The Why We Build Podcast!

Upstream Profit Protection: Why Great Projects Start Long Before Construction

43 min · 22. kesä 2026
jakson Upstream Profit Protection: Why Great Projects Start Long Before Construction kansikuva

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Too often in remodeling, profit leaks are blamed on the construction phase. A delayed material order, a missing detail, an indecisive client, or a subcontractor waiting for answers can quickly derail a project. But what if those costly problems actually began long before construction started? In this episode of The Why We Build Podcast, Greg sits down with veteran designer and business coach Betsy Brandenburg to explore the concept of Upstream Profit Protection and why the design phase may be the most powerful risk management tool in your business. Betsy shares how incomplete design, poor communication, and unclear processes create downstream chaos, and how intentional planning can dramatically improve profitability, client experience, and team alignment. In This Episode, You'll Learn: * Why incomplete design is one of the biggest causes of lost profit in remodeling projects. * How "profit bleed" often starts months before construction begins. * The hidden costs of allowances, delayed decisions, and long-lead items. * Why fully completed design packages reduce stress for both production teams and clients. * How design-build companies can improve collaboration between design and production. * The importance of structured handoff meetings and buildability reviews. * Why treating design as an investment rather than overhead changes everything. * How visible processes build trust and reduce homeowner anxiety.

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53 jaksot

jakson Upstream Profit Protection: Why Great Projects Start Long Before Construction kansikuva

Upstream Profit Protection: Why Great Projects Start Long Before Construction

Too often in remodeling, profit leaks are blamed on the construction phase. A delayed material order, a missing detail, an indecisive client, or a subcontractor waiting for answers can quickly derail a project. But what if those costly problems actually began long before construction started? In this episode of The Why We Build Podcast, Greg sits down with veteran designer and business coach Betsy Brandenburg to explore the concept of Upstream Profit Protection and why the design phase may be the most powerful risk management tool in your business. Betsy shares how incomplete design, poor communication, and unclear processes create downstream chaos, and how intentional planning can dramatically improve profitability, client experience, and team alignment. In This Episode, You'll Learn: * Why incomplete design is one of the biggest causes of lost profit in remodeling projects. * How "profit bleed" often starts months before construction begins. * The hidden costs of allowances, delayed decisions, and long-lead items. * Why fully completed design packages reduce stress for both production teams and clients. * How design-build companies can improve collaboration between design and production. * The importance of structured handoff meetings and buildability reviews. * Why treating design as an investment rather than overhead changes everything. * How visible processes build trust and reduce homeowner anxiety.

22. kesä 202643 min
jakson YOUR WARRANTY IS A PROFIT CENTER — YOU JUST DON’T KNOW IT YET kansikuva

YOUR WARRANTY IS A PROFIT CENTER — YOU JUST DON’T KNOW IT YET

Callbacks and warranty work are a fact of life in remodeling. Something breaks six months after a job closes, you send a crew back on your dime, and chalk it up to the cost of doing business. But what if that cost could actually build wealth instead of drain it? Tim Byrd has spent more than 30 years helping home service businesses do exactly that. As founder and CEO of Warranty RE, he’s brought the concept of captive reinsurance — the same financial engineering large corporations use to manage risk and accumulate capital — to remodelers, HVAC companies, plumbers, electricians, and every trade in between. In this episode, Tim breaks down how you can own your own warranty company, eliminate the third-party middleman, stop paying premiums into someone else’s pocket, and start building a capital resource that grows tax-advantaged inside a company you control. He also gets into succession planning, enterprise value, and the mindset shifts that separate business owners who drift from those who build. Website: warranty-re.com [http://warranty-re.com] Email: tim@warranty-re.com [tim@warranty-re.com]

15. kesä 202632 min
jakson Building the Future Workforce: Why Shop Class Still Matters with Noah Hughes kansikuva

