Builder Straight Talk Podcast

No Land, No Momentum: Building Smart in a Tight Market, with Ben Horning

1 h 12 min · Ayer
Portada del episodio No Land, No Momentum: Building Smart in a Tight Market, with Ben Horning

Descripción

Ben Horning grew up on job sites. His father built Berks Homes from a parking lot equipment deal in the mid-1970s, and Ben now runs it as president alongside his sister Katie, building around 480 homes a year across Pennsylvania. Ben explains the company's strategy of staying out of direct land competition with national builders and how that's shaped everything from where they build to who they build for. "No, I mean, that's not really a concern. More or less on the land side because anywhere they go and they're entrenched, they inflate the land values to a point where it's just really challenging for us little guys to battle with them." He also covers how buyer expectations and price sensitivity have shifted, and what it now takes to move homes in a market where a small price change can stop traffic in its tracks. "It's a huge challenge, and we're extremely price sensitive in some of our neighborhoods. Sell a couple, and I'm only talking about raising a price by like $2,500. Raise that, and then all of a sudden crickets for two weeks." The conversation gets into land development, data centers moving into residential markets, what Ben learned from his recession chapter, how he and Katie navigate family succession, AI's limits in homebuilding, and what he'd tell the next generation about a career in the trades. "I have a neighborhood right now that was selling phenomenally well, and directly adjacent to it, the developer sold it to a data center and basically made four or five times the amount of money he would've in half the time. And now my neighborhood is struggling because the buyers know that site's near there." --- Ben Horning is the president of Berks Homes, a family-owned homebuilder in Eastern and Central Pennsylvania. He's been in construction for over 21 years — long enough to have seen the industry from just about every angle. Ben grew up around the family business, which gave him an early appreciation for what it takes to build something that lasts. After college, he spent four years in Land Development before striking out on his own in 2009 — not exactly ideal timing, given the state of the housing market. He ran his remodeling company for a decade anyway, figuring things out as he went, and came back to homebuilding in 2019 to take on a role he'd had in the back of his mind for a long time. As a second-generation owner, he came into the COO seat with a clear priority: get the right people in the right positions and give them room to do their best work. The last two years have been largely about that — building structure that creates opportunity, and developing leaders who can carry things forward without everything running through him. He lives in Downingtown, PA with his wife and three kids. When he's not at the office, he's probably on a sideline somewhere watching one of his kids play, trying to stay active, and loudly rooting for every Philadelphia team regardless of their current record. https://www.BerksHomes.com [https://www.BerksHomes.com] https://www.BHDesignBuild.com [https://www.BHDesignBuild.com] https://www.instagram.com/ben_berkshomes/ [https://www.instagram.com/ben_berkshomes/] https://www.tiktok.com/@berkshomes [https://www.tiktok.com/@berkshomes] Follow Builder Straight Talk: * Web: https://BuilderStraightTalk.com [https://BuilderStraightTalk.com] * LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/michaelkrisa [https://www.linkedin.com/in/michaelkrisa] * Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/BuilderStraightTalk [https://www.facebook.com/BuilderStraightTalk] * Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/builderstraighttalk [https://www.instagram.com/builderstraighttalk] Chapters: 00:00 Introduction 01:01 Meet Ben Horning 03:02 Parking Lot Origin Story 05:10 Raised on Job Sites 06:21 Berks Homes 08:03 Avoiding National Builders 09:28 Sales Pace and Market Strength 15:48 Design Signature and Experience 18:14 Buyer Expectations and Information 21:15 AI Questions and Trust Building 24:24 In House Brokerage Strategy 34:56 Finding and Developing Land 36:57 Financing Banks vs Private Capital 39:37 Data Centers Hit Housing 49:19 Right People Right Seats 53:55 Recession Lessons and Integrity 59:48 Future of Housing and Trades 01:06:35 Rapid Fire Round 01:09:02 Faith and Family Priorities 01:11:27 Closing

