital builder. But
14:44
taking that to the
14:45
client in front of them, you know, they're going to learn that and love that.
14:48
And that's the biggest
14:49
thing that like, you know, of course, Paul's worked great with us and we've had
14:52
request Paul, Paul's
14:53
had stuff back to us, you know, every single time we're getting ready for a
14:55
presentation,
14:56
he's looking at me. And even though we've VDC's killing it here, he's looking
14:59
at me and like,
15:00
make sure you, you know, relate it. Why is this important? And I mean, he's
15:04
directed me and again,
15:05
it's the same conversation back and forth. I think one thing that stood out,
15:09
one of the first
15:10
times I've met you was just this idea of how you really brought up this kind of
15:15
phrase that's always
15:16
stuck with me is like, hey, we're using this to build trust. And the things
15:20
that our team is really
15:21
helping kind of narrate or I guess functionally equip our teams with is to
15:26
build trust with the
15:28
client, like to show them what we can do and why we're choosing to do that. And
15:32
I mean,
15:33
did you kind of see that correlation from production to like building trust
15:37
with these
15:38
clients that you like gotten to work with? Absolutely. But I just want to point
15:42
this out,
15:42
it starts with trust internally, first, not like even departmentalize, but like
15:46
, we had to build
15:47
our folks first. We had to reach Paul, we had to reach John Gromos, our senior
15:52
vice president. We had
15:53
to reach our individual teams that were completely negating here because if
15:57
they weren't our champions,
15:58
if our general superintendent that was hopping in that presentation with me and
16:02
didn't already
16:03
love working with me, like he wouldn't be able to volleyball back in front of
16:07
it,
16:07
volleyball with me during presentations. So it's all about building that
16:11
internal trust and then
16:12
taking that to the presentations with you because the clients see that. And
16:16
when the client see a
16:17
six-year-old superintendent saying this cold guy's a rock star, you don't need
16:21
to listen to what he
16:22
said because he like changed my job or the VDC department or whatever changed
16:26
my job and is 63
16:27
year old is saying that you can see that he has that trust in his eyes. That's
16:32
where the trust
16:33
comes into and that's where the client gets it is because they see it from us
16:36
internally.
16:37
And that's one of the things everybody's always looking for is that team
16:39
dynamic.
16:40
Yeah. Does this team actually know each other?
16:42
Exactly.
16:43
They're just a group of people that's pitching this project to us.
16:45
Yeah. And that you walk into a room, you can tell that really quickly, right?
16:50
And
16:50
it's such an interesting point for you to bring up because I think a lot of the
16:54
folks that tune
16:55
in and listen to this are like, gosh, like I'm only just seen as this transact
16:59
ional person to help
17:00
print something or to help install something or to help solve a problem and
17:04
then to be moving on
17:05
down the road. What do you feel like has helped to build that trust with the
17:09
team?
17:10
It's a hard, well, I heard what you said earlier, Gary's like, yeah, it just
17:14
takes patience and time.
17:15
Right? Like we know that.
17:17
Yeah. I mean, I look at it really by breaking it down, we're more simplified,
17:22
right? What are we
17:23
talking about in these presentations? We're talking about building something,
17:26
right?
17:26
So why would we not utilize tools and talent in our department specifically
17:34
to create a digital representation of what we're about to talk about, right? It
17:38
's almost
17:38
why would you not include some sort of digital representation of the
17:44
presentation or the building
17:45
you're talking about, right? So I think it's me and Cole kind of showed our own
17:48
team, like you
17:49
mentioned earlier, just showing our capabilities and what we can bring to the
17:53
table that caught the
17:54
attention of really everyone. And it almost made sense of if we're going into
18:00
in front of a client
18:01
or really in front of anyone, they don't have to be a client, it can be our
18:03
trade partners, it can
18:04
be anytime you're talking about this project that doesn't exist physically, we
18:09
need to make it
18:10
exist digitally so we can have a conversation around it, do different types of
18:14
analysis around
18:15
it. So it really is just common sense just to work and build a digital
18:19
representation,
18:21
whether it's logistics plans, whether it's different studies, things that we do
18:24
every day on projects
18:26
for to win new work. And not only are we doing it to win new work, we're
18:29
showing the client,
18:30
we're coming there with that team dynamic and that synergy that we're coming
18:34
into the presentation
18:35
with that they see that we are a team and we're not just talking about
18:39
something, we're going to
18:40
win this job and then we're going to go out there and we're going to use these
18:43
same tools to make
18:44
the project better and they see they don't just hear our project executives or
18:48
anyone else talking
18:49
about, hey, we have a VDGC department back in the office that will help with
18:52
this, they see that
18:53
those people there in the presentation and it again, it just builds that I
18:56
think that synergy and trust
18:58
with the client along with our other team. I heard a quote once and somewhat
19:03
relatable to this is
19:04
people don't remember what you did for them, they remember how you make them
19:07
feel. And when you
19:08
think about trust and setting the tone in just like these presentations and
19:13
pursuits, obviously
19:16
you're up against competition and you guys have different ways of approaching
19:20
the project and the
19:21
way that you visualize it and communicate it to them but you're really evoking
19:24
this sense of trust
19:25
with them and hopefully it is what your team is focusing on is like really the
19:32
core of what it
19:34
is that you're going to go out and execute on is really derivative of your guys
19:38
' team's ability
19:39
to give that as an opportunity to talk about. We talk about all the time how
19:46
project teams
19:46
don't necessarily or VDC teams don't really get involved early enough in the
19:51
project but you guys
19:52
are clearly setting that tone very early. We're not going to chase projects
20:00
that we don't want
20:01
to be able. We have different types of expertise and locally we have different
20:06
types of clients
20:07
that we want to work for and they want to work for us and so when we go into
20:10
these presentations
20:12
and these interviews, we're a big company, we don't need to win every single
20:15
job. We're going to go
20:16
in there knowing that if we do win this job it's going to be fun and we're
20:19
going to be able to
20:20
the best we can and we have the people like Cole, we have our pre-con team, we
20:24
have our estimating
20:24
team, we have our superintendents that they enjoy doing these things and so it
20:29
's almost not that
20:32
hard when you have that, again I use the word synergy again with our team and
20:37
we have that plan
20:38
going in and we just got where it's pretty obvious that our own people are not
20:42
going to go into these
20:45
whether it's presentations or whether it's just basic conversations without
20:49
letting them know that
20:50
we're going to use VDC and these digital tools to build their project and they
20:53
see that and
20:54
honestly I think it's pretty clear whenever a client recognizes that and they
20:59
see that we're
21:01
using these tools that early on and we have people like Cole and others in the
21:05
presentation
21:05
active in the process way before we've spent a dollar building it's like an
21:10
hour's yet.
