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When I think about my career, the things that I've enjoyed the most have always been solving hard problems with technology.
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What is going on, LM family?
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Back again.
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And this time, if you want to meet super awesome people, like even accidentally, that are way out of your league, start a podcast.
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Because my guest today is exactly that caliber of individual who we've had a little bit of conversation, and it's clear that he's a caring individual, totally different, comes from a different background, different country, even.
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I think, I don't know, I may be assuming there, but he's got a sweet spot for the trade contractors, which of course, you know me, I'm super biased about subcontractors out there.
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And he's come up with maybe I should say it this way he's helping subcontractors, specialty contractors double the number of bids that they can submit, reduce errors, and increase profitability.
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His name is Mr.
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Shane Patterson.
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He is the founder and CEO of Jenga.
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I keep saying Jeng AI, Jenga AI, Jengang, Jenga.
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It's just Jenga.
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All right, folks.
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Y'all heard it straight from the boss.
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He said it's just Jenga, which is estimating and pricing suite built for the commercial specialty contractors and helps them again double the bids, get more work out there.
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Does a lot of fancy stuff, which we're going to ask about because y'all already know I don't know, I'm like not that smart in the tech space, but I do understand valuing people and making lives better for subcontractors.
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So I'm super excited to talk with Mr.
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Shane.
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But before that, if you're new here, this is the Learnings and Missteps podcast, where you get to meet amazing human beings just like you that are sharing their gifts and talents to leave this world better than they found it.
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I'm Jesse, yourself your servant, and we're about to get to know Mr.
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Shane Patterson.
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Mr.
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Shane, how are you, sir?
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I am fantastic, Jesse.
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How are you?
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If you can't tell, I got a little bit of energy.
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I made some coffee this morning, went for a swim, and then I got to working, and then realized I didn't finish my coffee.
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So I started drinking my coffee again about 30 minutes ago.
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So I'm like bouncing all over the place.
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It's very dangerous to drink a coffee this late in the day, Jesse.
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I agree.
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I agree.
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And you're in Florida right now, so it's like 6:45 your time over there.
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Yep.
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Um, all right.
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So I got a super simple softball question for you, Shane.
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Sure.
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How simple is construction?
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Do you know what?
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I wish you had asked me that question six years ago when I first got into construction, because as far as I knew, there were general contractors, they were architects, and that was about it.
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Six years later, after immersing myself in construction, I feel like I know even less now than I did then.
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It's very interesting because for the uninitiated, it feels like a business that is that shouldn't be that hard.
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But the more you get to know it, the more you realize, wow, there's if I'm honest, Jesse, I don't think I'm not aware of.
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Well, let me tell you a little bit about my background.
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Sorry, I'm giving you a answer, but I I am a software engineer.
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I've been writing software for longer than I care to admit, even though I'm so young, I'm a very old man.
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I started out in finance, I worked for the British Treasury, I wrote the software that they use to auction out British Treasury bonds.
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Then I worked for an investment bank.
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I did a tech startup with my brother in 2013.
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It was a cloud-based financial analysis when cloud was still sexy.
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Or at the cloud's not that sexy now.
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And then when we sold that company, I was looking for something challenging to get into, something interesting.
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Friend of mine had a stone and tile subcontracting business based out of Manhattan.
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And he told me there was a big opportunity around preparing takeoffs and proposals.
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And my first question was, What's a takeoff?
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I literally had no idea.
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I walked into his office, he showed me how his company, which at the time was probably around 10 million in revenue, so not tiny, but not huge.
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And when he showed me what they did, I thought, oh my god, this guy has no idea what he's doing.
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It can't be like this.
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So did a bit of research and discovered that yes, when you're bidding construction projects, you genuinely do trace the outlines of the walls so that you can figure out the material quantities.
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Like there genuinely is a human who is clicking on all of the boundaries to start, yeah, to start preparing a takeoff.
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And at the time, I'm not sure if you remember those AI videos with the robotic arms picking up the squishy balls.
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Did you ever see that?
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Oh, yeah.
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So this was 2018.
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Man, not too long ago, yeah.
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I know.
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And I thought, you know what?
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If a robotic arm can pick up a squishy ball, I can write a piece of software that's gonna automate this takeoff problem, and I can build a company that has a material impact on this particular problem space.
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And here I am, six years later, still very angry with my friend for getting me involved in this very difficult business.
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But the short answer is I have developed a love for construction companies because the people are incredible, Jesse.
