Spend Your Time with Your Best Performers – Project Managers

Read 16 min

Spend Your Time With Your Best People

There is a moment every leader hits where the frustration settles in quietly. You look around your project team, your department, or your company and think, I’m working harder than ever, but we’re not getting better. You are mentoring. You are coaching. You are putting out fires. And somehow, the more energy you pour in, the more drained you feel.

I want to start this conversation with something that might challenge you a little, because growth usually does. If you want to maximize your effectiveness and scale through others, you must learn to intentionally spend most of your time with your best people.

That sentence alone rubs people the wrong way. We are taught to lift others up, to help those who struggle, to rescue the squeaky wheel. And I believe deeply in training, mentoring, and developing people. Elevate Construction exists for that exact reason. But what I am talking about here is different. This is about where your primary leadership energy goes. Because if you get this wrong, you don’t just stall progress. You quietly punish the very people who are doing everything right.

The Hidden Pattern That Holds Teams Back

On every project, in every company, and in every department, people generally fall into three groups. The exact percentages may shift, but the pattern is consistent. There is a group that is bought in. These people believe in the direction, the systems, and the standards. They show up prepared. They support the culture. They weigh in during meetings and back the decisions afterward. They do not need to be chased. They are your builders of momentum.

There is a middle group that is undecided. They are watching. They are not against you, but they are not committed either. They are influenced by what they see rewarded and what they see tolerated. This group will move, one way or the other. And then there is the group that is not bought in. Sometimes they are vocal. Sometimes they are silent. Sometimes they smile in meetings and undermine everything afterward. They resist standards, avoid accountability, and drain energy. Often, they are the loudest voices in the room when something isn’t going their way.

Here is the painful truth. In construction, the people who complain the most usually receive the most attention. They get the meetings. They get the explanations. They get the follow-ups. They get the emotional labor. And meanwhile, your best people quietly do their jobs, solve problems, and receive very little of your time. Over time, that imbalance sends a message, whether you intend it or not.

A Lesson From Home That Applies to the Jobsite

I have eleven children, and parenting has a way of exposing leadership blind spots very quickly. Like most families, we have kids who are naturally aligned with expectations. They do their chores. They follow through. They are diligent and responsible. We also have kids who struggle more. They need reminders. They push boundaries. They demand attention.

If I am honest, I often spend the majority of my time dealing with the squeaky wheels. And what does that communicate to the child who is doing everything right? It says, If I behave well, I disappear. Human beings do not need positive attention to act out. They just need attention. And when high performers feel invisible long enough, they either disengage or leave. The same thing happens on project teams. The same thing happens in companies. The same thing happens in leadership.

Why This Matters More Than You Think

When leaders over-invest their time in low performers, three dangerous things happen. First, the undecided middle group notices. They see that complaining, resisting, or creating drama earns attention. Slowly, some of them drift toward that behavior because it appears to work. Second, your top performers feel taken for granted. They stop bringing ideas. They stop volunteering solutions. They stop pushing themselves. Eventually, they go somewhere else where excellence is noticed. Third, the culture shifts. Not because of one big decision, but because of hundreds of small signals about what is rewarded and what is tolerated. This is not theoretical. I have watched it play out across projects, companies, and entire organizations.

What “Spend Time With Your Best People” Actually Means

This does not mean ignoring struggling team members. It does not mean abandoning training. It does not mean being harsh or uncaring. It means intentionally designing your leadership time so that the majority of your energy goes toward the people who are already aligned and performing.

When you invest deeply in your best people, several things happen naturally.

  • They grow faster and begin to multiply your impact through others.
  • The middle group becomes motivated to rise because excellence is clearly rewarded.
  • Chronic dissenters either improve, neutralize, or self-select out of the organization.

Patrick Lencioni once shared that roughly five percent of people in the dissenting group will leave when they are no longer the center of attention. That is not a failure. That is clarity. The goal is not to punish anyone. The goal is to create an environment where the standard is clear and the path forward is obvious.

The Role of Incentive and Survival

In construction, there are two forces that shape behavior more than any policy manual ever will. Incentive and survival. Incentive is recognition, opportunity, growth, trust, and time with leadership. Survival is the minimum standard required to stay on the project or in the role. We train relentlessly before people step onto a jobsite. We coach. We teach. We prepare. But once we are on site, certain lines cannot be crossed. Safety, quality, and respect for people are not negotiable. There is no on-the-job training for falling out of a harness. There is no learning curve for cutting corners that put lives at risk. Zero tolerance is not about punishment. It is about protecting the majority and honoring the standard.

How This Creates Real Collaboration

When leaders consistently spend time with their best people, collaboration improves rather than declines. Your strongest performers become cultural anchors. They model behavior. They reinforce standards. They pull others forward. The undecided group sees a clear picture of what success looks like and how it is supported. Many of them rise to the occasion. And the team stops revolving around the lowest common denominator. That is how collaboration actually scales. Not by endless accommodation, but by clarity, consistency, and respect.

Where Elevate Construction Fits In

At Elevate Construction, we believe leadership is about systems, not personalities. When the system rewards the right behaviors, people thrive. When it doesn’t, everyone struggles. If your project needs superintendent coaching, project support, or leadership development, Elevate Construction can help your field teams stabilize, schedule, and flow. This philosophy shows up in how we train leaders, how we structure teams, and how we build LeanTakt-based systems that allow high performers to multiply their impact without burning out.

The Respectful Choice

Some people hear this message and think it sounds harsh. I would argue the opposite. What is more respectful? Allowing poor behavior to persist and drag everyone down, or setting clear expectations and rewarding those who rise to meet them? What is more respectful? Forcing someone to stay in an environment where they are unhappy and misaligned, or giving them the opportunity to find a place where they can succeed?Respect for people does not mean comfort at all costs. It means honesty, clarity, and dignity.

A Final Challenge

Take a hard look at your calendar. Who gets most of your time? Who gets your energy? Who gets your attention? Tomorrow, intentionally schedule time with your best people. Walk with them. Coach them. Ask them what they see. Invest where the return is exponential. Edwards Deming once said, “A bad system will beat a good person every time.” Your job as a leader is to build a system that allows good people to win. That starts with choosing where you stand and who you stand with.On we go. 

Frequently Asked Questions

Isn’t this unfair to struggling employees?
No. Struggling employees still deserve training, feedback, and clear expectations. The difference is that they should not consume a disproportionate amount of leadership energy at the expense of high performers.

What if my best people don’t need me?
They may not need rescuing, but they do need recognition, challenge, and growth. Ignoring them is one of the fastest ways to lose them.

How does this help the middle group?
The undecided group watches what is rewarded. When they see excellence supported and recognized, many will rise to meet that standard.

Does this mean tolerating less empathy?
Not at all. Empathy remains critical. The difference is pairing empathy with accountability and clarity.