21:11
They see the trust that we're going to do it that way.
21:14
I want to hear a little bit more about past the pursuit now it goes into
21:17
execution,
21:18
project breaks ground, it's ongoing, progress is going.
21:22
How have you seen reality capture play a role in bridging that gap between you
21:28
and the field
21:29
teams? A lot of them, they'll see the final coordination model but they're not
21:34
in-revent
21:34
necessarily messing around with things. How have you seen whether it's their
21:40
first interaction
21:41
to this reality capture digital world has been, some type of interface has been
21:46
more user friendly
21:47
that's designed for those teams? Yeah I mean yeah I think it's been a native
21:53
like absorption,
21:54
like it just happens naturally. It's been something we've been doing for years
21:58
and we've had all
21:59
these different options out there and we're finally finding the solution and it
22:05
's simple and I don't
22:07
really know too much to say beyond it's just natural in regards to it's
22:13
something that we do
22:14
every day or we're doing every day and we have an easier solution that is found
22:19
, it's path,
22:20
it's natural. It's expectations right it's just doing reality capture and other
22:27
types of
22:27
whether it's drill mapping, laser scanning, just photo documentation that's
22:31
something that's
22:32
by default right our teams expect that so as we win the job right and it goes
22:36
into
22:36
pre-construction and estimating and we're looking at the jobs and you know our
22:40
estimating teams
22:41
are immediately going to come to us and say hey can you guys give me a cut feel
22:44
on this site or
22:45
they're going to come to us and say can you give us a 3D takeoff from the model
22:48
or
22:48
pre-construction teams are working with us to see hey this is a you know this
22:54
type of project
22:54
it's a retrofit there's a lot of you know unknowns out there you know how much
22:58
laser scanning do we
22:59
need to do to make sure we're verifying you know doing a lot of VE and valid
23:03
ating the drawings
23:04
as they go through the design package process so you know whether it's a retro
23:08
fit you know or
23:09
new construction greenfield there's a lot of different things that we use but I
23:13
think the most
23:13
important part is our own team outside of you know our 10 VDC folks or so the
23:17
other 75 people out
23:19
there they know where to come when to come for you know different problems that
23:23
they need to help
23:24
solve every day and to add on to that I think that is also huge is that we don
23:29
't have regionally
23:30
here anymore we don't have 10 different solutions out there and that's huge for
23:34
a company like us
23:34
because you know one year later six months later three years from now whatever
23:38
you maybe swap and
23:38
job to job all the same solution and so that's one of the then the biggest
23:42
things is when you
23:43
leave one project ah going to a different workflow or different working what
23:47
new software do I
23:48
feel or not yeah we're finally trying to standardize around reality capture and
23:52
finally are able to
23:53
and that's that's huge I think that's I mean you saw that this week right I
23:57
mean two three years ago
23:58
you know a lot of people were just learning about point clouds and and how you
24:02
know we're
24:02
we're pretty much going to scan to mesh and talking about meshes now we're
24:05
talking about
24:06
different avenues so you know the industry's moving so fast of how not only our
24:10
own teams are
24:11
adopting reality capture but how clients and how our trade partners right and
24:15
how people even
24:16
coming from you know newer the screen in the industry maybe they just graduated
24:19
they're coming
24:20
out of school knowing what a point cloud is right knowing what LiDAR is you
24:24
know it's on their
24:25
phones now so it's just it's just definitely a by default process and it's just
24:31
going to get
24:32
easier I was going to say I think one of the most and you mentioned on it today
24:37
which was one of
24:37
the most under-leverage departments is marketing your internal marketing
24:42
company ah your internal
24:44
marketing team at the company and what I want to know more about is like how do
24:48
you kind of
24:48
leverage them to like share those internal stories in those internal wins right
24:51
like you hear
24:52
something in a pursuit or superintendent says this is amazing because of xyz it
24:56
saved me on this
24:58
yeah just a real real clear before marketing kills us that we I think Cole
25:01
mentioned today we
25:02
didn't talk us the one group we didn't talk about today enough enough we hear
25:07
marketing is our rock
25:08
stars yeah absolutely we have a I mean locally I mean Turner has a great
25:11
marketing approach anyways
25:13
but but locally that's that's that's some of our not only colleagues but some
25:16
of our good friends
25:17
right we we deal with them daily a grant you just walk by and talk to Sarah
25:23
right but they
25:24
they continue to be that that yin and yang when it comes to what we do right
25:28
they know when to come
25:29
to us for things we know what to provide them on project specifics right so it
25:34
's just a good
25:35
meshing with our marketing department and and I know that it didn't quite
25:38
answer your question but
25:39
but they they trust us and we trust them and what we do really kind of
25:46
complement complements
25:48
there yeah where they do and and they understand that it definitely does have a
25:52
complementary feel because I mean you guys don't have backgrounds in marketing
25:57
and they obviously
25:58
have known strategies and ways to go about you know being effective at their
26:03
profession and when
26:05
you can complement each other I mean these two teams like when they intersect
26:08
and they're both
26:09
going up into the right right and they they intersect at times and have you
26:13
know points of
26:13
really when they're diving in and like jelling together but it is crazy that
26:18
the value that each
26:20
of each team can bring each other and I don't think it gets talked about enough
26:24
I think it's kind
26:24
of like up you guys go I'm gonna toss something over the fence and you'll take
26:27
care of it and
26:28
