WEBVTT
00:00:00.020 --> 00:00:02.629
I'm going to do my best to communicate with you with what I have.
00:00:02.629 --> 00:00:08.230
People are very receptive to that and they appreciate the fact that you took the time to learn anything.
00:00:13.121 --> 00:00:14.285
What is going on?
00:00:14.285 --> 00:00:26.254
L&m family Back again, and this is kind of like a refresh, a reboot, because the last time I had an amazing conversation with our guest it didn't process.
00:00:26.254 --> 00:00:28.146
There was some funky what do you call it?
00:00:28.146 --> 00:00:42.728
Technical glitch, which is like the perfect excuse for me to have another conversation with her and like it's an extra special treat because as long as I've known her she has spoken energy and excitement into my life.
00:00:42.728 --> 00:00:49.046
She just set like a really high target for me to aspire to and I ain't afraid I'm going to take it on.
00:00:49.889 --> 00:00:51.533
She's an intentional world changer.
00:00:51.533 --> 00:00:52.201
Bottom line.
00:00:52.201 --> 00:01:01.393
She changes the world of the people that she serves through her business and the people that she comes into contact with, cause I know I'm experiencing it now.
00:01:01.393 --> 00:01:08.963
Her name is Ms Heather Jones and she's like the big boss of Archer Estimation and Consulting.
00:01:09.385 --> 00:01:24.893
When I was kind of doing the little bit of research that I do, it was clear, or I wasn't surprised to find, that part of the reason the whole business started was because she wants to help combat the stress and burnout that estimators experience.
00:01:24.893 --> 00:01:36.149
Because she wants to help combat the stress and burnout that estimators experience, which she knows firsthand and I think we'll get some inside details on it about what it was that motivated her to start the business.
00:01:36.149 --> 00:01:48.385
I know that she wants to improve mental health and physical health for folks, but I also know that somebody very close to her in her life is an estimator, so maybe her insight came from that.
00:01:48.385 --> 00:02:04.522
And before we go any further, if this is your first time here, this is the Learnings and Missteps podcast, where real people just like you are sharing their gifts and talents to leave this world better than they found it.
00:02:04.522 --> 00:02:11.268
I'm Jesse, your selfish servant, and we about to get to know Ms Heather Jones.
00:02:11.328 --> 00:02:13.509
Ms Heather, how are you, I'm doing really well, thank you.
00:02:13.509 --> 00:02:13.969
How are you?
00:02:14.650 --> 00:02:21.215
Oh you know, having fun, feeling a little spent, but still like first world problems.
00:02:21.294 --> 00:02:22.295
It ain't that bad.
00:02:22.295 --> 00:02:23.236
Amen to that.
00:02:23.236 --> 00:02:24.177
I'm in the same boat.
00:02:25.159 --> 00:02:33.615
Yeah Well, one, thank you for coming back on after we spent that whole hour plus the last time together and having to do the redo.
00:02:33.615 --> 00:02:35.063
And two, I know you're not.
00:02:35.063 --> 00:02:37.471
You're feeling a little under the weather as well.
00:02:37.471 --> 00:02:42.431
So last year, what was about three weeks ago four weeks ago last time we talked?
00:02:42.450 --> 00:02:42.771
I think so.
00:02:42.771 --> 00:02:45.251
Yeah, I think it's been three, four weeks ago last time we talked.
00:02:45.251 --> 00:02:45.492
I think so.
00:02:45.492 --> 00:02:46.338
Yeah, I think it's been three four weeks.
00:02:46.359 --> 00:02:52.449
Okay, and are you in the same country today that you were three or four weeks ago?
00:02:52.449 --> 00:02:55.034
Yes, okay, okay.
00:02:55.034 --> 00:02:56.765
Where exactly is that?
00:02:56.765 --> 00:02:58.728
I know you said the Pacific.
00:02:59.580 --> 00:03:01.024
We are in Lima, Peru.
00:03:01.705 --> 00:03:04.032
Lima Peru Got it Got it.
00:03:04.032 --> 00:03:05.026
Why are you in Lima Peru?
00:03:05.026 --> 00:03:05.592
Lima Peru Got it Got it.