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episode No Land, No Momentum: Building Smart in a Tight Market, with Ben Horning artwork

No Land, No Momentum: Building Smart in a Tight Market, with Ben Horning

Ben Horning grew up on job sites. His father built Berks Homes from a parking lot equipment deal in the mid-1970s, and Ben now runs it as president alongside his sister Katie, building around 480 homes a year across Pennsylvania. Ben explains the company's strategy of staying out of direct land competition with national builders and how that's shaped everything from where they build to who they build for. "No, I mean, that's not really a concern. More or less on the land side because anywhere they go and they're entrenched, they inflate the land values to a point where it's just really challenging for us little guys to battle with them." He also covers how buyer expectations and price sensitivity have shifted, and what it now takes to move homes in a market where a small price change can stop traffic in its tracks. "It's a huge challenge, and we're extremely price sensitive in some of our neighborhoods. Sell a couple, and I'm only talking about raising a price by like $2,500. Raise that, and then all of a sudden crickets for two weeks." The conversation gets into land development, data centers moving into residential markets, what Ben learned from his recession chapter, how he and Katie navigate family succession, AI's limits in homebuilding, and what he'd tell the next generation about a career in the trades. "I have a neighborhood right now that was selling phenomenally well, and directly adjacent to it, the developer sold it to a data center and basically made four or five times the amount of money he would've in half the time. And now my neighborhood is struggling because the buyers know that site's near there." --- Ben Horning is the president of Berks Homes, a family-owned homebuilder in Eastern and Central Pennsylvania. He's been in construction for over 21 years — long enough to have seen the industry from just about every angle. Ben grew up around the family business, which gave him an early appreciation for what it takes to build something that lasts. After college, he spent four years in Land Development before striking out on his own in 2009 — not exactly ideal timing, given the state of the housing market. He ran his remodeling company for a decade anyway, figuring things out as he went, and came back to homebuilding in 2019 to take on a role he'd had in the back of his mind for a long time. As a second-generation owner, he came into the COO seat with a clear priority: get the right people in the right positions and give them room to do their best work. The last two years have been largely about that — building structure that creates opportunity, and developing leaders who can carry things forward without everything running through him. He lives in Downingtown, PA with his wife and three kids. When he's not at the office, he's probably on a sideline somewhere watching one of his kids play, trying to stay active, and loudly rooting for every Philadelphia team regardless of their current record. https://www.BerksHomes.com [https://www.BerksHomes.com] https://www.BHDesignBuild.com [https://www.BHDesignBuild.com] https://www.instagram.com/ben_berkshomes/ [https://www.instagram.com/ben_berkshomes/] https://www.tiktok.com/@berkshomes [https://www.tiktok.com/@berkshomes] Follow Builder Straight Talk: * Web: https://BuilderStraightTalk.com [https://BuilderStraightTalk.com] * LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/michaelkrisa [https://www.linkedin.com/in/michaelkrisa] * Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/BuilderStraightTalk [https://www.facebook.com/BuilderStraightTalk] * Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/builderstraighttalk [https://www.instagram.com/builderstraighttalk] Chapters: 00:00 Introduction 01:01 Meet Ben Horning 03:02 Parking Lot Origin Story 05:10 Raised on Job Sites 06:21 Berks Homes 08:03 Avoiding National Builders 09:28 Sales Pace and Market Strength 15:48 Design Signature and Experience 18:14 Buyer Expectations and Information 21:15 AI Questions and Trust Building 24:24 In House Brokerage Strategy 34:56 Finding and Developing Land 36:57 Financing Banks vs Private Capital 39:37 Data Centers Hit Housing 49:19 Right People Right Seats 53:55 Recession Lessons and Integrity 59:48 Future of Housing and Trades 01:06:35 Rapid Fire Round 01:09:02 Faith and Family Priorities 01:11:27 Closing