then you'll toss something over our side of the fence of a need and we'll take
26:31
care of it well
26:32
I'm even just talking about like sharing internal wins of things I mean it's it
26:36
's very
26:36
in construction's nature to just do something amazing and move on to the next
26:41
task we talked
26:42
about today right I think or I think Derek maybe mentioned it he was like guys
26:45
you need to take
26:47
the time to show the amazing things that you're doing like you get too focused
26:52
on the next thing
26:54
that you're gonna showcase and you're gonna go do and like I totally agree that
26:58
is marketing
26:59
helpful in that kind of endeavor to share wins I mean to Brian's question well
27:05
that's I think
27:06
what you're meant like Derek mentioned I think his exact quote was he was
27:09
talking to the group
27:10
today right and I think it was yesterday actually he said you know what you
27:12
guys are awesome a
27:13
problem solving you can take anything and you can use you know different
27:17
technologies and different
27:18
workflows to solve problems but what you suck at is telling people about it
27:22
right right you're
27:23
telling that story what happened you just move on to the next problem and you
27:26
know we're trying to
27:27
do that as a I think industry right slow down and tell those stories and you
27:31
know to your point
27:32
you know you got that you have to have a group that that that really brings all
27:37
of those together
27:38
and I think we do do a pretty good job with that especially with Turner you
27:42
know we're 12,000
27:43
employees and have you know projects all over the country and so I think that
27:47
we do that
27:48
nationally well and I think we do that locally well you know it's just things
27:52
move so fast where
27:54
you know unless we stop and talk about it and that's like our department or
27:58
really any other
27:58
department whether it's precon or VDC or anyone you really just have to stop
28:02
and enjoy the kind
28:03
of the wins and make sure it's documented right and wish we could do more but I
28:08
think we're doing
28:09
a pretty good job yeah well I wouldn't say it's don't exist right but no it
28:13
definitely does and
28:14
when I was an ad of that one you mentioned this earlier I was about to say
28:16
something but cultural
28:18
like culture here is awesome and like when you speak of our marketing
28:21
department all I think of
28:23
is fun and I think of like whenever we're working on pursuits not only with
28:27
marketing but with
28:27
other teams and whatever we have a lot of fun and I think VDC has an
28:30
opportunity obviously in
28:32
the professional atmosphere you're never supposed to say something that you
28:34
spend money on it's fun
28:35
but this is fun and we produce results and I think that is so huge in that
28:39
culture around having fun
28:41
and what we in our team here locally bring to the table of all of our partners
28:45
in the field
28:46
and marketing and VD whatever we just like to have a good time you're telling
28:50
me you get paid to have
28:51
fun is that what I'm looking at? Crazy content no but I'm so serious like here
28:57
locally we just
28:58
have a good time and we get results with it and that's what makes it so much
29:03
better and so like
29:04
when we are working on these pursuits putting in all this time that everybody
29:08
does and that
29:09
everybody probably at home listening is like I put in so much time I don't get
29:12
recognition
29:13
whatever blah blah blah totally hear it it's real organic it's organic it comes
29:18
natural I think that's
29:20
let's just comes back with trust right not only in individuals but our
29:23
leaderships or different
29:24
departments we definitely don't look at anything that we do whether it's
29:28
pursuit whether it's
29:29
operations whether it's you know a new client you know we're giving them
29:32
everything we have all
29:34
the time and we're not you know looking at a small project big project right we
29:37
're we're gonna
29:38
have that same approach at some level with everything we do I got some
29:43
questions but I don't
29:45
want to okay you guys don't hear that buzzing no this is this your brain
29:48
explodes dude it is
29:49
my brain like oh my gosh is there a bee in here I want to talk about I want to
29:56
talk about Paul
29:57
for a little bit because he kind of touched on it today when he came to present
30:01
to us and I want
30:03
to hear from your guys's perspective his let's just call it catalyst moments or
30:08
his transition
30:09
moments that are like oh I maybe have been thinking about this maybe a little
30:14
bit wrong of maybe just
30:16
bringing you guys in to show the shiny object to win the job and then you know
30:20
kind of move on from
30:22
and you could clearly tell today that is a thing of the past with him and I'm
30:27
curious to hear your
30:28
guys's perspectives because there's a lot more of that story but walk walk us
30:31
through a little bit of
30:33
like what you guys have seen from your perspective and winning the Paul over in
30:39
your guys's team's
30:40
dynamic does that make sense yeah I mean so I'll take this first because Cole
30:45
came on you heard
30:45
him his nickname is the future right Paul was the call was the future the DeL
30:49
orean everyone on the
30:50
call you still wonder where you park it yeah it's so see it hovers above the
30:54
office it's part two no
30:57
joke that's his nickname is the future so yeah but Paul was like I mentioned
31:00
before he was one of
31:01
those people that you know really looked at VDC is just a clash detection
31:05
coordination tool and
31:06
I think his aha moment was when he saw how we were reducing risks right he saw
31:11
as a leader in the
31:12
business that you know because that's really our biggest I mean we're a general
31:15
contractor really
31:16
our job is not to build things is to manage risks that you know as we're
31:19
building things right so
31:20
when he saw how VDC and technology and this was I think a specific adrenaline
31:25
pull example when
31:25
we're mapping it and they were we're blasting and you know validated a 750,000
31:31
dollar change order
31:32
that shouldn't existed right and he saw right then and there that realistically
31:36
he heard him say
31:37
we saved a hundred and fifty thousand dollars a thing to his eyes that paid for