Building the Future Workforce: Why Shop Class Still Matters with Noah Hughes

In an industry constantly talking about the labor shortage, it's easy to focus on the problem and miss the people creating solutions. This week, Greg sits down with Noah Hughes, a carpentry and Career & Technical Education (CTE) teacher at Caroline High School in Virginia, to discuss the critical role shop classes play in developing the next generation of skilled trades professionals. Noah shares his unconventional journey from framing houses, trim carpentry, and running construction businesses to becoming a high school teacher. Along the way, he discovered a new mission: helping students see the trades as a viable, rewarding career path while creating meaningful connections between classrooms and the construction industry. The conversation explores the misconceptions surrounding the trades, the importance of making shop class visible, and why builders, remodelers, and industry leaders need to play an active role in supporting local CTE programs. Noah also shares practical ways companies can get involved, whether through guest speaking, mentoring, internships, or simply showing students what a successful career in construction can look like. If you've ever wondered where the next generation of builders will come from, this episode offers both hope and a challenge: stop waiting for someone else to solve the workforce problem and become part of the solution. In This Episode * Why Noah left contracting to become a high school carpentry teacher * How modern CTE and shop programs are preparing students for real careers * The biggest misconceptions parents and educators still have about the trades * Why students are eager to learn from industry professionals * The importance of industry partnerships and community involvement * How social media is helping make shop class visible again * Lessons learned from building Habitat for Humanity homes with students * The role AI may play in the future of construction education * Why companies that invest in young people today will lead the industry tomorrow * Practical ways builders and remodelers can support local trade education programs Resources & Links * Follow Noah Hughes on Instagram: @we_learn_building * Listen to the Four Man Podcast * Learn more about Career & Technical Education (CTE) programs in your local community * Connect with your local high school's shop or vocational program Connect With The Why We Build Podcast If you enjoyed this episode, please subscribe, leave a review, and share it with a builder, remodeler, educator, or industry leader who cares about developing the next generation of skilled trades professionals. The future workforce isn't someone else's responsibility. It's ours. And it starts by showing up. #WhyWeBuild #ConstructionLeadership #SkilledTrades #CTE #TradeEducation #WorkforceDevelopment #ConstructionCareers #RemodelingIndustry #ShopClass #FutureBuilders

8. kesä 202644 min
jakson The Cost of Keeping the Wrong Person kansikuva

The Cost of Keeping the Wrong Person

In this episode of The Why We Build Podcast, Greg tackles one of the hardest leadership decisions in remodeling: knowing when it is time to move on from an underperforming team member. This conversation is not about blame. It is about clarity. Many owners already know the decision they need to make, but fear, timing, sunk cost, and self-doubt keep them stuck. Greg breaks down the real cost of waiting, including lost productivity, management time, team morale, client risk, and cultural damage. In this episode: * Why owners delay hard personnel decisions * The hidden financial cost of keeping the wrong person * How underperformance affects your best people * Warning signs that the decision has already been made * How to have the conversation with honesty and dignity * Why moving on cleanly protects your culture Key Takeaway: The cost of keeping the wrong person is rarely just one salary. It is financial, operational, emotional, and cultural. Strong leaders do not make perfect hires. They recognize when something is not working, act with integrity, and protect the team. Best Quote: “Your standard will only elevate to the worst possible behavior you will tolerate.”

1. kesä 20268 min
jakson More Than the Build: The Human Side of Remodeling with Mike Whalen kansikuva

More Than the Build: The Human Side of Remodeling with Mike Whalen

In this episode of The Why We Build Podcast, Greg sits down with longtime lead carpenter and industry leader Mike Whalen for an honest conversation about what remodeling really demands from the people doing the work. This isn’t just a conversation about tile layouts, production schedules, or project management systems. It’s about the human side of remodeling. The part that often gets overlooked. Mike shares his journey from building tree forts as a kid to working in commercial construction, running his own company, and eventually finding a long-term home at DBS Remodel, where he has spent more than two decades helping shape projects, teams, and company culture. Together, Greg and Mike explore: * Why remodeling is as emotional as it is technical * The importance of communication and empathy on the jobsite * Managing client expectations during stressful projects * The balance between craftsmanship and customer experience * What separates healthy remodeling companies from unhealthy ones * How leadership evolves from “bags on” production to strategic thinking * The role of organizational culture in long-term success * Why continuing education transformed Mike’s career * The impact of industry communities like JLC Live Mike also shares practical insight into: * Leading monthly production meetings * Using client feedback to improve communication * Reading client personalities and stress levels * Managing trade partner relationships * Handling recurring project challenges * Maintaining craftsmanship while scaling leadership responsibilities One of the biggest themes in this episode is that great remodeling professionals are not just builders. They are guides, communicators, problem-solvers, and leaders helping clients navigate deeply personal experiences inside their homes. This episode is a reminder that success in remodeling is not just about technical excellence. It is about how you show up for people.

26. touko 202643 min