00:03:05.592 --> 00:03:05.835
Why are you?
00:03:05.854 --> 00:03:06.259
in Lima, peru, why not?
00:03:07.219 --> 00:03:23.588
Like the longer answer to that is we spent some time in Cusco and we knew we wanted to see other parts of Peru and Lima just was a great place to get some time by the ocean, because it's on the Pacific coast and I was craving the ocean.
00:03:23.588 --> 00:03:27.382
There is an incredible food scene here.
00:03:27.382 --> 00:03:34.884
The restaurants are amazing and you can get tons of really good produce and just food to even cook at home.
00:03:34.884 --> 00:03:45.104
And we said you know, there's not like a ton of touristy things to do in Lima, but it'll be a great place to just hang out for a few weeks, relax and appreciate the ocean.
00:03:46.007 --> 00:03:51.146
Yeah, and so I know folks out there probably thinking like man, what an amazing vacation.
00:03:51.146 --> 00:03:56.325
But this isn't a vacation, this is like a lifestyle deal for you yeah, we slow travel.
00:03:56.325 --> 00:04:00.334
Yes, and so you're making the next jump.
00:04:00.334 --> 00:04:03.510
Where are you headed next, or what's next on the plan?
00:04:03.550 --> 00:04:09.009
So I think the next stop on the plan is actually going to be a new continent.
00:04:09.009 --> 00:04:21.610
We already had some plans to meet up with friends in the fall of this year in Europe, and so we're going to go take a vacation, hang out with some friends and then not 100% certain where we're going from there.
00:04:21.629 --> 00:04:30.699
Okay, so you just got the next step outline going to Europe, going to hang out, and so you just got the next step outline going to Europe going to hang out, and then when you get there, you'll decide where the next stop is.
00:04:30.721 --> 00:04:36.473
Yeah, we started out with like a four-year itinerary, and six months in we realized it's not.
00:04:36.473 --> 00:04:38.805
We're not even going to come close to sticking to it.
00:04:38.805 --> 00:04:45.791
We'd already made two changes by then, because we would either find out about a new place that someone said, oh, you should really check this out.
00:04:45.791 --> 00:04:54.899
Or we would say, oh well, there's this thing going on in this city or country that we really want to experience, so let's go there next.
00:04:54.899 --> 00:05:00.245
And so we just kind of threw the itinerary out the window a little bit, and now it's just a wish list.
00:05:00.879 --> 00:05:02.024
Oh so it's just a list.
00:05:02.024 --> 00:05:05.901
We might go here, we might go there, but it list.
00:05:05.901 --> 00:05:06.382
Oh so it's just a list.
00:05:06.382 --> 00:05:10.701
We might go here, we might go there, but it leaves it sounds like it leaves a lot of room for like adventure and exploration, to just say, okay, well, let's go check that one out.
00:05:10.742 --> 00:05:11.665
That's exactly it.
00:05:12.105 --> 00:05:17.920
Oh my, okay, so I know you started Archer Estimation and Consulting.
00:05:17.920 --> 00:05:23.067
Did you start that business so that you can bounce around all over the globe?
00:05:23.247 --> 00:05:24.889
Did we start it for that reason?
00:05:24.889 --> 00:05:27.312
No, is that a huge perk?
00:05:27.613 --> 00:05:36.526
Yes, Okay, so I know a little bit of the history, which you know because I got to interview too long ago.
00:05:36.526 --> 00:05:43.108
But business idea came from a real pain that you got to observe or see firsthand and opportunities to like help other people.
00:05:43.108 --> 00:05:47.288
There was a work thing that he was going through and it just kind of like well, why don't we just do this?
00:05:47.288 --> 00:05:48.966
And then you started doing that.
00:05:48.966 --> 00:06:01.350
And then, if we were to map it out, how long was it between starting the business and then becoming nomads?
00:06:02.279 --> 00:06:13.228
We officially started the business in October of 23, but we didn't actually begin like be active in it until December of 23.
00:06:13.228 --> 00:06:20.925
So December of 23, and we left on our nomad journey the first week of September of 2024.
00:06:21.685 --> 00:06:22.507
Oh, wow, okay.
