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Leveraging the Change Order. Philip Kresge Sr. Director, National Resources. What will we learn today?. Nothing we don’t already know!. We know what we should be doing!. Maybe we’re not doing it because . . . Overwhelmed Preconceived notions Complacent. What we’ll talk about.
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Leveraging the Change Order Philip Kresge Sr. Director, National Resources
What will we learn today? Nothing we don’t already know!
We know what we should be doing! Maybe we’re not doing it because . . . • Overwhelmed • Preconceived notions • Complacent
What we’ll talk about • Change order in the scheme of promotion vs. sales • Prospecting for opportunities • 3 Ways to Facilitate the Change Order • Success Stories • Getting the most out of your success • Turning sales into promotion
Promotion vs. Sales • By definition, promotion is a long-term investment • Influencing a thought process • Sales is a more immediate process • We usually differentiate between the two • Change Order more akin to sales than promotion • An everyday occurrence in our promotion efforts
Promotion Dogma • “Getting in early is key to successful promotion” • “Once the job is in Dodge reports, it’s too late” • It’s never too late!
Change Order • Substituting a specified building material with concrete. • Asphalt • Wood • Steel
Change Order • Job specific • Time sensitive
Change Order can be most successful if you . . . • Solve a problem for your customer • At thetime they are thinking about it • Do it easily and quickly • Selling Solutions
Prospecting The Usual Suspects • Dodge Reports • Construction News • Local Networking
Don’t overlook the obvious Only the wisest of cats would think to look there
Review Current Projects • Mid-job / Next-job recommendation • Landscaper, in the midst of sodding a yard, suggests a rock wall to reduce runoff • Caterer, serving a summer party, reminds client that Christmas is only five months away
Review Upcoming Projects • Residential • Already doing walls & floors • What about driveway? • Commercial • Someone will be asking for a price for footer/floor • What about parking lot? • Flowable fill possibilities?
Know Your Customer • Decision makers • Vote yes or no • Influencers • Can convince decision makers • May be stakeholders • Should be on your promotion team
What does your customer want? The only way to know is to listen!
What are the Hot Buttons? • Aesthetics • Energy Efficiency • Initial Cost • Life-cycle Cost • Unique Design • Sustainable Development
Listen to customers’ wants and decipher their needs Teach customers to want what they need
Energy Efficiency ICF Construction Teach customers to want what they need • Low Maintenance • Concrete Parking Lot • Aesthetics • Decorative Concrete
Look at all the possibilities • Tilt-up Walls • ICF • Parking Lots • Flowable Fill • Decorative • Pervious • SCC • ??????
Low Tech Pitch Book • Promoter may only have 10-15 minutes for introductory meeting • Alternative to using laptop/projector for presentations • Fact-finding mission
Low Tech Pitch Book • Concrete Parking Lots • Over 1,000 sold • Flowable Fill • Initial orders (300) being distributed now • Pervious Concrete (TBA) • Environmental Benefits of Concrete (TBA)
Change Order can be most successful if you . . . • Solve a problem for your customer • At thetime they are thinking about it • Do it easily and quickly
3 Ways to Facilitate the Change Order • Make Suggestions • Exercise your expertise • Ask for the Order • The fast food approach • Design/Build
Make Suggestions • Use your professional expertise to provide insight • Provide alternatives to existing designs • Present new technology • Self consolidating • Pervious • ICF • Demonstrate benefit to owner • Quality • Economy • Safety
Salvation Army • Allentown, PA • Owner looking to resurface existing asphalt • Contractor • Power of Suggestion • Stressed Safety as an issue (hot button) • Provided unsolicited proposal for concrete • 7,500 ft2 parking lot
Muncy Homes • Owner looking to upgrade gravel lot • Spec’d asphalt paving • Team identified “hot buttons” • Low maintenance • Life-cycle cost • Taught owner to want what he needs • Owner chose to pay $500,000 over asphalt bid • Initial proposal • 550,000 ft2 =12,000 yd3 • Owner added 4 acres
Ask for the Order • You are already bidding the job • You are already supplying the job • Mid-Job / Next Job Recommendation • Decision maker may consider alternatives if beneficial • Mobilization costs reduced • Construction schedule • “Would you like fries with that?”
Osram - Sylvania • Bethlehem, PA • Tilt-up Concrete Building • Producer & Contractor made pitch for 296,000 ft2 parking lot • 5,600 yd3 concrete
Harvest States Flour Mill • Slip-formed building and silos • R/M Producer suggested concrete parking lot in lieu of spec’d asphalt • Priced competitively due to lack of mobilization costs • 5,000 yd3 of concrete in parking lot
Originally steel building with asphalt pavement • Footings, floors, etc. 3,500 yd3 • Converted to Tilt-up + 5,000 yd3 • Asphalt to Concrete + 4,000 yd3 • Total Concrete 12,500 yd3 • 250% increase after project was put out to bid • “Would you like to Biggie Size your order?”
Design Build • Possibly the easiest way to facilitate the change order • D/B is a strong influencer • Producer / Contractor part of the D/B team • Present concrete options • New technologies
Shelter Systems Ltd. • Producer/Contractor part of D/B team • Owner wants to maximize development of site • 7+ Acres of pervious concrete substituted for conventional asphalt • Eliminated 1 ½ acre pond • “My lumber isn’t sitting in water.”
Not an easy task • Much of the world has its defenses up to keep out new ideas • Customer’s preconceived notions • Concrete is too expensive • Concrete is too difficult to place • Concrete cracks • We can fall prey to our customer’s objections
Are we too focused? • Sales call to get P/O for concrete footings, floors • Pays no attention to customer’s comments about • Material price instability • Manpower issues • Construction delays
Are we too focused? • Sales call to get P/O for concrete footings, floors • Misses at least three opportunities • Tilt-up concrete • ICF construction • Flowable fill • What about the parking lot?
Make sure you are solving the right problem! Count Basie
Choose Your Battles Wisely • R/M Producer, Pervious Concrete Contractor, Admixture Supplier aggressively promoted pervious concrete • “The perc rate [on site] was .07 inches/hour. One of the ones on the perimeter was .27 inches/hour. There were a few where the rock was so shallow they couldn't perform a perc test.” • “The Commonwealth requires a rate of .52 inches/hour for pervious pavements and requires bedrock to be excavated to three feet below the bottom of the stone reservoir.” • “The strategy that we have arrived at allows us to collect the water from the bus lot and infiltrate it into another portion of the site that percs more effectively, at a rate between .65 and .93.”
Choose Your Battles Wisely • “We couldn’t agree more with your points regarding economic and environmental responsibility. Based upon those criteria, we determined that impervious concrete, combined with underground percolation storage, would be the most practical method of holding and treating stormwater from the planned . . . site.” impervious concrete
A Word of Caution • Keep your promotion message positive • Focus on benefits of concrete • Sell Solutions • Handle your competitor’s weaknesses with care • Mediocrity Always Attacks Perfection!
Leveraging Your Success: Turning Sales into Promotion
Publicize Your Success • Issue press releases • Create one-page flyers • Distribute to • Members • Promotion partners • Existing customers • Potential customers
Osram-Sylvania Project highlighted in Concrete Producer magazine September 1997
Bed, Bath & Beyond project highlighted in flyer prepared by ICFA
Tell the whole story • Identify the customer/project • Identify the wants/needs • Quantify the results • construction time saved • money saved • customer satisfaction