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Like just such genuine, hardworking, honest people.
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And the work itself is tough.
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Not just the actual building work, that's obviously difficult because it's manual, like you're pushing your body, but the information technology side of construction is very difficult because it's the interception point between standards where you think that there's a specific way to communicate something very complex and then just the human aspect, creativity.
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So it's super, super interesting.
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So, how much do I know about construction?
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What do I think of it?
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I think it's hard, I think it's a tough business, very exciting, and I'm excited to learn more about it.
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It's probably gonna take a long time because it's tough.
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Yeah, no, uh a hundred percent.
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I remember being in the field as a as an installer, right?
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Plumbing apprentice, journeyman.
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And I had my we'll say opinions about how we did business, right?
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The type of clients we got that we worked for, the type of projects that we were on, where it was just like it was not, it's it was horrible.
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Like they treated us like garbage.
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It was just it was a horrible environment.
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Like, why are we picking people like this?
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Thinking, well, you just get better clients.
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Well, it's not that easy.
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So over the years, it's like you nailed it.
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There's so many levels of complexity.
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I mean, a simple one, which seems simple, right?
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Like you've got the front end of the business where you're out there doing business development, doing an estimate, doing a material takeoff, so you can produce an estimate, and then you have the execution installation of it, and the just the communication between that internally fails in a lot of in the majority of places.
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That's kind of how why I have a job.
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But you decided I could write some code for this, and so I'm curious about the software engineer thing for two reasons, Mr.
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Shake, because you and I've had some conversations, and you I feel like you and I could just fucking hang out and tell stories and get on forever.
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Which I've talked with, which is rare, meaning uh other folks that I know that are like programmers that have that kind of brain power, I can't have a conversation with them, and so there's that element, and then, like you said, the people in our industry, they're they're different, it's a notably different personality type of communication, style of communication.
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And so, for you specifically, um, getting into software engineering code, I'm assuming that's coding.
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What was it that got you there?
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What was interesting about it that pulled your attention for you to dedicate so much of your time to it?
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When I think about my career, the things that I've enjoyed the most have always been solving hard problems with technology.
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Okay.
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Always been drawn to those sorts of problems.
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And when you're at the start of your career, you spend a lot of time, and it's probably the same in plumbing.
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When you're a journey, when you're at the beginning, you're doing all of the actual installation and you're doing all the stuff that the more senior guy doesn't want to do, but you also need to learn, and then as you become more senior, you discover that wow, the easy part was actually writing the code, the hard part is actually understanding what the problem is that you're trying to solve.
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Yes.
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So I spent a lot of my career writing code, managing teams, but understanding when someone says when people describe a technology solution to you, they don't generally people are interesting, Jesse, because they always they can't always tell you what they do want, but they immediately know what they don't want.
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Yes.
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Oh yeah.
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And they know that after you have spent, let's say, a month putting something together, and then immediately they know, no.
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When people describe what they want to you, they generally they try to simplify it and they'll describe it to you in the terms that they understand, like make the Excel spreadsheet do this one thing or put a button here that does that.
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And the interesting part is uh really unpacking what do they when they say I want you to put this piece of information into this site and this spreadsheet, what do they actually mean?
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Why are they asking it in those terms?
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And that's what I spend my time doing.
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And essentially, I don't know if you've ever heard the phrase asking.
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There's a book called The Wise, or there's a technique called The Wise, which is basically just ask why.
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And I say the same things to my teams.
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Like when someone says to you, I need you to do this, you ask the question why you can, and you can sound like a three-year-old.
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Yes, experience the what it's like when you speak to a three-year-old who continuously asks you why.
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At some point you realize, wow, I I know nothing.
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You know, because oh, totally, because asking those questions, asking the whys really gets down to the root of the problem, you know.
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Yeah, yes, yes, yeah.
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The the five whys, that's the way I understand, yes, is a part of the lean construction problem-solving framework because it helps us get to the root cause.
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And I love the way you said it, right?
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Like, we're not, I'll say it.
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Here's a confession from me.
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I suck at articulating what I want.
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But man, I could tell you what I don't want, quick, right?
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Like, that's easy.
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Yeah, and so like the five wives helps us get layer after layer to really understand the root of the thing.
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Yep, because if we just take action on the presenting problem, we're not gonna solve the underlying issue, and we got to dig to get to the underlying issue.
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So you seem to have an appreciation, or maybe not appreciation, but patience to listen to people to really understand their problem.
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Where does that come from?