00:06:22.507 --> 00:06:26.716
So it was a year from actually starting the business.
00:06:26.716 --> 00:06:29.100
So what were the signals?
00:06:29.100 --> 00:06:34.682
What were the signs that y'all saw that you responded to, that said, hey, let's do this digital nomad thing.
00:06:35.124 --> 00:06:51.307
So we both always have wanted to live abroad, and there were a couple of times in the past that we made attempts at perhaps getting jobs overseas or something like that, but life and responsibilities just never quite let it happen.
00:06:51.307 --> 00:07:01.305
And so once we were free of all those responsibilities, the last one was our last dog, who we adored.
00:07:01.305 --> 00:07:03.507
We adored all of them, but he was the last one we had.
00:07:03.507 --> 00:07:06.872
He died in September of 23.
00:07:06.872 --> 00:07:16.112
And we started the business shortly thereafter and we just kind of looked at each other and said, wait a minute, there's nothing stopping us.
00:07:16.112 --> 00:07:22.528
Now, like, we're location independent, we have our own business, we can actually do this.
00:07:22.528 --> 00:07:32.661
And so we took some time to get the business up and running properly and make sure everything was going to go well, and we had our feet under us and we said, okay, let's start planning.
00:07:32.661 --> 00:07:34.846
And then we sold all our stuff and left.
00:07:35.709 --> 00:07:37.512
I love that, Just the current.
00:07:37.512 --> 00:07:41.430
Now I know a little bit more about you, which it's like totally makes sense.
00:07:41.430 --> 00:07:45.089
I'm sure your family is like yeah, Heather's always been kind of that way.
00:07:45.089 --> 00:08:06.134
But I think it's amazing because for me, like the contrast is estimating right, which is a very logical data, low, like low risk, eliminate risk, identify risk, and so like that kind of mindset doesn't necessarily in my brain, doesn't jive with like hell, yeah, let's go travel the world and like just do this thing.
00:08:06.134 --> 00:08:09.769
And so y'all have been bouncing around for a while.
00:08:09.769 --> 00:08:17.459
What have you learned about yourself as a result of doing this traveling around?
00:08:17.459 --> 00:08:22.492
I think you've focused on South America lately and sounds like you're headed beyond that.
00:08:24.100 --> 00:08:24.302
What?
00:08:24.302 --> 00:08:25.646
That's a great question.
00:08:25.646 --> 00:08:27.927
A lot, a whole lot.
00:08:27.927 --> 00:08:35.208
So you talk about logic and avoiding risk and identifying risk in the estimating field.
00:08:35.208 --> 00:08:37.567
I do a lot of that in my own life.
00:08:37.567 --> 00:08:40.269
I'm pretty risk averse, and always have been.
00:08:40.269 --> 00:08:48.307
So there was a lot of analysis before we kind of jumped off this ledge.
00:08:49.309 --> 00:09:01.725
So as someone who's very type A, who's logical, who does like a cost benefit analysis and a risk analysis on everything I do, number one, I've learned I have to go with the flow a little more.
00:09:01.725 --> 00:09:11.006
I'd already like started to learn that through you know the previous years of just what happened in life, but this has really reinforced it.
00:09:11.006 --> 00:09:14.188
I need to let go of control.
00:09:14.188 --> 00:09:16.388
I cannot control everything.
00:09:17.280 --> 00:09:17.522
And.
00:09:18.264 --> 00:09:20.150
I really like discomfort.
00:09:21.041 --> 00:09:23.048
Ah, and you didn't think you liked it before.
00:09:23.259 --> 00:09:32.964
I felt like I would, but I wasn't sure, because you know you go somewhere where they speak a different language and, yes, we spoke a little bit of Spanish and we're getting a whole lot better, but it's still.
00:09:33.004 --> 00:10:05.375
You're in a situation where you cannot effectively communicate everything you want to communicate and I've always been a pretty good communicator, so I knew that was going to be a huge challenge, and I've always been a pretty good communicator, so I knew that was going to be a huge challenge and so that's been really interesting.
00:10:05.455 --> 00:10:08.404
I knew I wanted to experience different cultures.