31:41
VDC for the next
31:42
decade right so if we could do that on every single thing that we do not just
31:47
withdrawn validation
31:48
but reality capture and coordination and he I think that was when he really
31:52
realized that
31:53
one it's this is something it's a value add but I think two it's he's the
31:57
person that interacts
31:58
with clients every day that's that's one of his main jobs and I think just the
32:02
industry is talking
32:03
about technology more they're talking about they're asking us hey what does
32:06
your VDC department
32:07
look like what does your innovation department look like and if Paul doesn't
32:10
have a good answer
32:11
for that then you know we're already you know having to fight from the bottom
32:16
so I think him
32:16
realizing that he's constantly here consistently hearing clients talk about and
32:20
wanting to know
32:21
more what we're doing as a company I think he realized as well he needed to
32:25
kind of educate
32:25
himself on you know what's out there and Susanna Gilles she's our business
32:29
development manager
32:30
she you know the same way right she she hears from clients all the time she
32:33
always reaches out
32:34
and says hey this client asked about what we're doing with the robotics what
32:37
can you what should
32:38
I tell them so I think them hearing from clients a lot more of they're they've
32:42
been inquiring about
32:43
our innovations and different technologies and what local resources we have
32:47
what national
32:48
resources we have I think made him not not just him but just really leadership
32:53
in general really
32:54
understand they need to make sure VDC and innovations more involved in the
32:58
business yeah and the
32:59
only thing I have to add to that is not only like kind of in that example a
33:04
reactive state where
33:05
we had documented something and gone back to it and referred oh found out we
33:09
750,000 dollars
33:10
don't pay for but when we started pushing him proactive solutions that were pro
33:16
actively you know
33:17
reality capture laser scanning ability and finding you know bust all over the
33:20
place we're trying to
33:21
sliver a building in a downtown state like finding this things proactive was a
33:26
game changer as well
33:27
I'm assuming because reactive is has great and all proactive whoa like we can
33:32
take that to climb
33:33
be like we're proactive on your job site that's why we're here before we even
33:38
started like we're
33:39
proactive before we've even stepped foot on your job and showing you some of
33:43
these things and I
33:44
kind of wanted to talk about the you know going from that reactive state to a
33:49
proactive state like
33:51
what is the effort added during a construction progress right so whether you're
33:57
walking weekly
33:58
or flying weekly becomes more of a proactive approach as opposed to I'm only
34:03
going to document
34:04
once I didn't wall like can you talk more about like the the magnitude like the
34:09
more the more
34:11
effort versus that like higher return of outcome almost like the exponential
34:15
value that comes when
34:16
you're being proactive when thinking about reality capture rather than it being
34:20
a oh it's just going
34:21
to be a one-time thing you're talking about the thing that's the hardest to
34:24
track the thing that
34:25
we didn't do yeah because we because yeah yeah yeah it's a joke question oh
34:30
yeah I mean that's
34:31
and that's something hard to prove right but it's going back to documenting
34:35
those small wins right
34:36
and whenever we can say hey on this project core and shell parking garage you
34:40
think it's a simple
34:41
build but we just did this you know one last year and this is kind of what how
34:45
we you know either
34:47
whether it's 360 walkthroughs whether it's in wall validation whether it's you
34:51
know validating
34:51
some change orders whatever that is when other people can see a similar job
34:55
that utilizes the
34:56
same workflow it's a easy easy I want to call it a sell or even it's a easy
35:00
mindset this easy culture
35:02
to say hey we should do this all the time and to your original question Brian
35:08
like going back to
35:09
do we do it once a day once a week it just takes that first time right if we
35:14
start early I think we
35:15
all know every time we laser skin something every time we do some sort of
35:18
validation every time that
35:20
we compare a model to the field we will I guarantee you we will find something
35:24
wrong it might be
35:25
small things might be big things combination but I guarantee you will find
35:30
probably dozens of
35:31
things they're just sitting there waiting to be discovered and so once you do
35:34
it once and I think
35:36
one of the projects called remember Bobby Faye at Bartless he caught us the
35:40
drug dealers because
35:42
we would come in we would say hey Bobby this is like a six-year-old you know it
35:45
's super smart
35:46
it's a super looks like Santa Claus right it's a super smart guy but really
35:50
another topic keep the time but he literally would come into some testing and
35:57
you know maybe
35:58
some R&D on his job because it was a big job and we would come in and say Bobby
36:01
there's like
36:02
15 things that we found wrong we need some time to review with you and we did
36:06
and he was like
36:07
okay I want you here Tuesday and Fridays for the next six months to one of
36:11
these I'm like whoa whoa
36:13
whoa whoa this you know things cost money we need to talk about with the
36:16
project team if we can get
36:17
this in and so he would always cause us cause us their call us the drug dealers
36:21
because we would
36:22
come in tempt him with something and then say sorry we can't come back and do
36:25
it because the
36:26
project didn't budge it for it early enough you guys are gateway drugs yeah
36:29
like
36:29
but yeah give me a little bit of that just a little bit then we take it away
36:32
right it's like
36:33
a teaser but I mean that's kind of how it is a lot of times when a project and
36:37
we use that example
36:38
a lot because when a project doesn't involve us early when the buyout we're not
36:42
buying BIM right
36:43
we're not buying you know how we're going to implement technology right early
36:46
on you know that's
36:47
being reactive right that's hey I think we got a laser scanner can we come scan