How does this connect to Lean thinking?
Lean focuses on amplifying value and reducing waste. Over-investing in chronic dysfunction is waste. Investing in people who multiply value is Lean leadership in action.

If you want to learn more we have:

-Takt Virtual Training: (Click here)
-Check out our Youtube channel for more info: (Click here) 
-Listen to the Elevate Construction podcast: (Click here) 
-Check out our training programs and certifications: (Click here)
-The Takt Book: (Click here)

Discover Jason’s Expertise:

Meet Jason Schroeder, the driving force behind Elevate Construction IST. As the company’s owner and principal consultant, he’s dedicated to taking construction to new heights. With a wealth of industry experience, he’s crafted the Field Engineer Boot Camp and Superintendent Boot Camp – intensive training programs engineered to cultivate top-tier leaders capable of steering their teams towards success. Jason’s vision? To expand his training initiatives across the nation, empowering construction firms to soar to unprecedented levels of excellence.

On we go

Lean Heaven Feat. Paul Akers

Read 23 min

The Interview That Changes How You See Quality and Safety

Every once in a while, you have a conversation that resets your internal compass. Not just a good interview, not just solid content, but one of those moments where you realize, “Oh… this is what we’ve been missing.” That is exactly what this episode was for me.

I have interviewed a lot of people. I have read the books. I have sat through the trainings. I have implemented Lean systems on real projects with real deadlines, real personalities, real pressure, and real consequences. But when I sat down with Paul Akers, I felt something that is hard to manufacture in a podcast recording. I felt inspired. Not hyped up. Not entertained. Inspired in the deep sense, where your brain starts mapping new possibilities before the conversation is even over.

The construction industry has no shortage of methods. We have schedules, software, BIM, meetings, punchlists, standards, and documentation. What we struggle with is getting quality and safety all the way to the worker. Not as posters. Not as slogans. Not as “we care” speeches. I mean truly embedded into daily behavior in a way that protects people and delights customers.

That is what this episode is about. It is about how lean culture becomes real, how it becomes personal, and how it becomes so practical that a temporary worker can recognize “not normal,” stop, call, and wait, and feel fully supported doing it.

We Want Quality, but We Don’t Build a Culture That Produces It

Most of us know the feeling. The project is moving fast. The trades are cycling. People are coming and going. We are trying to hit milestones, manage risk, and keep the jobsite safe. And then something happens that makes your stomach drop. A detail gets installed wrong. A finish gets compromised. A safety condition appears that should have been obvious. A problem repeats for the third time, and you realize the issue is not effort. The issue is the system. The issue is that we do not have a culture where every person, at every level, can see what “good” looks like and feels safe enough to stop when something is not right.

That is the moment where many teams default to control. More inspections. More rules. More reminders. More yelling. More paperwork. It feels like action, but it is not culture. It is reaction. Culture is what happens when nobody is watching. Culture is what happens when the foreman is not standing over someone’s shoulder. Culture is what happens when the newest worker on the site notices a deviation and knows exactly what to do next.

We Rely on Heroics Instead of Training

Here is the pattern I see over and over again. We want high standards, but we do not train to those standards. We expect craftsmanship, but we do not build shared definitions of normal. We assume people will “just know,” and then we punish them when they don’t.

That failure pattern shows up in the smallest places. The messy trailer. The muddy walk paths. The bathrooms everyone avoids. The uncontrolled laydown yard. The way we accept rework as normal. The way we keep moving even when something feels off because nobody wants to be the person who slows down production.

And here is the hard part. A lot of wonderful construction professionals are temporary in nature. Even if they are excellent, they might only be on your job for a season. They may not feel respected. They may not feel safe speaking up. They may not feel like they have the authority to stop anything. If we want quality and safety at the source, we have to build a system where they do.

The Jobsite Where Lean Actually Worked

I have been able to implement Two Second Lean concepts on projects with remarkable results. I am not saying perfect. I am saying measurable. The kind of results where an owner walks the site and says something so unexpected you almost laugh because it sounds too good to be true. One owner told us, “When I come on site, it feels like Disneyland.”

That is not because we had magical people. It is because we created a different environment. A jobsite that was clean, organized, visual, and respectful. A jobsite where people could find what they needed, move smoothly, and take pride in where they worked. A jobsite where small improvements happened daily instead of being saved for some mythical “when we have time” moment that never arrives. That experience is why Paul’s work matters so much to me. Two Second Lean is not just a book. It is a permission slip to stop accepting chaos as normal.

Lean Is Not a Toolset, It Is a Way to Live

One of the most powerful parts of this interview was the reminder that Lean is not something you do at work and forget at home. Paul said it plainly. Lean is about doing it. Everywhere. Every day. Fix what bugs you. Do it now. That is not just productivity talk. That is dignity talk. It is a way of saying, “My environment matters. My time matters. My people matter.” When you start thinking that way, you stop treating problems as background noise and start treating them as opportunities to create flow, joy, and safety.

And then the conversation took a turn that I did not expect. We started talking about heaven. I told Paul that the word that came to mind as I re-read Two Second Lean and Banish Sloppiness was “heaven.” Not in a cheesy way. In a real way. Because I cannot imagine a meaningful life or an eternal life being defined by stagnation. To me, continuous improvement is the closest thing to heaven on earth. A life where you are creating, improving, serving, learning, and making things better. Paul told me I should start my story for the Impact book with that concept, and I am going to.

How Quality and Safety Reach Every Worker

The biggest gift in this interview was the clarity around how to get quality and safety to every worker, even temporary workers, even people who are new, even people who do not yet feel confident. Paul shared an example from Japan that should wake up our industry. He visited a company called Techno Smile that trains temporary workers for Lexus. Think about that. Temporary workers. Lexus-level quality. That does not happen by accident. It happens by design. And the design is relentless training around one simple concept: normal and abnormal.

When everything is normal, keep going. The moment something is abnormal, stop. But it is not just “stop.” It is “stop, call, wait.” That phrase is so simple that it almost feels too small to be a game changer. But it is a game changer because it gives a worker a clear behavior, a clear next step, and a clear promise of support. It removes the ambiguity that creates fear.

Paul described how they repeat it over and over, testing comprehension through scenarios tied to all five senses. If you see something abnormal, stop, call, wait. If you smell something abnormal, stop, call, wait. If you hear something abnormal, stop, call, wait. The worker learns that quality is not an afterthought. It is the rule of the system. That is how quality becomes culture.

What This Looks Like on a Construction Project

In construction, we already have touchpoints that can carry this culture if we choose to use them correctly. We have foreman huddles. We have worker huddles. We have orientations. We have pre-task plans. We have training moments every single day. The question is whether we treat those moments as check-the-box activities or as the most important part of the job.