00:10:08.404 --> 00:10:24.729
I wanted to meet people, kind of where they live and people who are different and who've maybe never been to the US or never really traveled and all they know is their home, and learn about them and their lives and what their country is like.
00:10:24.729 --> 00:10:40.913
And, of course, within each country, every region is different and so, like, for example, cusco, we learned about the Quechua language and how that sort of integrates with their history and how it influences the Spanish they speak and different things like that.
00:10:40.913 --> 00:11:01.183
So I knew I would be comfortable with that, but I wasn't sure how I would do with the inability to communicate as effectively as I'm used to, but that's helping me learn to go with the flow and, as they say, be more tranquilo, because I'm a little tightly wound and it wouldn't hurt me to be less so.
00:11:04.187 --> 00:11:04.969
I love that.
00:11:04.969 --> 00:11:20.789
It's interesting because you've said to me that you're a recovering perfectionist and I get it right Like same, which doesn't align with like, yeah, let's go travel the world and we had an itinerary and now we don't.
00:11:20.789 --> 00:11:22.121
We're just kind of going to figure it out.
00:11:22.121 --> 00:11:24.307
That's not a judgment, I think it's.
00:11:24.307 --> 00:11:33.548
I think what's exciting about that is it's a signal that you're expanding your comfort zone, right, like staying on the edge of it.
00:11:33.548 --> 00:11:44.167
And then you I mean that's the thing right Is, when people stay on the edge of their comfort zone, we find out that it's not as horrible as we thought and, more importantly, that we can handle this.
00:11:44.167 --> 00:11:51.841
And it's like, oh, what else could I handle?
00:11:51.841 --> 00:11:52.282
What else could I do?
00:11:52.282 --> 00:11:52.802
What else could I learn?
00:11:52.822 --> 00:11:58.254
You know I love that you talk about like you're in a country where the first language is Spanish or some variation of it.
00:11:58.254 --> 00:12:03.673
Your first language is English, but you're still able to communicate.
00:12:03.673 --> 00:12:10.711
And the reason that stands out to me is because you know, in construction and get it, I hear it a bunch how well it.
00:12:10.711 --> 00:12:14.509
Just, you know we can't communicate with the guys because they don't speak English very well.
00:12:14.509 --> 00:12:15.740
I'm like you.
00:12:15.740 --> 00:12:17.062
We could, absolutely.
00:12:17.062 --> 00:12:17.845
I know I can.
00:12:17.845 --> 00:12:26.623
Now I've learned a lot of Spanish, but, like you can, like, it's easy to dismiss it and say well, it's because of them.
00:12:26.623 --> 00:12:52.902
And in this case you're them Right, you're the ones that aren't speaking the native, like if they're going to go to a country where they don't speak their language and maybe gallivant around the globe for a year or two, what pointers do you have for them?
00:12:52.902 --> 00:12:59.981
And before we go any further, we're going to do the LNM family member shout out.
00:13:00.101 --> 00:13:05.433
And this one goes to my brother, lance Furuyama, my brother from LinkedIn.
00:13:05.433 --> 00:13:06.826
He sent this note.
00:13:06.826 --> 00:13:15.549
He says I was fortunate enough to join the second session of the time management workshop and it changed the way that I look at my calendar.
00:13:15.549 --> 00:13:22.173
For those of you that know me, it looks like I'm a master of organization and planning.
00:13:22.173 --> 00:13:30.774
What I didn't realize is that I wasn't allowing any time in my calendar for myself or the things that I want to do.
00:13:30.774 --> 00:13:36.440
I promise you that it is worth your time and attention.
00:13:36.440 --> 00:13:50.544
And Mr Lance is talking about the Time Mastery Workshop, which has now been rebranded and it is the self first time mastery framework Super, super fancy.
00:13:50.544 --> 00:14:06.313
The link will be down there in the show notes and for everybody else you already know I love the attention, I love the comments, I love the shares, the stars, all of the things it gives me an opportunity to shout you out in a future podcast episode.
00:14:10.423 --> 00:14:11.105
Be humble.
00:14:11.921 --> 00:14:12.965
Ooh humble.