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Is that like an innate thing that came up through your family, or is it really a function of well, that's the best way to solve problems and deliver a solution that's gonna knock their socks off?
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We're gonna do the LM family member shout-out.
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And this one goes to Mr.
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Steve Wood.
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He sent me this message.
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He says, You have a way of making things concise and you hit the nail squarely on the head.
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I'm truly glad that the algorithm led me to you.
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And I connected him with him on the Instagram.
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I'm starting to get some traction on the Instagram.
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So, Mr.
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Wood, I appreciate you, man, taking the time to repost and engage with the content.
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I appreciate most of all that you're signaling back to me that the content is landing with you and bringing you some kind of value.
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And to the rest of you, LM family members out there, you already know I love attention.
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So if you leave a review, drop some stars, leave me a comment, even a stinky comment, I can handle it.
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That gives me an opportunity to shout you out in a future episode.
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It's something that I had to learn.
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Sometimes I tell my wife, I miss my 20s because I knew everything then.
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Yes.
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When I was younger, I had a bad habit of interrupting people and thinking, I know what you're gonna say, you don't have to finish, let me tell you.
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And I'm a big fan of learning.
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Stand on the shoulders of giants, and I think a common theme from people that are accomplished is they will listen to what other people say.
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So having seen that from other people, I want to emulate that.
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I I want to stand on the shoulders of giants, so it's a learned behavior, and I'm very happy that I've spent the time to learn it because it's changed a lot of things about my life.
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Oh, well, I don't know about your life, but I know it sure changed a lot in my life.
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I remember a friend of mine called a co-worker friend.
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This is way back when I was like in my 20s, where I was performance, and he's like, Jesse, you ask a lot of questions.
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I'm like, Yeah, because I really want to know.
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He's like, No, he's like, but you answer your own questions, you ask questions like you care about what we're gonna say, and really you're just setting yourself up to go on one of your rants, like you always do.
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I'm like, No, I don't.
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He said that to you.
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Wow, I went home to my ex-wife now, and I said, Can you believe what so-and-so said?
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And she just kind of looked at me, she's like, Yep.
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Oh like, oh, I got a problem.
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I asked my team, what was the number one thing I needed to work on?
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And like, we all came up with this list.
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We're on a project here in San Antonio, and and the deal was we were all gonna share our list for each other and help each other, like call each other out on it actively so we can make it better faster.
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The three guys all had the same complaint, they all said that I didn't listen, and I believed for real that I was the best damn listener in the company.
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Wow, and so I again right here that now I'm in my mid-30s when this happens, anyhow.
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What they pointed out, what we figured out was when they brought me a problem that I had been experienced before, I wouldn't, I would cut them off and tell them what to do.
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The rest of the time, I would I was listening, I was a little more patient.
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But if it was a thing like, hey, we got this issue with the supplier, um, okay, and I'm on the phone calling them, and they're like, Do you let me finish?
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Like, that's all right, I know what needs to happen.
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Don't worry about it.
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Oh, you should do this.
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And so it was, it took a lot of practice for me to break that habit.
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And I actually timed myself because I told the guys, for real, I said, guys, I said, I'm not, I don't want to defend myself.
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You are right, but I need you to signal to me when I'm doing it wrong, and that's how we discovered it was in that specific circumstance when it was a problem that I was very familiar with, I would just give them the answer.
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And so they keep, they would give me a signal.
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One guy will pull his ear, the other guy will kind of do this, and so I would like, oh okay, shut your mouth, Jess.
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And so, in order for me to keep my mouth shut, I had to focus on something.
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So I would focus on my why, I would tap I would time it.
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Wow, the longest it ever took for me to let them finish talking was two minutes.
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It was almost always less than 60 seconds for me to keep my mouth quiet and let them finish telling me the thing.
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And I thought I was being efficient, except that sure I was being efficient in terms of time, but in terms of social capital and relationship, entirely wasteful because I was offending them or disrespecting them every time I did that.
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So I say that to people if you're in that situation, time yourself, man.
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It's really not that much more time to just let people finish talking.
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So I don't know if you know a guy like Jordan Peterson.
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I know that he some of his politics is a little uh is a little controversial, but I've read his book.
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But also, I have tremendous respect for the way that he handles discussions because what he always does is no matter what people are saying to him, he always listens.
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And I think nine times out of ten, you do know what people are gonna say, and you probably could cut them off, but one out of ten, ten percent of the time, people are gonna surprise you, and I also think that uh you surprise yourself when you actually listen to people because sometimes your response is in some cases the opposite of what you thought you were gonna say at the start of the conversation, and to bring it back to construction.