If you want this to work, you do not treat training like something you do when you have time. You treat it like the job. You build it into the daily kata. You do it consistently enough that it becomes identity. Here are two places where teams can start immediately without turning this into a complicated rollout.

First, tighten your daily huddles. Not longer. Better. Make them visual. Make them specific. Make them interactive. Teach “normal versus abnormal” with real examples from your site, not generic posters. Then repeat “stop, call, wait” until it becomes muscle memory.

Second, build a jobsite culture of respect for people and resources. Paul’s examples were not theoretical. He talked about putting shoes back properly at Costco because it shows respect for the resource. He talked about leaving airplane bathrooms better than you found them because the plane is a shared resource and we are stewards of it.

That mentality is exactly what construction needs. When people respect the jobsite, the tools, the materials, and each other, quality and safety stop being separate programs and start becoming the natural outcome. This is also where LeanTakt and flow matter. When you build a plan that respects time, space, and trade flow, you reduce chaos. When you reduce chaos, you reduce defects. When you reduce defects, you reduce rework. When you reduce rework, you reduce injuries. The chain is real, and it starts with respect and training.

Bullet Reminders to Make It Stick

Most of what matters here cannot be captured in a list, because culture is built in story and repetition, not bullet points. But there are a couple of reminders worth keeping in your pocket as you try to implement this.

  • Train for comprehension, not exposure, meaning you don’t just “cover” the concept, you test it until the worker can repeat it and apply it.
  • Build pride through environment, because people protect what they are proud of, and they ignore what feels disposable.
  • Make it daily, because anything you do “sometimes” will never become a culture.

The Missing Ingredient: Total Participation

One of Paul’s most important points was that all the tools only matter if the outcome is total participation. Last Planner, visuals, daily huddles, audits, LeanTakt planning, all of it can become performance theater if the workforce is not participating in identifying and eliminating waste through small improvements.

Total participation means the newest worker and the most tenured foreman are both engaged in improving the work. Not once a month. Daily. That is when the site starts to feel different. That is when the job starts to feel lighter. That is when the whole team begins to win.

How Elevate Construction Supports This in the Field

At Elevate Construction, our mission is not to sell people a theory. Our mission is to help teams build habits that create stable flow, reliable schedules, and dignity for workers. We want construction to be fun, balanced, and remarkable, and we want families preserved instead of sacrificed.

If your project needs superintendent coaching, project support, or leadership development, Elevate Construction can help your field teams stabilize, schedule, and flow. This episode is a reminder that the path is not mysterious. It is not reserved for manufacturing. It is not reserved for Japanese culture. It is available to us if we are willing to train relentlessly, respect deeply, and improve daily.

Your Challenge

Here is my challenge to you. Stop waiting for the perfect moment to improve. Stop accepting “that’s just construction” as an excuse. Pick one behavior, one habit, one system that will help your workers see normal and abnormal, and start training it daily until it becomes who you are. Paul said it plainly. Lean is about doing it. Fix what bugs you. Do it now. And I will add this, because it has become one of my favorite ways to describe the vision. A life of continuous improvement, service, and daily progress is the closest thing to heaven on earth I have ever seen. On we go. 

FAQs

What does “stop, call, wait” mean in construction?
It means that when a worker sees, hears, or senses anything abnormal, they stop work immediately, call their supervisor or foreman, and wait for guidance before proceeding.

How do you train temporary workers to high quality standards?
You train them the same way you train full-time workers, with clear definitions of normal and abnormal, repeated scenarios, and consistent testing for comprehension, not just exposure.

Why does Paul Akers emphasize respect for resources?
Because waste is often a symptom of disrespect. When people treat tools, spaces, materials, and shared environments with care, quality and safety improve naturally.

How does Lean culture improve safety on a jobsite?
Lean reduces chaos and rework through organization, visual control, and daily improvement. Less chaos means fewer surprises, fewer rushed decisions, and fewer unsafe conditions.

How can LeanTakt help with quality and flow?
LeanTakt creates predictable trade flow and stable sequencing. When crews work in a reliable rhythm with fewer interruptions, quality improves and safety risks decrease.

If you want, I can also rewrite this blog into a version tailored for a specific keyword target like “lean construction culture,” “stop call wait,” or “construction quality training,” while keeping Jason’s narrative voice and the same structure.

If you want to learn more we have:

-Takt Virtual Training: (Click here)
-Check out our Youtube channel for more info: (Click here) 
-Listen to the Elevate Construction podcast: (Click here) 
-Check out our training programs and certifications: (Click here)
-The Takt Book: (Click here)

Discover Jason’s Expertise:

Meet Jason Schroeder, the driving force behind Elevate Construction IST. As the company’s owner and principal consultant, he’s dedicated to taking construction to new heights. With a wealth of industry experience, he’s crafted the Field Engineer Boot Camp and Superintendent Boot Camp – intensive training programs engineered to cultivate top-tier leaders capable of steering their teams towards success. Jason’s vision? To expand his training initiatives across the nation, empowering construction firms to soar to unprecedented levels of excellence.

On we go

The Leader Without a Title

Read 19 min

When the Team Won’t Collaborate and Your Hands Feel Tied

We have all been there. You are on a project with smart people, capable people, even good people, and yet nothing is moving. The team does not listen. There is no collaboration. Conversations are shallow or nonexistent. Everyone is protecting their corner, and you feel like your hands are tied because you do not have the title, the authority, or the final say.

That frustration is real. I want to say that clearly. I am not going to sugarcoat this or pretend it is easy. Trying to lead in an environment where people are disengaged or resistant can be exhausting. It can make you question yourself, your value, and sometimes even your future in this industry. But I want you to hear this right up front. You are not powerless, and you are not stuck the way you think you are.

This episode came from a real question, and it is one I have lived personally. How do you build collaboration when you are not in charge? How do you lead when the people above you are not interested in changing? How do you move a team forward when communication is broken and trust is thin?

The Pain of Working in a Non-Collaborative Environment

One of the hardest things in construction is working on a team that is content with being just good enough. Not bad, not failing, but not great either. They are comfortable. They know their routines. They hit minimum expectations, and they have no interest in pushing further.

Good is the enemy of great. I have seen it over and over again. Teams that could be remarkable but never will be because nobody is willing to disrupt the comfort zone. When you are someone who wants to improve, to innovate, to collaborate, that environment can feel suffocating.

I know what it is like to feel like the only one pushing. I know what it is like to be labeled intense, too forward, or too much. I also know what it is like to be told, directly or indirectly, to stay in your lane. That is not easy to navigate, especially when you care deeply about the work and the people.

Naming the Failure Pattern

The failure pattern is not a lack of intelligence or experience. It is a lack of ownership and shared purpose. Teams stop collaborating when they stop believing that collaboration matters. They stop talking when they do not feel safe. They stop listening when they do not see value in what is being said.