36:51
this wall I think
36:51
the field you know made it a little crooked we're like well sure we can but who
36:54
's going to pay for it
36:55
I think the other thing to add the last thing to add to that is conviction like
37:00
when I've seen
37:01
bad things happen on a job site and I know as a VDC guy I can fix them today by
37:06
looking at a model
37:07
or capturing this or whatever that conviction is like what makes us do it
37:13
before and then take it
37:14
to them and get them on that gateway drug we're referring to yeah yeah totally
37:19
in just
37:20
poor Santa Claus he's just on the gateway drugs well he's retired now oh thank
37:23
you
37:24
yeah I better not be well he's he's like calm if you need me but you better pay
37:28
me
37:28
he's more of a consultant super so so now he's a VDC manager oh basically yeah
37:32
he's not a podcast but right yeah that is one of my favorite stories they
37:37
really because that
37:38
and that's like Paul to Paul you know he been in it today when he was speaking
37:41
that you know four
37:42
five years ago he was didn't understand it because you don't know what you don
37:45
't know and again this
37:46
goes back to how we started this conversation right it's it's about having
37:50
trust in our leadership
37:51
starting from the top down and not trying to find every superintendent every
37:55
and find some small
37:56
use case which is important but those small use cases won't happen until we get
38:00
we involved
38:01
early right in the pre-con and the good thing is when we're involved in the
38:05
presentation and we were
38:07
you know we contribute to that when guess what the client's expecting us to do
38:11
that now yeah hey I
38:12
gave you this job because you told me how you know how your quality is going to
38:16
be you know out
38:16
the roof because you guys are going to scan all the time do you think you know
38:19
our own team is
38:20
going to pull scanning out of a budget you know when the client's expecting it
38:23
so it's you know
38:25
its early involvement is possible and really there's no reason why VDC
38:30
technology some sort of
38:32
innovation some sort of way we're going to build the project it digitally
38:35
shouldn't be involved
38:36
instead once we decide we're going to attack a project I don't know why we
38:41
wouldn't start talking
38:43
about that digital twin and let's start replicating it digitally to see what
38:46
kind of information we
38:47
could pull from it early on and not only and sorry again last thing at least
38:50
not only mentioning
38:52
two earlier you don't have to find big issues all you got to do is take a drone
38:58
out fly it
38:59
figure out how much rock is on our ramp at this project this bobby is a bobby
39:04
phase story yeah
39:06
find out how much rock is in his hole right now that he wants to excavate just
39:10
by find a drone
39:11
once and next thing you know he's asking about can I use this a drone to do to
39:16
answer this question
39:16
for me and then that's every other week now we got him hooked in right he's
39:21
literally just
39:22
took a uh a ex or a backfill quantity for him we gave it to him next thing you
39:26
know every single
39:27
week he's like can I draw an answer this question for me yeah sure yeah and I
39:30
don't think it gets
39:31
talked about enough it's just the small winds uh that eventually tip the scale
39:36
really quickly I mean
39:37
you throw pennies on a scale and you don't see a lot of movement it goes back
39:39
to the patient's part
39:40
right and it's tricky because you you get weary right I think especially our
39:46
teams we're like
39:47
gosh why why don't you see it how can you not see this and yeah you just get
39:51
weary really quickly
39:52
and if you don't have those small winds or if you don't talk about them like
39:56
what Brian said
39:57
and like sharing them around of like we are doing good things and like we are
40:00
making an impact and
40:01
we are having those things yeah you can just get tired of it yeah I'd be kind
40:05
of curious I mean
40:06
I still am kind of trying to figure out my my own mathematical formula for
40:10
setting a team up
40:11
for success whether they're like these trigger points where okay you just did
40:15
your first 360 walk
40:16
when it's processing the first thing you're going to do is add external field
40:22
teams at your design
40:23
team add these like almost like a checklist of things that I believe attribute
40:27
to just a higher
40:29
retention rate of like a higher return of value right like the first time I'm
40:33
going to show you
40:33
is going to be like the first time I'm going to have you walk maybe a concrete
40:37
pour or an
40:38
wall inspection even though it might be too late on your job just getting that
40:42
time to value down
40:43
as much as possible like what are some things that you will do when you're
40:46
setting up a project
40:48
team with something like are there any like small little hacks that you're like
40:51
oh if I do this at
40:53
the beginning I know that they will get more value out of this I mean I think
40:56
the big big obvious
40:58
thing is before we touch a job site before we mobilize put a fence up take a
41:03
tree down
41:04
you know get in there and get that walk right because nobody's there on the job
41:08
site yet right
41:08
they're still talking about the job from either another state here in the local
41:13
office they're not
41:13
there so if we can provide a platform for them to talk about the job while they
41:17
're before they get
41:18
there one that gives them you know that expectation you know that that familiar
41:23
or that that they're
41:24
more familiar with what the site is about without being there and on the back
41:27
side of that we might
41:29
use that you know a year and a half later when we're turning the job over and
41:31
the client's trying
41:32
to give us a change order for tearing up a curb that was already cracked and
41:35
busted before we
41:36
started right so and everything in between right when you have that that
41:40
constant data and I've
41:41
always been a big believer on especially with 360 walks and any kind of easy
41:45
low hanging way to
41:46
capture a lot of areas quickly you got to do it often and you got to make you
41:51
got to do it when
41:52
