The Grading and Excavation Contractor Blogs

The Blogger

John Trotti Grading & Excavation Contractor Editor

More from this blogger

  1. Vocational Education in Your Local Schools
  2. Glimmers from Deep in the Tunnel
  3. Tiers to the Fore
  4. Attaboys
  5. Do You Feel the Economy Stirring
  6. Stimulus Funds What's Next
  7. Investing in Training and Technology
  8. We All Need Some Idle Time - But Our Engines Don't
  9. Just the Facts, Ma'am
  10. Paperless Grading & Excavation Contractor
  11. Staying Focused at the Job Site
  12. You Ain't Seen Nothing Yet
  13. Saving Our Soil
  14. Transmixers
  15. Get Ready for Our May Issue
  16. Landfill Construction
  17. Jobsite Communications
  18. Simulated Dirt
  19. Hunkering Up to Meet the Future
  20. Health Care Assault on Construction Firms
  21. Who Checks Your Six
  22. Training It Starts with Your Image
  23. Is there a Moore's Law in Construction
  24. Technology How Much Is Enough
  25. Getting Set for Our Technology Issue
  26. World of Concrete 2010 - Still a Firm Foundation
  27. The Bottomest Line
  28. Life Beyond the School of Hard Knocks
  29. Developing and Using Standards
  30. A Late-Night Present From the Senate
  31. Commitment Rather than Change
  32. Lessons From Power-Gen
  33. The Action Desk
  34. NGVs for Fleet Operations
  35. Stimulus Funds for Infrastructural Repair Show Me the Dough
  36. Are You Ready for the GHG Emissions Inspector
  37. Do Statistics Tell the Safety Story
  38. LiDAR What is it and Why Should I Care
  39. Consolidation Happens
  40. Equipment Theft in a Tough Economy
  41. ICUEE 2009
  42. Standardization
  43. Causes That Matter
  44. Hard Hats and Safety Harnesses - but Situational Awareness Above All
  45. Signs of the Times That Make Sense
  46. The Human Element
  47. Whoop-De-Doozy
  48. Infrastructure in Dire Need of Overhaul
  49. All in it Together
  50. Pride in Accomplishment It's Part of Our Nature
  51. Y2K Plus Ten
  52. CNH Parts & Service Remanufacturing
  53. Construction Accidents Better But Still Too Many
  54. Not Like Your Father's Crawler
  55. Equipment Theft A Bigger Business Than Ever
  56. Two Days, Three Nights in Peoria
  57. Regulatory Compliance
  58. Fugitive Dust
  59. A Case for Dirtmanship
  60. Are We Still Having Fun
  61. The Best BMP for Erosion & Sediment Control is Knowledge
  62. Snoopy's Doghouse
  63. Leave Close at the Horseshoe Pit
  64. Bailouts, Stimuli, and our Future
  65. Tsunamis in the Sea of Change
  66. Fox in the Henhouse
  67. Writing Checks Our Resources Can't Cover
  68. Trenching Safety
  69. Dimensions 2009
  70. Bottom Lines
  71. Speed, Precision, and Awareness
  72. World of Concrete 2009
  73. Paperless iGrading & Excavation Contractor-i
  74. Tightening the Belt One Notch at a Time
  75. Operation Head Start
  76. Stimulating Thoughts
  77. Start the Year with PMA
  78. Staying Out of the Crosshairs
  79. Employee Free Choice Act (FCA)
  80. Keeping Pace with Workforce Change
  81. Forward to the Future
  82. Investing in Training and Technology
  83. Focusing on the Future
  84. Southern California Fires
  85. Bottom Lines
  86. In Pursuit of the Digital Jobsite
  87. Situational Awareness
  88. Coming to Grips with Change
  89. Sweeping Up the Scraps
  90. How're the Fish Biting Today
  91. Welcome to the New Site!
view all

GX Contractor Editor's Blog

March 30, 2009 1:29pm PST

Rising to the Challenge of Change

Posted By John Trotti Comments

Where once we were looking at what we thought to be an expanding construction universe, today we are caught up in a sea of momentous change affecting nearly every aspect of our business. The economy is one aspect, but that’s not what I want to talk about here. Rather it’s about how the tools of our trade have changed and what this means.

Time was you could pace out a site, scribble some numbers on the back of a piece of paper, make a few calculations, add in your secret fudge factor, and come up with a decent bid. When the electronic calculator came along, it allowed you to add a few extra decimal places to your initial calculations, but your secret factor rounded those off so the end result was pretty much the same as when the pencil was invented.

But then came the computer and spreadsheet and the bidding wars began to heat up, leading us to the present where if you don't have a pretty high-powered business software suite you're liable to find yourself among the also-rans. And that's just one aspect of the digital revolution that has both blessed and cursed our lives.

Face it—life was pretty good before the microchip. Do you remember the days when you'd meet face-to-face with the project owner to discuss what the job entailed, lay out the schedule, talk about money, shake hands, jump on a machine with levers and mechanical linkages, and move some dirt? In those days it seemed that amid all the dirt, smoke, and confusion you were able to make time for some fishing or golfing or camping with your family. The machines you operated were beefy and often needed to be coaxed to perform with a firm hand that was on an honest-to-goodness chunk of metal rather than a something more suitable as a child's toy than a thundering behemoth turning mountains into molehills. You don't have to have been moving dirt for too many years to remember the day you saw your first joystick and wondered just what the designers were sprinkling into their oatmeal. Now look what's happened.

Instead of a couple of rugged gauges designed somewhere during the Middle Ages by a blacksmith who basically told you that the engine was working just in case you had any doubts in the matter, today you have multifunction displays capable of telling both the physical and the mental state of your engine, transmission, and electro-hydraulic systems, including what's wrong and how to fix it. Nor does the technological intrusion end with status checks. Laser and global positioning systems can show you where you stand—literally and in terms of your project—where you'll be when you finish the job, and how to get there from here.

For sure computers have brought a lot of aggravation into our lives, perhaps causing you to wonder whether your job is as satisfying today as it used to be. But when you compare what you can accomplish in an hour or a week today against the same period only a decade ago, the difference is astounding, and the revolution is only in its infancy. Can you imagine meeting the emerging regulatory, environmental, safety, and legal challenges without the help of today's technology? I seriously doubt it. And it's only going to get more demanding from here on out.

Perhaps the most challenging situation we face today—and one that will become even more critical in the future—is the evolving makeup of our workforce. Nationwide, nearly two-thirds of our construction workers do not have English as their primary language and in many cases do not speak, read, or understand English at all.

Technology can and will help us adapt to the situation, but that's only a small part of the answer. The solution lies with you and your ability to stay on the front side of the power curve when it comes to change. What does this entail? Well, to begin with, it means taking an inventory of your entire operation to see how it measures up to the challenge. Just what are the language and cultural conditions in your workforce? Do such things as your policy manual, instructions, signage, and warning decals reflect the actual needs of your workforce? Are you and your supervisors able to communicate fully and precisely with your workers? Have you found ways to provide both the education and the training to develop the language and technical skills of your non-English-speaking workers?

Those who are able to meet such challenges as these will have a distinct advantage over those who carry on "business as usual." Staying on top of change is tough, but luckily there are a lot of resources out there to help. We're one of them, and it's our job to tell you about them. But you can help us be even more valuable by letting us know about the changes you're experiencing and the steps you've taken to stay on top of them.

 

 

What Do You Think?

Post a Comment

Be the first to tell us what you think!

Post a Comment

Not a subscriber? Sign Up
 
 
*  
 




 

Get GX Contractor Email Updates!

Get weekly news and updates through our GX Contractor email newsletter!