00:14:12.965 --> 00:14:13.707
Why humble?
00:14:13.899 --> 00:14:20.514
Because one of the first phrases that we learned was I'm sorry, I only speak a little Spanish.
00:14:20.514 --> 00:14:23.666
Now that phrase has changed to I'm sorry.
00:14:23.666 --> 00:14:33.822
Our Spanish is limited, and so we always start our interactions with that, like we immediately say we're sorry, we don't speak your language.
00:14:33.822 --> 00:14:35.043
Can you help us?
00:14:36.626 --> 00:14:40.153
And I think that goes a long way and every place I've ever been.
00:14:41.139 --> 00:14:45.471
I've been to several countries now where it was either Spanish, german, portuguese.
00:14:45.471 --> 00:14:49.326
I always learn a few words Hello, thank you.
00:14:49.326 --> 00:14:51.672
Please have a nice day.
00:14:51.672 --> 00:14:53.316
Where's the bathroom?
00:14:53.316 --> 00:15:07.121
You know basics, but I learned something and I always start with that, and I've found that, as long as you start with the attitude of I'm the person who doesn't speak the language, this is.
00:15:07.121 --> 00:15:12.099
I'm coming into another country and I don't expect you to speak my language.
00:15:12.099 --> 00:15:14.785
I'm going to do my best to communicate with you with what I have.
00:15:14.785 --> 00:15:27.804
People are very receptive to that and they appreciate the fact that you took the time to learn anything and so like especially if you're just vacationing or you're there for a short time just learn enough to show respect.
00:15:28.726 --> 00:15:30.671
Yeah, oh, I love it Like it's just that.
00:15:30.671 --> 00:15:37.792
Be humble, show some respect, make a damn effort to learn their language and just own it.
00:15:37.792 --> 00:15:44.732
I can go off and complain about the situation here in the States right out on the job site, where, but I'm not gonna.
00:15:44.732 --> 00:15:46.301
We're gonna focus on you.
00:15:46.301 --> 00:16:02.929
So now I know that the main, I'll say, motivation behind your business is to like eliminate or minimize the stress and burnout that estimators are going through and estimators out there.
00:16:02.929 --> 00:16:12.610
I really can't think of an estimator that I know that isn't wound tight and like on the edge, because there they.
00:16:12.610 --> 00:16:15.945
There's a lot, there's just a lot of stress and pressure.
00:16:15.945 --> 00:16:17.668
I don't understand it, cause I never done that work.
00:16:17.668 --> 00:16:30.326
The only thing that I can really relate to them is how what I think is like a superpower is the way that they bounce back from rejection because, right, like, what's a good hit rate?
00:16:30.326 --> 00:16:37.393
I have no idea, but I know a lot of the estimates that they produce don't win and so like.
00:16:37.533 --> 00:17:04.371
For people like me, that would be extremely difficult and then there's all kinds of other pressures and so how much has the traveling helped with the stress of estimating and the types of projects we choose?
00:17:04.371 --> 00:17:16.096
The traveling is actually really good because, especially for Jake, when he's had a day where he's just in an estimate all day long, it's a complicated one.
00:17:16.096 --> 00:17:21.778
You know he's into numbers up to his ears and problems with drawings and just different things.
00:17:21.778 --> 00:17:29.289
When the workday is over it's like okay, well, let's go walk along the Malecon by the Pacific Ocean, let's go take a walk.
00:17:29.289 --> 00:17:34.731
You know you get to get out and you see things you wouldn't necessarily normally see.
00:17:35.494 --> 00:17:53.599
It's not, I don't want to say, the same boring routine of being at home, but I think many people do get into a routine, and especially if you work from home, people don't always leave the house and they don't always put their phone or their computer away, oh, I know.
00:17:53.599 --> 00:18:10.628
And so they end up working, you know, oh, I'll get some dinner and then they'll sit there and after dinner they sit on the sofa and they work, and so having things to see that are not normal for us, and you know, we're in places a limited time so we only have so much time to see the place where we are.
00:18:10.628 --> 00:18:17.189
We have the option to sit on our duffs and not go out and see things, but that's not why we're doing this.