it's when it's when it's important and you have to do it in a way that people
41:56
are using it and if
41:56
they're not using it and you know the value of it it's it's such an obvious
42:00
value that if you just
42:01
show them this and take maybe a little time there's a couple people that we
42:05
work with it right that
42:06
we almost have to kind of say hey here's where you put your password in here's
42:09
how you go to the
42:11
calendar right here's how you go back to this date it seems pretty simple but
42:15
you know once you get
42:16
that first a little bit of training in again there's it's such a big value to
42:21
be able to see the
42:22
site without being there so whatever you say is that the hack is really like
42:25
setting the job up
42:26
by documenting it before you even earlier the better yeah the better yeah and
42:31
just giving you a
42:32
place to collaborate from as if it's like hey like this is where we're all
42:36
going to move into it's
42:37
kind of like before you move into a house or an apartment or somewhere it's
42:40
like let's just make
42:41
sure we get this thing all on the same page everyone and I mean to do that
42:44
obviously on the ground
42:46
doing a walk makes the most sense but even from the air too right I mean yeah
42:49
touch on that and maybe
42:50
I mean we have a lot of clients that again especially here in Tennessee and
42:54
really the US
42:55
you know the big boom is like battery plants right and most of these clients
43:00
that are building
43:00
these battery plants their their technology their equipment is not even in the
43:04
same country so
43:05
one project specifically we're doing you know flights as often as possible we
43:08
're doing walks
43:09
we're asking them you know or asking the team a day or two before what's going
43:13
to be the topic
43:13
of conversation so when you have clients specifically they're not local I mean
43:17
it's just it just
43:18
behooves us not to do that but the big value is is that you know pictures worth
43:22
a thousand words
43:23
and when you don't speak the same language it's worth a million right so us
43:27
being able to do that
43:28
just basic capture right and sharing it with them I mean it's just priceless to
43:33
when you're not on
43:34
the side so yeah cool I'm curious to hear your hack of setting a job up
43:39
successfully or like what
43:41
what task really does differentiate them to to be successful or not any tasks
43:46
that is a simple task
43:48
that's the answer I mean and I'm saying that joking away but serious like
43:52
if you want the design team to be involved you got to send them the invite like
43:57
okay that's really
43:59
simple send them the invite at the beginning of the job teach them show them
44:03
they're going to take
44:04
it and they're going to run with it from there and they may use it for
44:05
something completely different
44:06
you may learn from them but you have to invite them to see where it goes same
44:10
thing with the
44:10
clients like next you know we're getting invite oh I want my mother in law to
44:15
be of course we don't
44:16
get that far but you know they want to see it they want to show it off and so
44:20
number one in
44:20
the people in the platform the first place where they can see all this is
44:24
crucial but it's so simple
44:25
and it's so often so skipped like the amount of times that we don't have x
44:29
person in there and
44:30
they're like why is this why are they not already and trendably and that that's
44:35
I think that's the
44:36
the first part is is keeping it simple and the other thing too is and not to
44:39
negate the amount
44:40
of effort that y'all put into how to's but again my production background etc I
44:46
love recording
44:47
the super simple videos regardless of its 30 seconds or 10 minutes those move a
44:52
lot of boundaries
44:53
out of the way like hey guys by the way on our ex-site on our share site go
44:58
here's a folder with 10
44:59
videos covering the 10 subjects that are going to affect your job vc wise the
45:03
most specifically in
45:04
one of those re-re-out of capture so yeah yeah co-communicates I can't tell
45:08
many times instead of a
45:09
screenshot most people would send a markup screen recording he'll voice over
45:13
okay this this is and
45:14
this and that's how he communicates so yeah it's fun for me it's very effective
45:19
have you started
45:19
thinking about that knowledge exchange by project type like your you know your
45:25
hospital projects
45:26
and that px getting some type of different deliverable of information as
45:29
opposed to obviously like
45:30
your small fiddouts etc well man I think that project type really is one of the
45:35
most important
45:36
things right not really what we're building right but what kind of building
45:39
where you know is it a
45:40
core and shell garage is a TI is it a data center is an hospital is it you know
45:45
something to speed
45:47
I think well Andy Davis he's our general manager VP at a Memphis he always
45:52
describes it like a
45:53
tripod right you only can have two of the three you have your schedule quality
45:57
and cost you can
45:58
have all three right so what's what two things are those three is important to
46:03
that client for
46:03
example an airport right they really don't care too much about cost right they
46:07
care about schedule
46:08
and they care about quality right whereas a parking garage for a client in
46:12
downtown that wants to
46:14
earn return on their investment and get that thing built as quickly as possible
46:16
they could give a
46:17
crap less about quality they really care about schedule and cost right so
46:22
depending on what two
46:23
of those three things are important to that specific project type I think it's
46:27
a good way to kind of
46:28
get started and you know anytime you don't have cost of all it's always easier
46:33
but most of the
46:33
times cost is the major driving factor and that's even when we win or lose jobs
46:37
right it's we could
46:38
be you know the most professional them have the best tools the best staff the
46:42
best you know culture
46:43
but if not if we're not the cheapest we have to overcome that hump and you know
46:47
and show them why
46:48
we're expensive why you're you're getting a premium here and guess what things
46:52
aren't free
46:52
so if we're giving a premium deliverable you know the clients typically going
