Manic Energy Podcast
Twenty years of working alongside someone teaches you things you never expected to learn. This episode is one I've been wanting to do for a while. Dave Hokanson is my business partner, and we've been working together for almost two decades, but somehow there were still pieces of his story I'd never heard. So Katie Brooks and I sat down with him to dig into how he got here, from a kid fixing snowmobiles in his driveway to where we are today running LSC together. Dave's path wasn't a straight line. Mechanical drafting, a summer at Marvin Windows throwing two by fours at hurricane test windows, then back to school for industrial engineering right here in Duluth. He landed at LSC as employee number six after four rounds of interviews, and what followed was almost a decade in the field on massive pipeline projects, then nine years embedded with a client before coming back to LSC full time. We also got into the harder stuff. What it actually felt like buying this company together. The deal that fell apart on a Friday night and somehow turned into the deal that worked. What ownership means when you're young and don't fully understand what you signed up for. And what we're hoping this company looks like long after we're not the ones running it. KEY THEMES AND TAKEAWAYS Dave's early influences, his dad's work ethic, the family machine shop background, and how that shaped his approach to every job since The reality of being an embedded consultant for nine years and what that taught him about relationships and trust The story of our management buyout, including the moment the original deal fell through and how that turned into something better What it actually feels like to have skin in the game as an owner, even when you don't fully understand it yet Why employee ownership matters to both of us and what we're working toward for our team Why growing a company profitably is so much harder than just growing it OUR FAVORITE QUOTES "Read the user manual. Figure it out yourself." "There's no real way I can go manufacture that situation with integrity. It's got to come to you." "It doesn't matter how small it is, it's still a piece of the business and ownership in the business." "The energy we put into it is going to be relative to the benefit we get out of it." "I think it's really important to have perspective on what success looks like, because you can only say I just want to survive for so long before you need a vision and a plan." CHAPTER MARKERS 01:03 Dave's early years and the pull toward mechanical things 03:22 Marvin Windows and the hurricane test lab 05:27 Becoming employee number six at LSC 13:31 Nine years embedded and what it taught him about trust 24:29 The buyout, the Friday night call, and how it almost didn't happen 40:00 The Freeze and Nichols conversation and rethinking legacy 51:38 What's ahead for LSC and the people behind it YOUR TURN This week's reflection: think about someone you've worked alongside for years. Is there a piece of their story you've never asked about? What might you learn if you did? LINKS & MENTIONS Lake Superior Consulting – https://www.lsconsulting.com/ [https://www.lsconsulting.com/] 🔥 If this episode sparked something for you, please follow the show, leave a review, or share it with a friend MB01LWIBQH0ANYK
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