When leaders diminish others, intentionally or unintentionally, the team responds by shutting down. When meetings become status updates instead of conversations, collaboration dies. When people feel unheard, they disengage. None of this happens overnight. It builds slowly, and then one day you look around and wonder how you ended up there.

Where You Are

If you are an assistant project manager, assistant superintendent, field engineer, or anyone without a formal leadership title, this can feel especially discouraging. You see the problems. You see the opportunities. You know things could be better, but you do not feel empowered to act. I want you to know that feeling frustrated does not mean you are wrong. It usually means you care. And caring is not a weakness in construction. It is a responsibility.

Leading Without a Title

Early in my career, I found myself on a project with a superintendent who believed in pushing forward. I fought to get onto that project because I knew the culture mattered. Once there, I did not wait to be told what to do. I started solving problems. I planned work that nobody else was planning. I coordinated scopes that were falling through the cracks. I showed initiative, not because I wanted power, but because the project needed it.

Over time, trust was built. Not through speeches, but through results. Eventually, responsibilities were handed to me because I had already proven I was capable and committed. That is how leadership without a title works in real life. It is earned, not assigned.

Leadership Is Not About Permission

One of the most freeing realizations you can have is this. Leadership is not something someone gives you. It is something you practice. Titles help, authority helps, but neither is required to begin leading. You do not need to wait until you are in charge to act like someone who cares about the whole. You do not need to wait for permission to prepare, to learn, to coordinate, or to help others succeed.

How Collaboration Actually Gets Built

Collaboration is not created by telling people to collaborate. It is created by trust, clarity, and shared wins. People collaborate when they believe three things intellectually and emotionally.

First, they understand what you are proposing and why it matters. Second, they feel that it aligns with their needs and concerns. Third, they see a clear path that makes participation easy rather than painful. This is where many well-meaning people fail. They have a good idea, but they do not address all three of those elements. When even one is missing, resistance shows up.

Two Practical Anchors for Leading Without a Title

When you want to influence a team that is not collaborating, there are two practical anchors that consistently work when applied with humility and discipline.

  • You look for opportunities where others cannot or will not step in, and you do the work quietly and well, letting results speak before words ever do.
  • You use structured environments, especially team meetings, to create safe, consistent communication where people can weigh in, challenge ideas, and ultimately buy in together.

Neither of these relies on authority. Both rely on preparation and courage.

Why Team Meetings Matter More Than You Think

People love to complain about meetings, but a well-run team meeting is one of the most powerful leadership tools available. When communication breaks down, it is often because the meeting space has failed. A real team meeting is not about updates. It is about alignment. It is about surfacing conflict safely. It is about listening, deciding, and committing together. When meetings are done right, collaboration becomes inevitable because silence is no longer an option. If you can influence the quality of the team meeting, you can influence the direction of the project. I have seen it work in environments that seemed completely stuck.

The Role of Authority and Influence

There is a dangerous myth in leadership circles that authority does not matter. That is simply not true. It takes a teaspoon of authority and a gallon of influence to get things done. Without that small amount of authority, progress is harder.

The key is this. You do not need full authority. You need a small, clear opportunity where authority has been implicitly or explicitly given. That might be ownership of a scope, a process, or an initiative. Once you have that, influence can do the rest.

A Framework for How You Show Up

When leading without a title, how you show up matters more than what you say. I like to think about this in two dimensions: who you are becoming and how you treat others while you are becoming that person. You must commit to innovation, mastery, authenticity, courage, and ethics in your own behavior. At the same time, you must be helpful, understanding, relational, engaging, and genuinely supportive of others. When those two sides come together, trust grows. Here is where many people get it wrong. They push change without empathy, or they empathize without acting. Neither works on its own.

Scaling Results Instead of Lecturing

One of the most effective ways to build collaboration is to create success in your own area and then share it. Results are the best argument. When people see trades thriving, schedules stabilizing, and stress reducing, curiosity replaces resistance. I have always believed in scaling excellence. If something works, show it. Share it. Walk people through it. Let them experience it rather than convincing them with words alone.

When You May Need to Make a Hard Choice

Sometimes, despite your best efforts, the environment does not change. Leaders remain closed. Collaboration remains blocked. When that happens, you have a decision to make. You can wait, documenting what you are learning for the day you are in charge. Or you can choose to move to an environment that aligns with your values and direction. Neither choice is failure. Staying miserable without learning or moving forward is.

How This Connects to Elevate Construction

At Elevate Construction, we see this pattern everywhere. People want to do better, but they do not know how to influence systems they do not control. That is why our work focuses on leadership, communication, and operational clarity, not just tools. Whether it is LeanTakt planning, team meetings, or leadership development, the goal is always the same. Create environments where people can collaborate, speak up, and succeed together. If your project needs superintendent coaching, project support, or leadership development, Elevate Construction can help your field teams stabilize, schedule, and flow.

A Motivating Challenge

Here is my challenge to you. Stop waiting for permission to care. Stop believing that a title defines your impact. Look for the small openings where you can lead, prepare relentlessly, act with courage, and treat people with respect. As Jason Schroeder often says, leadership is a choice you make long before it is a role you are given. And as Deming reminded us, a system will always deliver the results it is designed for. If you want different results, someone has to redesign the system. On we go. 

FAQs

How can I build collaboration without authority?
By preparing deeply, solving real problems, and using structured communication like effective team meetings to build trust and alignment.

What if leadership above me resists change?
Focus on what you can control, create success in your area, and let results speak. If resistance remains, decide whether to wait or move on intentionally.

Are team meetings really that important?
Yes. A well-run team meeting creates psychological safety, healthy conflict, and shared commitment, which are essential for collaboration.

Do I need a title to be a leader?
No. Leadership is demonstrated through initiative, integrity, and service, not job titles.

When should I consider leaving a team or company?
When you are no longer learning, aligned, or able to live your values despite sincere effort to improve the environment.

If you want to learn more we have:

-Takt Virtual Training: (Click here)
-Check out our Youtube channel for more info: (Click here) 
-Listen to the Elevate Construction podcast: (Click here) 
-Check out our training programs and certifications: (Click here)
-The Takt Book: (Click here)

Discover Jason’s Expertise:

Meet Jason Schroeder, the driving force behind Elevate Construction IST. As the company’s owner and principal consultant, he’s dedicated to taking construction to new heights. With a wealth of industry experience, he’s crafted the Field Engineer Boot Camp and Superintendent Boot Camp – intensive training programs engineered to cultivate top-tier leaders capable of steering their teams towards success. Jason’s vision? To expand his training initiatives across the nation, empowering construction firms to soar to unprecedented levels of excellence.

