Business Building: Mandatory Management Meetings Maximize Money!

Words: George HedleyMost construction business owners are very impatient, impulsive, and don’t like to have a set rigid schedule every week. When job problems come up or a customer calls, they want to have flexibility to jump immediately on the issue and take care of it. And because owners like to be in control and micro-manage their people and projects, putting out fires becomes their way of doing business. Therefore, they especially don’t want to schedule regular weekly or monthly meetings with managers and supervisors. And when they finally decide to put regular meetings on their calendar, owners always find several better urgent reasons to cancel or postpone these meetings until next week or never, whichever comes first! Meetings make life better! Well managed contractors are well managed by the business owner and management team. These top contractors have regularly scheduled management meetings that allow them to stay in touch with their estimators, project managers, field supervisors, and foreman. Meetings allow managers to leverage their time and be the leader instead of the ‘make every decision’ supervisor, constant decision-maker, and full time problem-solver. Meetings allow owners to delegate and keep people accountable and responsible to achieve results they want. As the business owner and manager, meetings make life much better as you create a better run company, free yourself to do what you should do, and allow for time to plan, strategize, sell, and focus on making more money. Meetings maximize bottom-line results! Can you imagine a baseball game without a scoreboard and player statistics to see who is winning and does the best out on the field? Without scorecards and weekly feedback, results don’t matter much to supervisors. Therefore, the meeting leader must create a scorecard tracking system to record each attendee’s performance on every job for all to see every week. This will improve job performance and allow your foreman and supervisors to know, track, and hit their goals rather than working blindly without anything to aim at. When you hold regular field supervisor meetings for example, each foreman and supervisor is challenged to achieve specific results, track progress, report on last week’s progress versus their weekly target, and then discuss plans for the upcoming week. They report on their job schedule, crew-hours, equipment hours, safety, quality, and performance. Every attendee is then committed in front of their peers to hit weekly goals. This teamwork approach creates a competition amongst peers to be the best and beat their project budget and targets. To help you get started improving your meetings, email GH@HardhatPresentations.com to get a copy of ‘Field Tracking Systems For Contractors!” Make meetings mandatory! In order to take back control of your company, the owner and management team must set a series of mandatory meetings that meet every week and month. Set them at the same time and never postpone or cancel them. When you cancel meetings, it shows they’re not a top priority, and it’s OK to miss for supposedly more important reasons like bids, inspections, customer demands, field issues, or any other weak excuse that can and will come along. And when the owner can’t make a meeting, still hold them by delegating the meeting leadership to a key manager to handle the agenda. Start and end every meeting on-time within a set amount of allotted time. This allows attendees to plan their calendar around these regular mandatory meetings. Use a written agenda or template to keep the meeting moving, and assign someone to take notes to document what was agreed to and who is accountable to make things happen. If your company has projects and jobs spread out long distances away from your office, use a conference call service or conferencing software to still hold meetings on the regular schedule. Mandatory Annual Management Meetings
  1. Strategic Planning Session - Every year your management team must take a day or two to sit down and plot out the strategy for the upcoming year. Engage a facilitator to help your team review your last year results, look at what’s working and what’s not, and identify areas for improvement. Set new targets and goals. And create implementation action plans to improve your company.
  2. All Company Town Hall Meeting - At least twice a year, get everyone in your company together for a ‘state of the company’ review session and discussion. Talk about your successes, failures, goals, results, and plans for the future. Also use this time for training and to recognize key people who made a difference in your company’s performance. Use this opportunity to facilitate roundtable group discussions on ways to improve scheduling, communications, productivity, equipment use, estimating accuracy, customer retention, or other areas your company needs improvement.
Mandatory Monthly Management Meetings
  1. Monthly Company Strategy Session - Every month owners and managers must meet to discuss their company overall strategy. The best place to start is by reviewing you strategic plan goals and action items. The agenda must include reviewing results and strategies for your financials, revenues, overhead and profit, receivables, cash-flow, organizational chart, management, people, operations, systems and procedures, work flow, project management, supervision, safety, quality, scheduling, productivity, equipment, accounting, technology, estimating, and sales and marketing.
  2. Monthly BIZ-DEV Sales Strategy Session - Creating a marketing and sales activity calendar will allow you to review your business development progress every month. Identify key markets and customers you want to seek and do business with, develop a plan to find and cultivate new customers, strategize how to better your customer relationships, look at ways to improve your bid-hit ratio, and explore how to increase your margins with better customers and lower competition.
  3. Monthly Project Management Review Meeting - I call this ‘accountability time” as each project manager and supervisor presents their specific job results to the company management team. In these monthly meetings review every project job cost report, schedule update, change order log, project receivable, problems and issues, accomplishments, and progress. This meeting will hold people accountable to follow the company systems, manage their projects properly, do their job as expected, and hit their targets.
Mandatory Weekly Management Meetings
  1. Sales, Proposal, Estimating & Bid Follow-Up Meeting - Every Monday morning get your sales, marketing, and estimating team together to review your revenue stream, current and cumulative contract awards, sales activity, lead flow, customer relationship meetings, jobs bidding, follow-up required for jobs already bid, and strategies to improve your bid-hit ratio.
  2. Superintendent & Foreman Weekly Meeting - Every week you must get together with all of your field foremen and superintendents together to review their individual project progress, goals, results, schedule, activities, manpower, workload, equipment requirements, material needs, subcontractor performance, safety success, and customer issues. Each foreman or supervisor reports individually on their project and commits to hitting weekly goals for all to hear. Together the group will work together to help each other with ideas and suggestions to meet or beat schedules, budgets, safety, and productivity goals.
Make meetings a mandatory must! Use these mandatory meetings to get everyone on the same page and achieve your project and company goals. The dynamics of holding regular meetings builds teamwork, creates accountability, holds people responsible, and frees up management from having to visit every job every day and make all the decisions for everyone all the time ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------   As a professional construction BIZCOACH and popular industry speaker, George Hedley helps contractors increase profits, grow and get their companies to work! He is the best-selling author of “Get Your Construction Business To Always Make A Profit!” available at his online bookstore at www.HardhatPresentations.com. E-mail GH@HardhatPresentations.com to sign-up for his free e-newsletter, join a peer mastermind BIZGROUP, attend a BIZ-BUILDER Boot Camp, implement the BIZ-BUILDER BLUEPRINT, or get a discount for online courses at www.HardhatBizSchool.com. George Hedley CSP CPBC HARDHAT Presentations Phone:             (800) 851-8553 Email: gh@hardhatpresentations.com website:           www.hardhatbizschool.com