00:18:17.189 --> 00:18:26.673
So it's motivation to leave work at work and get out and shift your mind to something different and give your brain a break.
00:18:28.082 --> 00:18:28.846
Yeah, good, good.
00:18:28.846 --> 00:18:39.413
And so I know Jake is like he does the estimating right, Like that's the service that y'all provide, which I think means you do everything else.
00:18:42.682 --> 00:18:43.625
Am I reading that right?
00:18:43.625 --> 00:18:45.685
I do pretty much do everything else else.
00:18:45.685 --> 00:18:47.843
I handle all the back end stuff of the business.
00:18:47.843 --> 00:18:53.320
I handle a lot of the client interactions, initial kind of client contact, that sort of thing.
00:18:53.320 --> 00:19:01.483
I also do pipe tables and help our clients with admin tasks and help them organize their filing systems.
00:19:01.483 --> 00:19:12.073
Or we even have one client who I'm fortunate that they trust me to help with hiring and so I, you know, screen candidates and do initial interviews and things like that.
00:19:12.073 --> 00:19:22.463
And I also can help with building the back end of some estimating softwares, entering line items and things like that to help build the database.
00:19:22.463 --> 00:19:29.088
So the longer the business has been around, the more I'm getting into some of that work.
00:19:29.088 --> 00:19:31.268
I will not ever, I don't think estimate.
00:19:31.268 --> 00:19:32.021
That is not.
00:19:32.021 --> 00:19:33.686
Estimators are born.
00:19:33.686 --> 00:19:34.710
They're not trained.
00:19:36.760 --> 00:20:10.295
I'm not going to argue because it's a thing, like it is a special skill set, like I will say this I love, and specifically in the plumbing and mechanical space, right, I love understanding the number of labor units based on MCAA or whatever it's based on, per the quantity of the different sizes of materials and how that translates into labor.
00:20:10.295 --> 00:20:11.116
Like all of that I absolutely love it.
00:20:11.116 --> 00:20:17.367
But I could not do that work every damn day, like there is just I think you're right Like they're born, like that's a different, that's a different.
00:20:17.367 --> 00:20:27.723
Speaking that, no way I would lose my mind and I would get fired, like day two maybe, maybe day three, because I just know I'm getting nervous Just thinking about it.
00:20:27.743 --> 00:20:29.188
I've actually said the same thing to Jake.
00:20:29.188 --> 00:20:31.887
I've said I'm so glad I'm not an estimator.
00:20:31.887 --> 00:20:35.621
I don't think I'd last very long, cause my mouth will run away with me.
00:20:35.621 --> 00:20:37.865
I just I've never patient.
00:20:37.865 --> 00:20:39.288
It's not my best virtue.
00:20:39.288 --> 00:21:00.153
I have a lot more than I used to have, and I don't want to use the word stupidity I think that's the most common catch-all that people use but inattention to detail, sending out sloppy work because you didn't check it, forgetting something obvious, and then you know someone having to ask for it.
00:21:00.153 --> 00:21:06.682
We all make mistakes, but you know things like that that I see happening over and over in the industry.
00:21:06.682 --> 00:21:09.509
I would be like you know, I just couldn't keep my mouth shut.
00:21:09.509 --> 00:21:11.864
I'd have a smart email ready to go and I'd be done.
00:21:12.285 --> 00:21:29.104
Boom, bam, a templated email even Cause it happens, it happened all the dang time, and so, like this stress and burnout thing again, I don't think I'm making too big a leap, but my guess is that you got to see it in Jake.
00:21:29.284 --> 00:21:30.384
Oh yeah, I sure did.
00:21:31.684 --> 00:21:31.925
Yeah.
00:21:31.925 --> 00:21:35.147
And then you said, okay, we need to do this.
00:21:35.147 --> 00:21:54.161
It's still going to be the estimator, but you're going to do it to help other companies, and so when you're talking to a prospect or a potential client, do they recognize the stress and burnout in their estimators, or is it more just a capacity thing and they need more people to do it?
00:21:54.701 --> 00:21:56.282
It depends on the size of the client.
00:21:56.282 --> 00:22:03.926
Actually, there are some that do recognize the estimators burnout and like the load that they're carrying.