On we go

Physical Intimacy in Relationships Feat. Brandon Montero

Read 19 min

Intimacy, Relationships, and the Life You’re Trying to Build

Let me start this one plainly, because that’s how we do things here. Most of us have problems at home in our relationships that we are not solving. We work around them. We numb them. We ignore them. We tell ourselves it will get better when the project slows down, when the kids are older, or when life is less busy. But it rarely does. And eventually those unresolved issues show up on the jobsite, whether we like it or not.

I wanted to talk about this topic because construction is not just hard on schedules and budgets. It is hard on marriages, partnerships, families, and intimacy. Long hours, early mornings, late nights, stress, and responsibility all take a toll. And yet we rarely talk about it. We talk about Lean. We talk about safety. We talk about productivity. But we don’t talk about what kind of human being is showing up inside those systems.

That’s why I invited Brandon Montero to have this conversation with me. Not to shock anyone. Not to be edgy. But to be honest. Because if we want to build remarkable projects, we need to build remarkable lives. And intimacy and relationships are not side issues. They are central.

Why Intimacy Matters in Construction

In construction, especially for men, emotions are often treated like a liability. Intimacy is even more taboo. We are taught to tough it out, push through, and keep moving. But here’s the truth I’ve seen over and over again. You cannot be healthy at work if you are unhealthy at home. You cannot be present, patient, and grounded on the jobsite if you are disconnected, resentful, or lonely in your most important relationships.

I’ve had people come up to us after boot camps and say, “You didn’t just help my career. You helped my marriage.” And that matters to me more than almost anything else. Because when your home life stabilizes, your nervous system stabilizes. When your nervous system stabilizes, your leadership improves. When your leadership improves, your project improves.

Most people don’t wake up intending to neglect their partner. It happens slowly. Fatigue sets in. Stress builds. Communication drops. Intimacy becomes transactional or disappears altogether. And instead of addressing it, we normalize it. We joke about it. Or we silently suffer. That suffering leaks. It leaks into how we talk to our crews. It leaks into how we react under pressure. It leaks into our patience, our tone, and our ability to see clearly.

Ignoring What Actually Hurts

One of the biggest failure patterns I see, both in projects and in relationships, is avoiding what hurts. In Lean thinking, we talk about fixing what bugs us. If something is broken, we don’t just accept it as normal. We study it. We collaborate. We experiment. We improve. But when it comes to intimacy and relationships, many people abandon that mindset. They decide that distance is just how marriage works. That lack of desire is just part of getting older. That resentment is normal. That silence is safer than vulnerability. It’s not that people don’t care. It’s that nobody taught them how to care effectively.

Showing Up at Home the Same Way You Show Up at Work

One of the most powerful ideas Brandon shared was the concept of giving 100 percent where you are. At work, we talk all the time about being present. Being engaged. Being focused. At home, the same rule applies. Intimacy is not just sex. It is attention. It is awareness. It is touch. It is closeness. It is letting your partner feel seen and desired, not just used or ignored. It is showing up throughout the day, not just at the end of it. If we don’t do that, there are consequences. Just like on a project. When you don’t prepare, rework shows up. When you don’t communicate, conflict shows up. When you don’t maintain trust, everything slows down. The same is true at home.

Obligation Versus Giving Freely

One of the most important distinctions we talked about was obligation versus giving freely. Nobody is obligated to do anything in a relationship. But every action and every inaction has consequences. Think about your kids. When they ask you to read them a story and you don’t, there is an emotional impact. Not because you were obligated, but because connection was missed. When you do read the story, even if you were tired, you don’t resent your child. You feel closer. Intimacy works the same way. When it becomes something taken rather than something given, resentment grows. When it is offered freely, as a way to build connection, it becomes life-giving instead of draining.

Building Intimacy Throughout the Day

One of the most practical insights from this conversation was that intimacy is built long before anything physical happens. It is built in small, consistent actions that communicate attraction and care. This is not about grand gestures or movie scenes. It is about daily presence. Things like touch, attention, and warmth that say, “I see you. I want you. You matter to me.”

Here is where many people get stuck. They do nothing all day, then show up at night expecting intimacy to just happen. When it doesn’t, frustration follows. That frustration often gets misinterpreted as rejection, when in reality the emotional groundwork was never laid. A healthy approach looks more like this in practice:

  • You intentionally create moments of closeness throughout the day, even in simple ways, so your partner feels desired and connected before anything physical is even considered.
  • You take responsibility for your own health, energy, and presence, understanding that attraction is influenced by how you show up emotionally, physically, and mentally.

This is not manipulation. It is leadership in a relationship.

Love Languages and Intentionality

Love languages matter. Not because they are a gimmick, but because they remind us that people receive love differently. Just like on a project, you wouldn’t teach every crew member the same way. You adjust based on how they learn. Some people feel loved through touch. Others through words. Others through time or acts of service. When we insist on expressing love only in our own language, we miss the mark.

What really stood out to me was the idea of intentionality. Some couples schedule time for connection because spontaneity alone doesn’t work for them. That doesn’t make it robotic. It makes it reliable. We schedule meetings. We schedule workouts. We schedule safety walks. But when it comes to relationships, we pretend scheduling is unromantic and then wonder why things fall apart. Intention is not the enemy of romance. Neglect is.

Health, Desire, and the Courage to Address Reality

Another hard truth we discussed is that a complete lack of desire is often a signal, not a verdict. Hormones, stress, diet, sleep, and mental health all play a role. Ignoring those signals doesn’t make you noble. It makes you passive. In construction, if equipment is malfunctioning, we don’t shame it. We inspect it. We maintain it. We fix it. Our bodies and relationships deserve the same respect. This is not about blame. It is about responsibility. If something matters, we work on it.

Attraction, Respect, and Appreciation

We also talked about attraction and how uncomfortable that topic makes people. Attraction does not mean objectification. Respecting beauty does not mean replacing your partner. There is a difference between appreciation and obsession.

Brandon shared a metaphor I loved. You can walk through a museum and appreciate many beautiful paintings, but still know which one is yours. Problems arise when you replace what is yours or become consumed by something that was never meant to take that place. Unhealthy behaviors are unhealthy not because they exist, but because they replace connection instead of supporting it.

Jealousy, Insecurity, and Maturity

Jealousy and insecurity show up in every relationship. The question is not whether they exist, but how we handle them. Maturity is learning to separate appreciation from threat. It is understanding that your partner noticing beauty in the world does not diminish your value. In Lean thinking, we talk about controlling what is in our control. Our thoughts, actions, and intentions are our task. Someone else’s thoughts are not.

Why This Belongs in a Construction Podcast

Some people will ask why we are talking about intimacy on a construction podcast. Here’s why. Systems don’t run themselves. People run systems. And people who are depleted, disconnected, and resentful do not run systems well. You can install LeanTakt, Last Planner, or any operational control system you want. But if the human beings inside those systems are operating at 50 percent because their personal lives are in chaos, you will never reach flow.