46:56
to pay that premium
46:57
price and so going back to the original question and what we talked about was
47:01
project type is
47:02
it drives everything we're going to put in a much bigger effort for a health
47:06
care client
47:06
for certain tools certain reality capture certain documentation than we would
47:10
for something else
47:11
but at the same time if we have a parking garage it's going in a downtown area
47:15
we'll probably have
47:15
a heavy reality capture around existing utilities making sure our blasting you
47:20
know or we're not
47:20
over blasting things like that but once the structures that we probably won't
47:24
do too much
47:25
documentation of you know a parking garage so project type you know different
47:29
times of the
47:30
projects always going to drive that that implementation of certain types of
47:33
technologies yeah and the
47:35
only thing I was going to add on to that I don't know why I thought about this
47:38
but
47:38
I like honesty and it's okay to say no like there's this whole theory that we
47:43
always have to say
47:44
yes and make it work and I'm totally against that like you can you can say no
47:48
like this is not the
47:49
option or this is not the best way or no it's not going to work I'm sorry that
47:54
has empowered us a
47:55
lot and built that honesty because they know they're going to get the honest
47:58
answer so like
47:58
saying yes isn't always the best well I like what you know mentioned it before
48:03
but
48:04
when my mentor's John Gromo's he always said care if you just approach it with
48:08
don't tell me no
48:08
tell me yes if so if I want something or if we need something like I'm not like
48:15
I'm not going
48:15
to tell you no I'm going to tell you yes if x y and z is done you're a lot
48:18
nicer than I am
48:19
why do you say no no is never there if you give me these things right so
48:24
but yeah that's a great point that we we were very realistic and even some of
48:29
our budgets we
48:30
provide our own teams might be pretty high for certain technologies innovation
48:35
that we think
48:35
we should use but they're realistic right so um but yeah gotta be honest yes I
48:41
bet I do
48:43
want to land the point here a little bit this is I mean we could honestly just
48:46
keep talking for
48:47
days uh the last question or just a question in general that I've kind of been
48:52
stewing around is
48:53
like what what do you feel like are the biggest misconceptions at that like
48:57
exact level of your
48:59
guys's team and how are you guys addressing it what are ways in which you've
49:04
kind of overcome it
49:05
like I didn't really hear any specifically from Paul but maybe early days of
49:11
what some
49:12
of the misconceptions that he had um and how are you guys really leveraging
49:16
that trust now to kind
49:17
of continue to build off of that I think the biggest mix it's real simple I
49:21
think it everyone
49:23
used to think that these types of technologies and VDC was expensive right they
49:27
everyone thinks
49:28
that unless you have a billion dollar campus or a mega project that you can't
49:33
have you know innovation
49:35
and VDC and technologies on a project we can apply 360 walkthroughs we can
49:39
apply you know drone
49:40
flights really easy things that we do all the time to a 10 million dollar you
49:44
know SPO job just as
49:47
easy as we can and bring the same value as we can to a billion dollar campus so
49:51
I think our leadership
49:53
and I think the industry is a whole things that you only can apply VDC and
49:57
those type of efforts to
49:59
bigger jobs and that's just simply not the case yeah and that comes with
50:03
leadership support because
50:04
with that comes all these nuances of trying to recover cost and and all these
50:09
different things
50:10
that allow us those opportunities to do those on smart jobs and so cost is cost
50:15
is definitely not
50:16
always it was or what everybody thought was a hindrance and I and I truly back
50:21
that and believe
50:21
that as well yeah um one of the other things too I was trying to remember the
50:25
exact quote from
50:26
Ben and from from nationals down to us is stop being just visualizers or we're
50:32
not just visualizers
50:34
you know we're builders we're result driven and I think a lot of people pre all
50:40
of this discussion
50:42
thought that we were just visualizers that we're just providing a 40 animation
50:46
to do presentation
50:47
and when behold when we put that extra effort in there and we start doing
50:51
proactive start with
50:52
reactive and then and put those points out there and start talking to the
50:56
proactive points that
50:59
it's easy to go from there without question so yeah we're construction company
51:04
not a
51:05
drone company not a laser scanning company right we're builders and there's all
51:10
kinds of tools out
51:12
there that that I think we all know and it's just going to get again easier and
51:15
easier in the industry
51:16
to uh to know that you can't build buildings nowadays without technology
51:20
innovation and if you do
51:22
you're you're they're not building them well or you're not building them at all
51:26
because technology is
51:29
is going to be here way way beyond um this year next year it's not going to
51:34
have some boom right
51:35
it's going to continue to just drive how we build things um yeah we got to be
51:40
right there in the
51:41
front to to continue to do it I was going to say you could go back to your
51:44
tripod now and see if
51:45
you don't build in a digital way you're going to lose one of those legs to
51:48
those tripods yeah you
51:49
can't have all three I don't know one project that has a great schedule where
51:52
they'd be able to
51:53
super fast that they built it really really cheap and they had great quality
51:58
yeah you have to lose
51:59
one of those and and hopefully one day we could have all three uh but I think
52:03
technology is really
52:04
kind of maybe not letting all three of those uh or sorry not letting one of
52:10
those be the thing
52:11
that tips it right like technology really is kind of the this is stupid but the
52:15
thing at the bottom
52:16
of the tripod that like keeps all three of those together right like it keeps
52:20
the three legs
52:21
connected in some way like you think about schedule how technology helps with