Words: George Hedley
Dutch Quality StoneTM debuts first brick profile, Handformed Brick™, in three colorways including the new Snowpack™

Westlake Royal Building ProductsTM (“Westlake Royal”), a Westlake company (NYSE:WLK) announces Handformed Brick™, a new, elevated tumbled brick profile from Dutch Quality Stone, available in three colorways including the newest addition, Snowpack™, a sere

Pinnacle and Tucker Design Awards to Combine in 2025

The Natural Stone Institute is pleased to announce that beginning with the 2025 Call for Entries, the Tucker Design Awards will be partnered with the Pinnacle Awards program. Both awards will be given annually beginning in 2026. This streamlined approach

Brick Remains Top Choice Among Architects & Homeowners, Glen-Gery Survey Reveals

In advance of National Architecture Day on November 1, 2024, Glen-Gery, a premier brick manufacturer that is part of Brickworks North America, released “Trends in Design and Renovation: A Comparative Study Among Homeowners and Architects,” a national surv

Strengthening the Foundation: Recruitment Strategies for Masonry Companies Amid Employee Shortages

In today’s construction landscape, masonry companies are facing an increasingly pressing challenge: the shortage of skilled labor. This shortage is not just a minor inconvenience but a significant hurdle that threatens the industry's growth and sustainabi

About: Featured