If your project needs superintendent coaching, project support, or leadership development, Elevate Construction can help your field teams stabilize, schedule, and flow. But none of that works in isolation from the life you live at home.

The Challenge

Here is my challenge to you. Stop normalizing suffering. If something in your relationship is broken, treat it like a problem worth solving. Bring the same curiosity, humility, and collaboration to your home that you bring to your job. We are smart enough to do this. We are capable enough to do this. And we deserve the kind of life where work and home support each other instead of compete with each other. I’ll leave you with a thought inspired by Deming, even if he didn’t say it exactly this way. A system is perfectly designed to get the results it gets. If your relationships are producing distance, it’s time to redesign the system. On we go. 

FAQs

Why is intimacy relevant to construction professionals?
Because unresolved relationship stress affects focus, leadership, and emotional regulation at work, directly impacting safety, communication, and project performance.

Is intimacy only about sex?
No. Intimacy includes emotional connection, attention, touch, and presence throughout the day, not just physical acts.

Can scheduling intimacy really work?
Yes. Scheduling creates reliability and intention, especially when spontaneity alone is not enough due to busy or stressful lives.

How do love languages help relationships?
They help partners express care in ways the other person actually receives, reducing frustration and misunderstanding.

What should I do if intimacy feels broken?
Treat it like any other important problem. Talk openly, seek professional help if needed, address health factors, and collaborate instead of suffering in silence.

If you want to learn more we have:

-Takt Virtual Training: (Click here)
-Check out our Youtube channel for more info: (Click here) 
-Listen to the Elevate Construction podcast: (Click here) 
-Check out our training programs and certifications: (Click here)
-The Takt Book: (Click here)

Discover Jason’s Expertise:

Meet Jason Schroeder, the driving force behind Elevate Construction IST. As the company’s owner and principal consultant, he’s dedicated to taking construction to new heights. With a wealth of industry experience, he’s crafted the Field Engineer Boot Camp and Superintendent Boot Camp – intensive training programs engineered to cultivate top-tier leaders capable of steering their teams towards success. Jason’s vision? To expand his training initiatives across the nation, empowering construction firms to soar to unprecedented levels of excellence.

On we go

Focus and Drive – Field Engineers

Read 30 min

Focus and Drive in Construction

You are not focused enough. I want to say that upfront, not to insult you, but to save you. Because I’ve seen what happens to people who drift through construction like it’s a casual job. They hit a ceiling, they get frustrated, they start blaming the company, the superintendent, the schedule, the “system,” and they never realize the truth. In this industry, nobody accidentally becomes a great field engineer, foreman, superintendent, or project manager. You earn it by being more focused than anyone else, knowing more about the plans than anyone else, and having more drive than anyone else in your area. That’s not hype. That’s how reality works on a jobsite.

I’m recording this while preparing for Field Engineer Bootcamp, and I’m thinking about all the people who want the title, the pay, and the promotion, but don’t want the disciplines that create them. I don’t say that to be harsh. I say it because I care. I want you to succeed. I want you to have a remarkable career, a healthy marriage, and a life where you don’t feel like you are constantly behind. But you cannot have that if you show up distracted, low energy, and half present. Construction will eat you alive if you treat it like a background app while your phone is the main screen.

Being Busy All Day and Still Losing

One of the most painful things in construction is when you worked all day and you still feel behind. You did tasks. You answered a few questions. You moved a couple of items forward. But at the end of the day, you still have open loops, unanswered RFIs, missing layout prep, and a superintendent who is wondering where you are. The job feels chaotic, and you feel like the chaos is happening to you. That’s when people start hiding. They find a comfortable corner, get “their task,” settle into a chair, and build a little fort around their computer. They call that being productive because they are busy, but they aren’t winning because they aren’t driving the work.

This is what I see with a lot of young professionals coming out of high school or college. They are good people and they are capable, but they’ve been trained by modern life to be distracted. Their phones are constantly pulling their attention. Their habits are out of balance. They are thinking about home while at work, and thinking about work while at home, and they are present nowhere. They can’t get in the zone. And in construction, if you can’t get in the zone, you will always be reacting instead of leading.

Comfort-Zone Field Engineering

Let’s name the failure pattern. It is comfort-zone field engineering. It looks like coming to work like an accident, sitting down, getting into one task, and disappearing. It looks like low communication, low energy, and low initiative. It sounds like, “Well, nobody told me,” or “Nobody showed me,” or “They still don’t have my computer,” or “They didn’t give me the information.” It is a victim posture, even if the person doesn’t realize it.

The reason I’m willing to say this out loud is because I’ve seen what happens to people who live there. They don’t progress. They might survive, but they don’t grow. They might keep their job, but they don’t build a career. And the scary part is they often believe they are fine because they’ve adopted a modern narrative that says, “Just be yourself, you don’t need to change, you don’t need to speak up.” That may work in some environments. It will not work on a construction project.

We are professional communicators. We are builders. We are leaders, even when we are young. If you don’t communicate, don’t follow up, and don’t stay ahead, your project will not feel safe for the people around you. Your superintendent cannot rely on you. Your foremen cannot rely on you. And when people can’t rely on you, they stop giving you opportunities.

I Was a Kid Too

If you’re feeling called out, I’m not doing it to shame you. I’m doing it to wake you up, because I was a kid too. I didn’t go to college. I started young. I was immature. I needed correction. I needed someone to tell me the truth in a way that would stick.

I remember early in my career, I worked hard. I cleaned tools. I cleaned the truck. I asked for things to do. One of my foremen once told my dad something that still makes me laugh because it was so honest. He said, “He tries really hard and he works harder than anybody else, but we don’t let him have anything sharp.” What he meant was my enthusiasm outpaced my carefulness at the time. I had the drive, but I needed the discipline and the process. Over time, I learned safety. I learned precision. I learned how to turn effort into effectiveness. That combination, focus plus drive plus discipline, is what changes everything for you.

“I Don’t Ever Want to See You Sitting Down”

There was a moment as a young field engineer that I will never forget. We had a break in work and I was waiting for something, so I sat down. The general superintendent came up and said, “Jason, I don’t ever want to see you sitting down on this project. You need to be up, alert, awake, looking at safety, doing your layout and preparing.” He wasn’t trying to be cruel. He was trying to teach me what it takes. He also told me, “If you don’t show up on time, I’m going to fire you.” Those messages were necessary. I needed to grow up. That moment taught me something that applies to you right now. In construction, people don’t promote potential. They promote reliability. They promote presence. They promote the person who is already acting like the next level.