Ayer1 h 12 min
episode Reading the Industry: Pro Builder's Take on What's Ahead, with Rich Binsacca artwork

Reading the Industry: Pro Builder's Take on What's Ahead, with Rich Binsacca

Rich Binsacca has spent nearly 40 years covering residential construction -- from job sites in college to Head of Content for Pro Builder and Custom Builder, a print publication in its 90th year and NAHB's official media partner. The thread running through this conversation is culture. The builders Rich has consistently watched perform well share one common trait: "The best builders that I know are committed to a culture, and typically that culture is customer-focused, customer-centric. They really do a great job, operation wide, taking care of their customers and making sure that they deliver a high-quality product that meets and exceeds their expectations." Consolidation in the mid-size builder segment is one of the more telling conversations in the episode: "Because we're seeing more diversity among buyers, not just other builders, but private equity firms, Japanese conglomerates, and land banks, we're seeing more mid-size builders opening themselves up for sale, saying, 'Look, I'm open to a conversation that you can acquire me.' And I think part of it is just this uncertainty, and even since the pandemic, just this kind of rollercoaster economy we've been on. They're like, 'Look, I just wanna get out. I'm just done with this. I'll go be a consultant or I'll maybe work for another builder, but I don't want my own company anymore. It's too hard.'" Buyer expectations come next. Rich's read on where younger buyers are headed includes a footnote on millennials that complicates the current Gen Z narrative: "When you look at Gen Z now, it's kind of the same narrative, and I'm just waiting for them to go through the same life changes and say, 'Well, no, we still want single family homes.' Right now we don't, but in 10 years, 15 years, when we're maturing and we've got maybe a kid or two -- yeah, I want a yard. I want a single family home." Labor gets a candid segment -- no false comfort on the workforce gap. Data centers come up too, with real implications for land and infrastructure. On technology, Rich highlights Fordje, ARX, and AI for Residential Construction by Grace Mase. "The builders who will struggle most over the next 10 years are the ones who don't embrace technology and innovation." --- Rich Binsacca is a nationally award-winning journalist, editor, and communications professional. He serves as Head of Content for Pro Builder and Custom Builder, overseeing editorial strategy across print, digital, and live platforms, and as Community Builder and host for ProConnect Events -- a forum connecting home builders, design professionals, and developers with leading product manufacturers and service providers. When he's not working, you'll find him on a tennis court, on his bike (usually headed to tennis), out on a trail, or behind a camera photographing things most people walk right past. He lives in Corvallis, Oregon with his wife of 24 years and two cats. * Pro Builder: https://probuilder.com [https://probuilder.com] * Custom Builder: https://custombuilderonline.com [https://custombuilderonline.com] * LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/rich-binsacca-389124a [https://www.linkedin.com/in/rich-binsacca-389124a] * Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/richbinsacca [https://www.instagram.com/richbinsacca] Follow Builder Straight Talk: * Web: https://BuilderStraightTalk.com [https://BuilderStraightTalk.com] Chapters: 00:00 Introduction 02:37 Meet Pro Builder’s Insider 03:30 Early Journalism Spark 06:45 Construction Roots 07:16 Pro Builder Career Path 09:00 Print Legacy Goes Digital 11:14 Audience and Industry Reach 12:37 What Makes Builders Win 17:39 Consolidation and Survival Niches 20:23 Building a Sellable Business 22:32 Big vs Small Builder Experience 25:56 Quality Risks and Lawsuits 29:12 Video Marketing That Builds Trust 35:31 Hottest Markets Right Now 37:01 Hot Housing Markets 37:27 Buyer Expectations Shift 39:01 Built-to-Rent and Smaller Homes 42:00 Lease-to-Own Reality Check 46:07 Policy Barriers and Buy-Right 50:04 Where Regulation Works 52:51 Data Centers vs Housing 54:24 Offsite and 3D Innovation 56:53 Fixing the Labor Pipeline 01:00:30 AI Tools for Builders 01:05:04 Wrap-Up