00:22:03.926 --> 00:22:12.438
There are others who the owner's been doing the estimating and the business has grown to the point that they just don't have the bandwidth anymore.
00:22:12.438 --> 00:22:17.255
But they're not necessarily large enough to hire someone full time yet.
00:22:17.825 --> 00:22:31.789
And then there are other people who they have, their estimator or their small estimating team but when there are cycles of larger amounts of bids coming out and just heavier workloads, that they need some occasional help.
00:22:31.789 --> 00:22:33.615
But it's not enough to hire somebody else.
00:22:36.125 --> 00:22:37.348
Got it, got it, okay.
00:22:37.348 --> 00:22:43.770
And so where do you think, like your personal observation, where do you think the stress and burnout comes from?
00:22:43.770 --> 00:22:46.155
Like into the individual?
00:22:46.155 --> 00:22:47.318
Is it the company?
00:22:47.318 --> 00:22:47.885
What do you?
00:22:47.885 --> 00:22:48.347
What's the mix?
00:22:48.347 --> 00:22:49.432
I think it's the industry.
00:22:50.766 --> 00:22:56.174
I really do think it's the industry overall, because we've seen the shift.
00:22:56.174 --> 00:23:13.847
If you look 10 years ago to now probably closer to 15, but even 10, you could you would see, for example, the amount of time that an estimator is given to turn in an estimate, when they first get the bid package to when it's due, has shrunk significantly.
00:23:13.847 --> 00:23:21.779
You see projects going out with plans that aren't even 50% and they don't want a budget, they want an estimate.
00:23:21.779 --> 00:23:30.849
And then you know you've also got companies that there are now so many players and there's a bit, there's not a bit.
00:23:30.890 --> 00:23:32.515
There is kind of a race to the bottom.
00:23:32.515 --> 00:23:37.828
It's like the lowest number is where everybody goes and it's not necessarily okay.
00:23:37.828 --> 00:23:40.217
Well, who's going to do the best quality work?
00:23:40.217 --> 00:23:46.715
Who read the scope properly and included everything they need to and isn't going to change, order us, et cetera, et cetera.
00:23:46.715 --> 00:23:49.608
It's more just.
00:23:49.608 --> 00:24:45.890
You have each company has to bid more in order to win the work that they need, and so you've got estimators bidding way more jobs than they necessarily did in the past, because there's more competition and it's a lot more competitive and just kind of no-transcript in the beginning instead of the cheapest one.
00:24:47.132 --> 00:24:50.338
Yes, best value over best price.
00:24:50.338 --> 00:25:13.958
Yeah, I mean I recognize that it takes discipline for the contractor to select on best value over best price and I mean it'll be my argument till forever that choosing on best price I understand, like I totally understand that we got there's a budget and we got to stay within budget.
00:25:13.958 --> 00:25:19.047
I totally understand that we got there's a budget and we got to stay within budget.
00:25:19.047 --> 00:25:19.628
I totally understand that.
00:25:19.628 --> 00:25:32.759
Now I also know that there are some, we'll say, decision makers that will pick the lowest price because they know that their bonus is attached to the whatever the financial performance of the project is what.
00:25:32.759 --> 00:25:44.256
But what they fail to see, or rather what ignore, is when they're solely selecting on best price, assuming that best price also isn't best value, because it could be.
00:25:44.355 --> 00:25:54.992
But it's rare that the construction management team is going to be stressed the hell out managing these people that were ultra cheap.
00:25:54.992 --> 00:26:02.057
And there's a reason that they're cheap, right, it's almost never because they're super optimized and super efficient.
00:26:02.057 --> 00:26:31.736
It's almost always because they're operating a very basic system, meaning there's one boss that, like you said, doing the estimating and everything else, and they're hiring people as they can and so they don't have the overhead that some of the other companies have that could provide a better service, but there's a price associated with that and so it creates this thing, like you said, the race to the bottom Now you've already kind of hinted at.
00:26:31.736 --> 00:26:34.248
You help them kind of optimize some of their stuff.
00:26:34.248 --> 00:26:35.851
It's not just the estimating.