Focus Is Respect and Drive Is Ownership

Here is the deeper insight behind all of this. Focus is not just a productivity tool. Focus is respect. When you are fully present on the jobsite, you are respecting the craft workers who are risking their bodies. You are respecting the foremen who are trying to execute. You are respecting the superintendent who is carrying the weight of the project. You are respecting the owner who is paying for the building. You are respecting yourself, because you are choosing to become the kind of person who can lead.

Drive is ownership. Drive is the inner decision that says, “I’m going to go get it.” Not “they should have told me.” Not “they should have given me.” Not “I wasn’t taught.” Drive is saying, “I will learn it. I will ask. I will read. I will follow up. I will over communicate. I will become the person who knows the plans, knows the work, and knows what needs to happen next.” That’s why I say nobody succeeds without focus and drive. You can be smart. You can be talented. But if you are distracted and passive, you will stall.

How to Model Focus and Drive on a Jobsite

I said in the episode that I don’t know exactly where focus and drive come from, and I mean that. Some people seem to have it naturally. But I do know how you can model it. You can build habits that force focus. You can build routines that create drive. You can design your day so your default behavior is winning behavior.

The first part is being present at work and focused on work. This means your phone is not running your day. It means you are not texting your personal life all day. It means you are not watching games, YouTube, or scrolling in between tasks. If there is an emergency, handle it. Otherwise, your family can deal with the normal stuff while you are building the building. Construction demands presence. If you want a remarkable career, you must treat the jobsite like the field of play, not a lounge.

The second part is refusing to hide in your comfort zone. A lot of field engineers find one task, get comfortable, and build their identity around it. They become the “RFI person” or the “layout person” or the “submittal person,” and they stop stretching. But the best field engineers do not hide. They circulate. They follow up. They prepare the next operation. They check safety. They coordinate. They stay connected to the communication systems. They are available. They answer the phone. They return messages. They keep the radio on. They are visible and reliable.

The third part is over communication. The people who win in construction communicate constantly, professionally, and clearly. They ask a million questions. They tell people what they are doing. They follow up on commitments. They don’t disappear. They don’t wait to be told. They make sure the superintendent never has to wonder, “Where are you?” They make sure the foreman never has to wonder, “Did you get that layout?” They make sure the inspector never has to wonder, “Who is running this area?”

The fourth part is mastering the plans and the work. Let me say this plainly. If you are not the person who knows the most about the plans in your area, you are not winning yet. If you don’t know what is happening next, you are not winning yet. If you don’t understand the building, the sequence, and the constraints, you are not winning yet. That’s not condemnation. That’s a target. You can become that person, but it will not happen without studying, walking the work, and asking questions.

This is also where the technical side matters. I want you to treat field engineering as a science and a process, not an art form and not a guess. That is why I push people toward the Field Engineering Methods Manual by Wes Crawford, because it teaches that field engineering is an exact discipline. Follow the process and you win. Ignore the process and you lose. That mindset pairs beautifully with LeanTakt, because LeanTakt depends on reliable information, reliable layout, reliable coordination, and reliable follow-up.

What “Focused and Driven” Looks Like in the Field

I’m going to keep this in narrative form, but I want to give you a couple of concrete anchors so you can see it. When you are focused and driven, you show up early enough that nobody is waiting on you, and you show up prepared enough that you don’t need excuses. You already have the plans open. You already know the work package for the day. You already know the constraints. Your bags are on. Your tools are ready. The area is cleared. Your foreman knows you are coming, and your superintendent can trust you.

There are a few behaviors that, if you adopt them, will change your career fast. I’ll place them here in a small bullet section, not as a checklist, but as a mirror you can look into. If you want to know whether you are acting like a high-performing field engineer, ask yourself if you consistently do these things:

  • You are reachable and responsive through the company’s communication systems, and you return calls quickly because you understand that silence creates instability.
  • You ask questions early, and you ask them with energy, because you would rather feel a little uncomfortable now than create rework later.
  • You proactively learn the plans, the specs, and the building sequence until you can explain it clearly to others without hiding behind jargon.

Now let me talk about drive, because drive is not just working long hours. Early in your career, especially as a field engineer, there is a season where you grind. I have said openly that this is the one position where I personally will recommend working hard for a period of time, because you are building your foundation. You are learning the craft of being a builder. But you have to be smart about it. The goal is not to burn out. The goal is to invest. The goal is to build competence and confidence quickly so you can become effective, not just exhausted.

Drive also means you stop the victim language. You stop saying “they” in ways that excuse your inactivity. You stop waiting for someone to “give you” what you need. You go get it. You ask for the computer. You ask for the plans. You ask for the training. You ask for the total station. You ask to run the meeting. You ask to do the lift drawings. You ask to be in the mud with the crew. You bring donuts if that helps open a door, and you learn. That’s how builders are made.

This is also where professionalism matters. You cannot write emails like you are texting. You cannot communicate like you are half asleep. You cannot show up late and then wonder why nobody trusts you. This industry is built on trust, and trust is built on consistency.

To close out the practical side, there is one more small set of indicators I want you to reflect on. These are not meant to shame you. They are meant to reveal whether you are coasting. If your voice sounds low energy, if you walk with low energy, if you go slow, if you have to be reminded constantly, if you avoid reading, if you avoid training, if you avoid speaking up, and if you live in excuses, then you are not in the game yet. You can change that starting tomorrow, but you cannot pretend it is fine. It is not fine if you want to progress.

Where Elevate Construction Fits: Systems That Create Focus, Drive, and Flow

The reason I teach this is not because I want a bunch of burned-out people grinding for no reason. I teach this because focus and drive are the gateway behaviors that allow you to implement real systems. If you are present, you can learn. If you learn, you can execute. If you execute consistently, you can lead. And if you lead, you can stabilize projects, protect workers, and create flow.

This connects directly to Elevate Construction’s mission and to LeanTakt. When field engineers and foremen are focused and driven, the project’s communication rhythm becomes reliable. The plans are understood. Constraints are surfaced early. Layout is ready when the crew needs it. Safety is proactive instead of reactive. And the project can actually flow the way it was designed to flow.

If your project needs superintendent coaching, project support, or leadership development, Elevate Construction can help your field teams stabilize, schedule, and flow.

Be the One Who Gets the Ball

I want to end where the episode began. You are not focused enough, not yet, and that is okay if you decide to change. Because you can start tomorrow. You can decide that when the ball comes out, you are going to be the first one to get it. You can decide that a thousand other people may want what you want, but you will outlearn them, outprepare them, and outcommunicate them. You can decide that you will be the field engineer who is always on time, always ready, always present, and always ahead.

Here is your challenge. For the next five workdays, put your phone away, over communicate, study your plans, and show up with energy like your future depends on it, because it does. Do that for one week, and you will feel different. You will be different. And people around you will treat you differently because reliability is magnetic in construction.

I’ll leave you with a quote that fits this topic and this industry. Marcus Aurelius wrote, “You have power over your mind, not outside events. Realize this, and you will find strength.” Focus and drive are you taking that power back. On we go. 