9 de jun de 20261 h 8 min
episode Make It Rain: Building Homes, Culture, and Community, with Andi Dirkschneider Bliss artwork

Make It Rain: Building Homes, Culture, and Community, with Andi Dirkschneider Bliss

Andi Dirkschneider Bliss grew up on job sites with her dad before starting Brookline Homes in Charlotte. After studying neuroscience and behavioral economics at Emory University, she managed a thousand REO properties at a distressed real estate hedge fund before joining Brookline in 2016. In 2025, she became the third woman to serve as president of the HBA of Greater Charlotte, the seventh-largest HBA in the country. This conversation gets into what that background means in practice. Brookline builds roughly a hundred homes a year for first-time and move-down buyers around Charlotte's 485 loop, and the neuroeconomics thread runs through everything. "Value is not just dollars and cents. It is how does it make you feel? How does it live for you? How do you feel as part of the community?" Sense of place, the "no assholes" rule, a diverse team, and a dog-based brand identity all get real airtime. "If someone comes in and is being a jerk to any one of my team members, we are not selling a house to them. I do not care how much money they want to throw at us. Life is too short to deal with jerks." Succession covers the gradual handoff from her father, her MBA and master's in real estate during COVID, and a leveraged buyout plan that got upended. "Our nuclear family of four became a family of two very fast." The company now sits in an irrevocable trust. Andi also addresses being a woman in homebuilding head-on. "I still get people coming in the door who don't want to talk to me. They want to talk to my production manager or my director of operations because they're men and they assume that I just do design or just do sales. I have a GC license too. I've built houses too. I've been in the field too." Andi Dirkschneider Bliss is a second-generation homebuilder who quite literally grew up on job sites. As a kid, her family moved frequently as her father worked for several different national homebuilders, giving her an early front-row seat to how housing shapes communities and creates a sense of belonging. She began working in the industry in high school, but her path wasn't linear. Andi earned degrees in Neuroscience & Behavioral Biology and Behavioral Economics from Emory University, launching a career in digital marketing before moving into real estate investment and asset management. That mix of psychology, economics, and human behavior continues to influence how she leads and builds today. In 2016, Andi joined her family's company, Brookline Homes, where she's worked across purchasing, sales, construction, and land acquisition and development. After completing her MBA and Master of Science in Real Estate (MSRE) at UNC Charlotte, she became President of Brookline Homes in 2022. Today, Andi is passionate about creating attainable homes for first-time and move-down buyers, while also focusing on something equally important: growing people. https://mybrooklinehome.com [https://mybrooklinehome.com] https://www.linkedin.com/in/andi-bliss [https://www.linkedin.com/in/andi-bliss] Follow Builder Straight Talk: * https://BuilderStraightTalk.com [https://BuilderStraightTalk.com] * https://www.linkedin.com/in/michaelkrisa [https://www.linkedin.com/in/michaelkrisa] * https://www.facebook.com/BuilderStraightTalk [https://www.facebook.com/BuilderStraightTalk] * https://www.instagram.com/builderstraighttalk [https://www.instagram.com/builderstraighttalk] Chapters: 00:00 Introduction 01:17 Welcome Andi 03:37 Brookline Homes 04:22 Wearing Many Hats 06:00 Growing Up Building 07:51 Neuroscience to Real Estate 10:58 Joining Dad to Build 12:43 Challenging Builder Status Quo 14:07 Reading Buyers Better 18:46 Healthy, Efficient Homes 20:37 Curated Options, Less Stress 22:10 Designing Sense of Place 27:14 Neuroeconomics and Value 30:16 Influence and Sales Experience 31:52 No Jerks Rule 34:11 Dogs as Brand Mascots 38:23 Hiring for Diverse Team 40:45 Succession 42:51 COVID Reset and Education 45:32 Systems that Run Without You 46:39 Millennial Culture and Authenticity 51:13 Succession Handoff 54:08 Family Tragedy Reshapes Plans 55:47 Irrevocable Trust 01:01:43 Becoming the Industry Face 01:05:26 Women in Building 01:10:33 Advice snd Let Them Theory 01:13:44 Rapid Fire

