Building Better Relationships in Construction

Don't Procastinate!

8 min · 24 de jun de 2026
Portada del episodio Don't Procastinate!

Descripción

Chapter 32, Don’t Procrastinate — The Importance of Early Subcontractor Identification, highlights the critical role of securing subcontractors early in the construction process. Alex and Sabrina explain that delaying trade selection often leads to higher costs, schedule disruptions, limited contractor availability, and reduced client confidence. Early subcontractor engagement preserves negotiating leverage, improves project coordination, reduces stress, and strengthens relationships with trusted trades. The hosts recommend creating detailed trade calendars, vetting contractors well before construction begins, maintaining backup options, and conducting regular communication to confirm schedules, material deliveries, and resource availability. They emphasize that early involvement of subcontractors improves quality, reduces change orders, and helps identify potential conflicts before they become costly field issues. Practical examples involving roofing, HVAC, and specialty finishes demonstrate how advance planning prevents delays and rework. Ultimately, the chapter argues that proactive subcontractor identification is a competitive advantage that protects schedules, budgets, quality, and client trust while fostering stronger partnerships and long-term project success.

Comentarios

0

Sé la primera persona en comentar

¡Regístrate ahora y únete a la comunidad de Building Better Relationships in Construction!

Prueba gratis

Empieza 7 días de prueba

$99 / mes después de la prueba. · Cancela cuando quieras.

  • Podcasts solo en Podimo
  • 20 horas de audiolibros al mes
  • Podcast gratuitos

Todos los episodios

32 episodios

episode Don't Procastinate! artwork

Don't Procastinate!

Chapter 32, Don’t Procrastinate — The Importance of Early Subcontractor Identification, highlights the critical role of securing subcontractors early in the construction process. Alex and Sabrina explain that delaying trade selection often leads to higher costs, schedule disruptions, limited contractor availability, and reduced client confidence. Early subcontractor engagement preserves negotiating leverage, improves project coordination, reduces stress, and strengthens relationships with trusted trades. The hosts recommend creating detailed trade calendars, vetting contractors well before construction begins, maintaining backup options, and conducting regular communication to confirm schedules, material deliveries, and resource availability. They emphasize that early involvement of subcontractors improves quality, reduces change orders, and helps identify potential conflicts before they become costly field issues. Practical examples involving roofing, HVAC, and specialty finishes demonstrate how advance planning prevents delays and rework. Ultimately, the chapter argues that proactive subcontractor identification is a competitive advantage that protects schedules, budgets, quality, and client trust while fostering stronger partnerships and long-term project success.

24 de jun de 20268 min
episode The Power of Reinforcement and Repetition artwork

The Power of Reinforcement and Repetition

Chapter 31, The Power of Reinforcement and Repetition, emphasizes that strong relationships in construction are built through consistent practice, not one-time efforts. Alex and Sabrina explain that people quickly forget new learning unless it is regularly reinforced, making repetition essential for communication, appreciation, and problem-solving habits. They encourage weekly reflections, journaling, visual reminders, team discussions, and daily rituals that keep core relationship-building principles top of mind. Practical strategies include recognizing team members, using verification checks, mentoring, sharing lessons learned, and embedding positive behaviors into workflows and onboarding. The hosts stress that reinforcement should be visible, measurable, and supported by accountability, leadership example, and constructive feedback. Small habits—such as expressing appreciation, setting clear expectations, and reviewing goals—compound over time into stronger trust, better teamwork, fewer mistakes, and improved client satisfaction. Their central message is that consistent repetition transforms good intentions into lasting habits and culture, creating resilient teams and stronger business relationships that deliver long-term success.

17 de jun de 20268 min
episode Covering for the Team and Building Trust artwork

Covering for the Team and Building Trust

Episode 30, “Covering for the Team and Building Trust,” stresses protecting your crew publicly while handling accountability privately to preserve client confidence and team cohesion. Hosts Alex and Sabrina advise responding to client complaints with ownership and solution-focused language—acknowledge the issue, promise prompt options, and set a timeline—then investigate internally. Public unity reassures clients and shields subcontractor relationships; private root-cause reviews correct processes without shaming individuals. Practical tactics include scripted but sincere responses, empowering frontline staff to offer immediate remedies, post-issue protocols (document, assign actions, update procedures), and inclusive reviews that solicit field input. Leadership modeling, role-playing, and recognizing teams for successful fixes build psychological safety and motivate ownership. The approach prevents blame-driven culture, reduces turnover, and enhances workmanship. Ultimately, consistently protecting the team publicly and improving systems privately turns mistakes into learning, strengthens client trust, fosters partnerships, and drives referrals and repeat business.

10 de jun de 20269 min
episode The Power of Genuine Appreciation artwork

The Power of Genuine Appreciation

Episode 29 explores Chapter 29, “The Power of Genuine Appreciation,” arguing that sincere, specific, and timely recognition is strategic—not optional—in construction. Hosts Alex and Sabrina explain that authentic appreciation builds loyalty, morale, and long‑term trust, creating deposits in the “relationship bank account.” They stress specificity (“your trim work around the bay window…”), immediacy after an effort, and matching public or private praise to individual preferences. Practical tactics include verbal thanks on site, handwritten notes, small gestures (meals or gift cards), and embedding “wins and thanks” in meetings and checklists. Leadership modeling and celebrating verification successes foster cultural change, reduce turnover, and improve client relations and referrals. The hosts caution against insincere or inconsistent praise and recommend documenting recognition, training managers to notice quiet contributors, and measuring outcomes like retention and client satisfaction. Ultimately, treating appreciation as deliberate practice truly strengthens teamwork, professionalism, and project outcomes by valuing people over productivity.

3 de jun de 202610 min
episode No Guessing-The Power of Clarity artwork

No Guessing-The Power of Clarity

Episode summarizing Chapter 28, “No Guessing — The Power of Clarity,” argues that verification beats assumptions in construction. Hosts Alex and Sabrina explain that guessing—even small shortcuts—can trigger rework, delays, safety issues, code violations, and lost client trust. They promote a simple 30‑second rule: pause to call, check plans, consult codes, or take a measurement before proceeding. Practical verification methods include using quality checklists, reviewing contracts and plans, communicating with trades and suppliers, and performing on‑site physical checks. Embedding micro‑verification points, encouraging crews to stop work and ask, and documenting lessons learned turns mistakes into training opportunities. The hosts emphasize leadership modeling, adding prompts to workflows, and communicating verification steps to clients to build confidence. While verification may feel time‑consuming initially, it prevents larger time and cost consequences and strengthens relationships, accountability, and reputation. Adopt the 30‑second rule to improve quality, efficiency, and client satisfaction daily.

27 de may de 20269 min