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Honestly, we were talking about big mistakes, and when I started the company, my big mistake was trying to deliver more than anyone had ever done before, not understanding how risky doing what I was doing was gonna be.
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So let me unpack that for you.
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So yeah, please, I'm curious.
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So so my friend brought me into his office, and it was 1 p.m.
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in the afternoon, and he had a bottle of whiskey on his desk, which he opened up and we had a sip of whiskey, which which was shocking for me, honestly.
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I was like, wow, okay.
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And then he showed me what it looks like for him to go through the bid process, and of course, it's your oxygen in a construction, everything comes through, almost every i mean, it depends on your business, but in most cases it comes through a bid process.
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And at the end of the session with him, I thought, you know what?
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Wouldn't it be cool if Yunus could be his name?
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My friends called Yunus.
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If Yunus is sitting in the bar and Jenga delivers his proposal for him.
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I said to you, what do you think of that?
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He was like, I would love that.
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Absolutely grow my business.
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So if you think about what's involved in doing that, so basically, you've got to you've got to do the takeoff accurately.
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And some trades are more risky than others, some scopes are more risky than others.
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He was in stone and tile.
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I knew nothing.
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Honestly, before I started, I didn't even know what a subcontractor was.
00:21:05.519 --> 00:21:07.039
He had to explain to me.
00:21:07.200 --> 00:21:10.640
I didn't even understand the function of a general contract, if I'm honest.
00:21:10.799 --> 00:21:12.640
I I'd done re-throughs on my house.
00:21:14.079 --> 00:21:16.240
I know it's crazy.
00:21:16.640 --> 00:21:18.799
I was so ignorant.
00:21:19.119 --> 00:21:22.960
But I I knew that I needed to start somewhere.
00:21:23.200 --> 00:21:29.279
I needed to under, I needed to work with someone who was an expert, and that was what his expertise was in.
00:21:29.839 --> 00:21:34.880
He actually said to me, You shouldn't start in stone and tile because it's too easy.
00:21:36.480 --> 00:21:47.759
In the finish trades, I'm not sure, Jesse, how familiar you are with the finished trades, but one of the riskiest is stone because stone slabs are so expensive.
00:21:48.000 --> 00:21:48.960
Ah, yeah.
00:21:49.200 --> 00:22:00.240
One of the most difficult is ironically, not I know nothing about the actual installation of it, but I'm sure that it's very challenging and tough and requires expertise.
00:22:00.480 --> 00:22:06.559
The toughness I'm talking about is getting the number right, like actually making money on posing.
00:22:07.279 --> 00:22:15.440
Getting that right is hard because you've got waste factors which impact you, you know, the margins are always tight.
00:22:15.759 --> 00:22:20.880
And you if you get the waste factors wrong, then you don't make money.
00:22:20.960 --> 00:22:30.240
So you do all this work, it feels like you're making money, but at the end, you're paying the you're paying your clients to install their stuff for them.
00:22:30.400 --> 00:22:31.519
Yeah, oh yeah.
00:22:31.759 --> 00:22:37.119
So my big idea was what how do I get to a place where I can do this for Unis?
00:22:37.440 --> 00:22:59.519
So I thought, let's start with I I don't have a machine that can do the takeoffs yet, but let's I'll build out an estimation team, they'll do the takeoffs, I'll build out a pricing engine so that I can I can material price for the scope of works that that I'm focused on.
00:22:59.839 --> 00:23:06.640
And my team will receive the bid invitation and they'll turn it into a fully priced bid.
00:23:06.880 --> 00:23:15.039
And I'll give that to my customer, and my customer will change the number, and then they'll they'll make it theirs and they'll submit that.
00:23:15.279 --> 00:23:22.000
I'll tell them, guys, please don't bid with this number because this is just your starting point.
00:23:22.559 --> 00:23:23.200
Right.
00:23:23.680 --> 00:23:33.119
Started to bring on customers, and then one of my customers called me up and said, Shane, we just lost$25,000.
00:23:33.440 --> 00:23:36.880
So they paid me$300 for the piece of work that we did.
00:23:37.200 --> 00:23:42.400
We just lost$25,000 on this project because of your price.
00:23:42.799 --> 00:23:44.240
And I said, Huh?
00:23:44.480 --> 00:23:48.400
What you submitted your proposal using our price?