2 de jun de 20261 h 18 min
episode The Hidden Psychology Behind "Must Have" Homes, with Trapper Roderick artwork

The Hidden Psychology Behind "Must Have" Homes, with Trapper Roderick

Trapper Roderick is a fifth-generation builder in Park City, Utah and Los Angeles, with deep roots in the industry. His grandfather and great-grandfather built Jacobson Construction into one of the largest commercial companies on the West Coast. Before building full-time, he studied architecture, ran a haberdashery making custom suits for wealthy athletes and business leaders, and taught entrepreneurship at the University of Utah. He calls himself an architectural guardian — someone focused on making sure the emotional intention behind a design actually shows up in the finished home. "Walk in a lot of different homes, and one home is $7 million, the other one's $7 million. Well, why does this one feel so much better? Is it the fit and finish? Is it the finishes, or is it that there was emotion that was controlled in the space — by using certain materials in certain ways and the way it was finished?" His pre-construction alignment process brings architect, engineer, interior designer, and client onto the same page — sometimes before a design even exists. He'd run 80% spec if the capital were available and explains how great architecture engineers the reaction that makes a buyer walk in and simply have to own the place. The conversation goes deep on money. Trapper estimates 95 to 99 percent of builders have built themselves a job rather than a business. He covers the $400,000 budget overrun that taught him one simple invoice change, the Utah market dynamics driving demand above $7 million, and how getting on video opened the door to brand partnerships and a docuseries on a current spec build. "The money that's in their account isn't theirs. We run what's called a work in progress report, and that tells us at any given moment the money that's in our account, how much of it is ours and how much of it is our clients'." He closes with a question he found on a plaque that captures why he does this work: "What have I done to enrich the lives of others today?" --- Trapper Roderick is the President of Roderick Builders, a Park City-based firm he runs alongside his father Travis Roderick, who leads the California office. He's a fifth-generation builder with roots in both commercial and residential construction — his great-grandfather and grandfather built Jacobson Construction into one of the largest commercial companies on the West Coast. Before focusing full-time on building, Trapper studied architecture, taught entrepreneurship at the University of Utah, and ran a haberdashery making custom suits for wealthy athletes and business leaders across the country. He still owns a luxury necktie brand today. Roderick Builders has built over $950 million in residential real estate across fewer than 50 homes. Trapper's work centers on architecturally ambitious projects where pre-construction alignment and financial transparency are the foundation. He's an active voice for raising industry standards through podcasts, teaching, and direct mentorship with other builders. Connect with Trapper: Roderick Builders: https://www.roderickbuilders.com [https://www.roderickbuilders.com] Trapper on LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/trapper-roderick [https://www.linkedin.com/in/trapper-roderick] Follow Builder Straight Talk: https://BuilderStraightTalk.com [https://BuilderStraightTalk.com] Chapters: 00:00 Introduction 02:37 Meet Trapper Roderick 02:55 Architectural Guardian 05:04 Preconstruction Alignment 08:22 Budgets and Expectations 10:21 Spec vs Custom Builds 11:47 Fifth Generation Roots 14:42 Grandfather and Integrity 16:12 Residential vs Commercial 17:22 Builder as Business 20:12 Splitting the Companies 21:41 Systems and Software 24:36 How Builders Profit 33:37 Accounting Lessons Learned 36:46 Client Transparency Tools 37:38 Wealthy Clients Expectations 40:54 Precon Budget Planning 43:21 Spec Homes Risk Playbook 49:31 Utah Market Tailwinds 50:53 Land And Data Centers 52:53 From Roofer To Luxury 57:13 Deal Breakers Capital Stack 01:01:39 Video Branding Partnerships 01:05:59 Rapid Fire 01:08:04 Final Thoughts