52:24
that you think about
52:25
quality clearly like that's where technology comes in and you think about cost
52:29
it's like hey like
52:30
these are preventing rework costs and different other costs like it's just
52:33
engine I've heard that
52:34
analogy many many times and and I think that the disconnect or the second level
52:38
that doesn't get
52:39
talked about is how technology truly can truly can actually help all three of
52:43
those improve
52:44
at the same time I mean I just think the very first example of why drones on
52:49
the job that we were on
52:50
just took off because I was like guys like wait a second here we've always had
52:54
to give up one of
52:55
these and in this aerial inspection that we're going to do really checks all
52:59
three of those boxes
53:01
like let's just kind of sit a little bit that's not common and so with that
53:06
like how do we take this
53:09
into more farther ground and I love that analogy and I've always loved it
53:13
because it really brings
53:14
that kind of sense of like truth and realism to situations but I just don't
53:18
think it often gets
53:19
talked about of how technology really is turning that corner and saying hey
53:23
maybe I can help all
53:24
three of these things it is should right it you should not like technology
53:28
shouldn't look at or
53:30
it shouldn't be a misconception that hey we're going to use laser skiing on a
53:33
project it's going
53:33
to cost us money it should be hey we're going to use laser scanning on a
53:36
project how we're going
53:37
to save so much money because we're going to find all this stuff first right
53:40
and that's a great
53:41
point you know it's in today's world you typically had to lose one of those
53:45
three but I mean technology
53:47
whether it's drone, laser scanning, mock-ups, you know renderings whatever that
53:51
is it should help
53:52
all all three legs and help hold them together and I just don't think our
53:55
industry has seen
53:56
something that's come in to address all three of those and I think that's what
54:00
is really unique
54:01
about our roles what we've been able to do how we're helping more teams
54:05
operations marketing all
54:06
these other like hey you've been told that pick two hey I'm going to flip the
54:12
script here a little
54:12
bit and say what if I can help in all three and that's just yeah I think it it
54:19
changes people's
54:19
mindset because they're like wait I've never had that like I've never been able
54:23
to tackle all three
54:23
of those things together man that's uh that's that synergy that organic team I
54:28
think it's not just
54:29
VDC it's not just our clients our owners our executives once you have everyone
54:33
trusting each
54:34
other right I mean there's no reason why we couldn't do that because and we
54:38
should right so challenge
54:40
accepted there challenge accepted well guys this has been super fun uh honestly
54:45
if you're
54:47
listening and I hope you had as many takeaways as I've already started to stew
54:51
around if you haven't
54:52
connected out with Cole and Gary on LinkedIn or just even through our channels
54:56
to please do it
54:57
honestly you guys have been just an encouragement for not only both Brian and I
55:01
but our entire team
55:03
on the Drona Point team of just learning continuing to build the partnership
55:07
that we've had not only
55:08
just from a business side of just we were just talking about what we were doing
55:11
last week in
55:11
Gary and it's like oh dude it's awesome like that sounds like a ton of fun we
55:14
have enough time to
55:15
talk about that I wish I wish I wish you know I will uh but it's just fun and
55:19
and I would just
55:20
encourage all the folks that are listening and tuning in it's just like guys if
55:23
you're not
55:24
connecting with these people that are sparking a curiosity or have a question
55:28
with like man we
55:30
shouldn't be sitting here talking about this stuff like take it from this
55:32
conversation find ways to
55:34
get the questions answered that you have and really try to connect with these
55:37
folks I could
55:38
flip it right back right if anyone listening is not touching out or reaching
55:41
out with you guys I
55:42
mean that just helps us right because you guys have been such a great partner
55:49
and and I think that
55:50
it's not only a partnership right we're we're talking about you know the next
55:53
couple conferences
55:55
five years down the road what are we going to do then so and just uh yeah can
55:59
can ask for a better
55:59
partner and and still features bright yeah it is really fun bright any any
56:03
closing thoughts
56:04
nope let's go get some uh let's go down the bed let's go on a Broadway and uh i
56:08
'll get talkin
56:08
Nashville i gotta get my hat steamed so we'll get you a matching business yep
56:13
bright doesn't
56:13
think he's his hat steamed we bought his hat literally as the store's closing
56:17
and they're like hey you're
56:18
gonna have to come back and get steamed a brand's like steamed what is that
56:20
what is that like steamed
56:21
my clothes like like yeah i was thinking like chipotle burrito but i'm learning
56:25
i'm learning how to
56:26
go to coves uh no no yeah i think it was another hush boot bar yeah it's like
56:33
boot bar yeah it was
56:34
boot bar the only one opened at like three am yeah yeah clearly they had the
56:37
selection that we needed
56:38
they were targeting your like yeah people that probably don't care if their
56:42
hats are steamed or
56:42
not pretty much yes sir do you know about the steam no cool well then just get
56:48
out of here because
56:49
it's time to leave uh well fellas thank you again this has been super fun uh
56:53
would just encourage
56:54
anyone who's listening to please do connect with these guys on LinkedIn it's it
56:57
's just really cool
56:58
to see the stuff that you guys are working on uh and and thank you for making
57:01
the time thank you for
57:02
hosting i mean as we're sitting here in this amazing space uh keep doing some
57:06
great stuff and
57:06
we'll we'll try to help you guys along the way awesome appreciate it thanks
57:10
thanks team make sure
57:12
to subscribe to build different on apple podcasts spotify and anywhere you
57:15
listen to podcasts let's
57:17
build this community together