Roots of Success

The Talent Pipeline, Water Wars, and Building for the Long Game

44 min · 9. juli 2026
episode The Talent Pipeline, Water Wars, and Building for the Long Game cover

Description

What does it look like to build a company the right way — not the fastest way? In this episode of Roots of Success, host Chris Psencik reconnects with one of his oldest friends in the industry, Kyle Cahill, founder of Grown Company in Houston and newly elected Chair of the Texas Nursery and Landscape Association (TNLA). Kyle shares the full story: launching a company two weeks before his first daughter was born, losing $5,000 on his first big job, running the business out of his driveway, and eventually earning recognition as one of Houston's top family-owned businesses. From talent retention and strategic planning to water legislation and the future of the green industry in Texas, this conversation covers the full picture of what it means to build something that lasts. THE BIG IDEA: Being Present Matters More Than Being Impressive KEY MOMENTS: * [03:30] Growing Up in Beaumont, Mowing Yards, and Discovering Horticulture at Texas A&M * [08:30] Early Leadership Lessons at Southern Botanical: You Get to Make That Mistake Once * [10:00] The Value of Certifications, TNLA Committees, and Emotional Intelligence Early in Your Career * [14:30] The Role of Kyle's Wife Susanna: Faith, Sacrifice, and the Real Foundation of the Company * [21:00] Houston's Family-Owned Business of the Year: What That Award Really Meant * [25:30] The Biggest Concern: The Talent Pipeline * [30:30] Newly Elected Chair of TNLA: What It Means and What He Plans to Do * [37:00] Growing TNLA Membership: Meeting Landscape Firms and Growers Where They Are * [40:30] Most Underrated Leadership Trait: Consistency Questions We Answer 1. Why do horticulture programs at universities like Texas A&M matter to the future of the green industry? 2. What advice would you give someone considering a career in landscaping or horticulture? 3. What does it really look like to launch a business with no clients, no office, and a baby on the way? 4. How do you have the conversation with your spouse about stepping into entrepreneurship? 5. What were the hardest moments in the early years of building a company from scratch? 6. How do you balance being a business owner with being a present husband and father? 7. How does Grown Company maintain 70%+ frontline retention year after year? 8. What does it mean to build a team that doesn't need you for every decision? 9. What excites you most about the green industry in Texas right now — and what concerns you?

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episode The Talent Pipeline, Water Wars, and Building for the Long Game artwork

The Talent Pipeline, Water Wars, and Building for the Long Game

What does it look like to build a company the right way — not the fastest way? In this episode of Roots of Success, host Chris Psencik reconnects with one of his oldest friends in the industry, Kyle Cahill, founder of Grown Company in Houston and newly elected Chair of the Texas Nursery and Landscape Association (TNLA). Kyle shares the full story: launching a company two weeks before his first daughter was born, losing $5,000 on his first big job, running the business out of his driveway, and eventually earning recognition as one of Houston's top family-owned businesses. From talent retention and strategic planning to water legislation and the future of the green industry in Texas, this conversation covers the full picture of what it means to build something that lasts. THE BIG IDEA: Being Present Matters More Than Being Impressive KEY MOMENTS: * [03:30] Growing Up in Beaumont, Mowing Yards, and Discovering Horticulture at Texas A&M * [08:30] Early Leadership Lessons at Southern Botanical: You Get to Make That Mistake Once * [10:00] The Value of Certifications, TNLA Committees, and Emotional Intelligence Early in Your Career * [14:30] The Role of Kyle's Wife Susanna: Faith, Sacrifice, and the Real Foundation of the Company * [21:00] Houston's Family-Owned Business of the Year: What That Award Really Meant * [25:30] The Biggest Concern: The Talent Pipeline * [30:30] Newly Elected Chair of TNLA: What It Means and What He Plans to Do * [37:00] Growing TNLA Membership: Meeting Landscape Firms and Growers Where They Are * [40:30] Most Underrated Leadership Trait: Consistency Questions We Answer 1. Why do horticulture programs at universities like Texas A&M matter to the future of the green industry? 2. What advice would you give someone considering a career in landscaping or horticulture? 3. What does it really look like to launch a business with no clients, no office, and a baby on the way? 4. How do you have the conversation with your spouse about stepping into entrepreneurship? 5. What were the hardest moments in the early years of building a company from scratch? 6. How do you balance being a business owner with being a present husband and father? 7. How does Grown Company maintain 70%+ frontline retention year after year? 8. What does it mean to build a team that doesn't need you for every decision? 9. What excites you most about the green industry in Texas right now — and what concerns you?

9. juli 202644 min
episode Busy Isn't a Badge: The 5 Habits That Are Keeping You Stuck artwork

Busy Isn't a Badge: The 5 Habits That Are Keeping You Stuck

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25. juni 202643 min
episode Fail Forward and Show Up Consistently: The Culture Playbook from a Second-Generation Owner artwork

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What separates the companies people want to work for from the ones they can't wait to leave? In this episode of Roots of Success, host Chris Psencik sits down with Ryan Malone of Malone's Landscape in Seattle, Washington — a second-generation owner, ACE Chairman member and endurance athlete — to talk about one of the most important assets in a growing company: culture. From monthly culture rallies and the Beast Mode award to a bilingual onboarding program and a weekly team newsletter, Ryan shares the real, repeatable traditions that have helped Malone's become a destination workplace. If your team feels stagnant or your retention is slipping, this episode is your playbook. THE BIG IDEA: Intentional Culture Is Your Biggest Competitive Advantage KEY MOMENTS: [01:30] Ryan's Background: From Collegiate Baseball to Second-Generation Owner [04:00] Why Culture Gets Left Behind — and Why It Shouldn't [07:00] Culture Rallies: Getting Construction and Maintenance on the Same Team [10:00] What Ryan Has Stolen (and Improved) From ACE Peer Group Members [12:00] Building Trust Through Consistency: The Culture Committee [14:00] How the Culture Committee Is Structured, Who's On It, and How It Runs [16:00] Becoming a Destination Workplace — and What That Actually Means [21:00] Bilingual Onboarding: How Myra Bridged the Gap for Field Teams [23:00] The Weekly Team Newsletter — What's In It and Why It Works [27:00] Selling Value at a Premium: How Culture Justifies Top-of-Market Pricing [29:00] Leadership Action Steps: Three Things to Start Right Now [33:00] From Operator to Owner: Ryan's Biggest Lesson [34:00] Final Advice: Join a Peer Group and Fail Forward QUESTIONS WE ANSWER 1. How do you build a strong company culture in a landscaping business? 2. What are some real traditions that create team engagement and retention? 3. How do you fix the construction vs. maintenance divide at company events? 4. What should a culture committee look like, and who should be on it? 5. What are the most common onboarding mistakes — and how do you fix them? 6. How do 30-60-90 day check-ins improve new hire retention? 7. How do you communicate core values consistently across a growing team? 8. What should a weekly team newsletter include? 9. How does a strong culture help you justify premium pricing with clients? 10. What's the best advice for a second-generation owner stepping into a family business? 11. How do you avoid letting culture initiatives go stagnant over time? 12. What does "fail forward" actually mean in practice for a business owner?

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episode What You Say vs. What They Hear: Mastering Communication in Your Landscaping Business artwork

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episode Transparency, Liquidity, and Bankers – How to Take Control of your Business' Value artwork

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