26 de may de 20261 h 9 min
episode Building Texas's Future, One Home At a Time, with Scott Norman artwork

Building Texas's Future, One Home At a Time, with Scott Norman

Scott Norman is the CEO of the Texas Association of Builders -- a perspective most builders don't get regular access to. He knows what's being decided at the Capitol, who's filing the bills, and what those decisions cost by the time they reach a job site. A former Capitol staffer and general counsel to a statewide engineering association, Scott has been with TAB since 2003 and CEO since 2008. TAB represents roughly 10,000 member companies across 27 local home builders associations. Its primary mission is advocacy -- getting builder voices into the conversations that determine what homes cost and how long they take to build. This episode covers the statute of repose and your liability exposure after a project closes; shot clock legislation and what permit delays actually cost; why 25 percent of the cost of a home traces back to regulatory burden; data centers competing with builders for land, water, and power; and the workforce crisis in the trades. "A lot of people don't realize whatever building they're sitting in was built by humans -- built outside in the mud with natural materials. A lot of people just think all these buildings around them -- they don't really ever think about how they appear. They weren't just always here." TAB secured $850 million for Texas State Technical College this past session to rebuild the trades pipeline. Scott also walks through membership in practice -- HomePAC, the Texas Builders Foundation scholarships, and what the association fights for on behalf of builders every session. "Building futures is what our members do. You're building futures for your workforce that's working for you by employing them. You're building futures by building communities. You're building futures for the people living in those homes -- where they're going to work, eat, pray, live, raise a family. And you're building future wealth, because you are putting improvements on the ground that are going to grow in value over time." More at https://texasbuilders.org [https://texasbuilders.org] --- M. Scott Norman, Jr. is the CEO of the Texas Association of Builders, the second largest home builders association in the nation, representing nearly 10,000 members and their companies across the state. TAB member companies are responsible for more than 758,000 jobs and over $71.5 billion annually to the Texas economy. An East Texas native and sixth-generation Texan, Scott earned his BA in Economics from the University of Texas at Austin and his law degree from South Texas College of Law. He has been active in Texas state government for over 30 years as a Capitol staffer, association executive, and registered lobbyist. Scott is a founding board member of the Texas Builders Foundation and was appointed by Governor Greg Abbott in 2026 to the Texas Jobs Council. He also serves on the board of Operation Finally Home, a nonprofit that has completed and donated over 340 home projects in 33 states to military heroes, first responders, and their families. Follow Builder Straight Talk: * Web: https://BuilderStraightTalk.com [https://BuilderStraightTalk.com] * LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/michaelkrisa [https://www.linkedin.com/in/michaelkrisa] * Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/BuilderStraightTalk [https://www.facebook.com/BuilderStraightTalk] * Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/builderstraighttalk [https://www.instagram.com/builderstraighttalk] Chapters: 00:00 Introduction 04:11 Scott’s Role at TAB 05:24 From Law School to Capitol 07:46 Why Texas Leads Housing 09:56 Attainability and Core Constraints 11:46 Data Centers vs Housing 13:58 How TAB Influences Policy 16:46 Why Join the Builders Association 19:34 Behind the Scenes Advocacy 23:02 Fixing the Trades Pipeline 32:18 Building Futures Mindset 35:32 Tariffs and Material Costs 35:56 Texas Repose Reform 38:13 Liability Act Updates 38:44 Sharing Wins Nationwide 40:49 Shot Clock Permits 42:53 Regulation Costs Explained 44:57 Affordability Crisis Reality 50:02 Rent to Own Ideas 53:06 HomePAC Political Power 54:44 Workforce Development Push 57:16 Sunbelt Builders Show 01:04:47 Final Thanks

19 de may de 20261 h 5 min