FAQs

What does “focus” mean for a field engineer on a construction project?
Focus means being fully present at work, understanding the plans and the building sequence, staying ahead of the crew’s needs, and not letting distractions or comfort zones pull you away from the work.

How can I build drive if I don’t naturally feel motivated?
Drive can be modeled through habits like showing up early, preparing your tools and information, asking questions, following up consistently, reading and training daily, and refusing victim language that excuses inaction.

Why is over communication so important in construction?
Over communication stabilizes the jobsite by reducing confusion, surfacing constraints early, and ensuring superintendents and foremen can rely on you. Silence creates instability, and instability creates rework and delays.

How do I become the person who knows the plans better than anyone else?
You become that person by studying drawings daily, walking the work, learning the sequence, asking questions, reviewing details with foremen and supers, and treating field engineering like a process and a science, not a guess.

How does LeanTakt relate to focus and drive?
LeanTakt depends on reliable preparation, reliable handoffs, and reliable communication. Focus and drive are the behaviors that make those systems work so the project can stabilize, schedule, and flow

If you want to learn more we have:

-Takt Virtual Training: (Click here)
-Check out our Youtube channel for more info: (Click here) 
-Listen to the Elevate Construction podcast: (Click here) 
-Check out our training programs and certifications: (Click here)
-The Takt Book: (Click here)

Discover Jason’s Expertise:

Meet Jason Schroeder, the driving force behind Elevate Construction IST. As the company’s owner and principal consultant, he’s dedicated to taking construction to new heights. With a wealth of industry experience, he’s crafted the Field Engineer Boot Camp and Superintendent Boot Camp – intensive training programs engineered to cultivate top-tier leaders capable of steering their teams towards success. Jason’s vision? To expand his training initiatives across the nation, empowering construction firms to soar to unprecedented levels of excellence.

On we go

Customer Service – Know what to Build – Foremen

Read 29 min

You Don’t Know What You’re Doing until You Know What the Customer Wants

I want to start with a hard sentence, and I want you to hear it the way I intend it. You do not know what you are doing, not yet, not fully, if you do not know what the customer wants with what you are building today. I am not saying you are not skilled. I am not saying you are not hardworking. I am saying that in construction, skill without customer clarity turns into guessing, and guessing turns into rework, conflict, and broken trust. If you don’t know what the owner, designer, engineer, end user, and inspector are expecting in that specific area, then you are installing based on habit and muscle memory, not customer service. And customer service is quality, whether we admit it or not.

This episode 102 message has been on my mind because I keep seeing the same pattern coast to coast. We push work. We “get it done.” We make assumptions. Then we act surprised when the inspector is upset or the owner says it’s not what they wanted. If you want to stabilize your jobsite, protect your crews, and create flow, you have to start with the end in mind. That is Lean thinking. That is what Elevate Construction teaches. That is what LeanTakt is supposed to enable when it is paired with quality at the source.

Good People Working Hard and Still Losing

One of the most frustrating feelings in the field is when you have enough manpower, enough materials, and enough hours, and yet the job still feels stuck. It shows up as areas falling behind, daily task forces, constant re-inspections, and crews burning energy on fixing yesterday instead of building today. It starts to feel like the project is fighting back. I have been in those meetings where everyone is looking at the schedule, the percent plan complete, the delays, and the manpower curves, and the conversation keeps circling, but nothing changes.

Here is what is usually happening underneath all that noise. The team is trying to buy speed with effort, but the system is not producing quality predictably. And when quality is not predictable, the inspector gets upset, the owner loses confidence, the trade partner loses momentum, and the general contractor spends the day managing emotion instead of managing flow. That is not a people problem. It is a system problem. It is a clarity problem. It is a training problem.

Building What We Always Build, Then Calling It a “Change”

Now let’s name the failure pattern, because if we do not name it, we cannot fix it. The failure pattern is that we install what we know how to install, not what the customer actually ordered. Then we try to force the customer to accept it. Then we argue about money. Then we spend months repairing relationships that should never have been damaged in the first place.

If you want to feel this in your bones, think about the simplest customer service moment in normal life. If I go to Cold Stone and order sweet cream mixed with butter pecan, caramel, and chocolate shavings, and they hand me chocolate ice cream, I am not paying. It does not matter that they “worked hard” to scoop it. It does not matter that it is still technically ice cream. I did not order that. And in construction, we do this all the time. We build a version of the product that the customer did not ask for, and then we get offended when they resist paying for it.

I have heard a similar analogy that always makes me smile because it is so obvious. If I go to a Ford dealership and order an F-350 with off-road tires, and the dealer tells me I live in the city so I “don’t need that” and tries to sell me an F-150 instead, I walk away. It is my money. It is my preference. It is my business what I want. In construction, we lecture owners in ways we could never get away with in any other customer service environment. We tell them they don’t need that finish. We tell them they don’t need that polish. We tell them they don’t need that level five. We act like we know their value system better than they do. And then we wonder why trust breaks.

This Happens When We Lack a Field-Ready Quality System

If this is hitting you hard, I want you to know I am not throwing rocks. I have been the field engineer who thought concrete was “just structure.” I have been the person who did not fully appreciate that exposed concrete, architectural ceilings, and polished slabs are not just structural decisions anymore. They are customer experience decisions. They are brand decisions. They are design decisions. If you don’t know the exposed areas and the finish expectations early, you cannot magically “patch” your way into excellence later. Patching is not a quality plan. Patching is evidence that we did not build it right the first time.

This is why I get passionate about it, because I believe most of the quality problems we experience are not because people do not care. They are because we did not give the field a clear target and a clear method to hit it. When a foreman is forced to guess, the crew pays the price. When the crew pays the price, safety pays the price. Rework is one of the most dangerous things we do in construction because it adds unplanned work in unplanned conditions with frustration, fatigue, and pressure. If we care about people, we build a system that prevents rework by honoring customer requirements at the source.

The Foreman Who Was Calm Because He Was Clear

I watched this show up in a meeting where we were discussing areas being behind. We had enough people. We had materials. We had the ability to do the work. Yet we were still losing time. The inspector was upset, and the trade partner was frustrated. Then one foreman spoke up, and he said something so simple that it should be written on the wall of every job trailer.

He said, “I don’t know what to say. I have a wonderful relationship with the inspector. All my guys know exactly what they do. I start my day in the morning. I have lists per worker of what I want them to do, how I want them to do it, and what the expectations are. I huddle with them and teach them exactly what I expect. And I know 100% it’s exactly what the municipal inspector wants every single time. So we don’t have any issues.”

That foreman was not lucky. He was not magical. He was running a system. He was doing customer service through quality. He was respecting the inspector’s requirements, the owner’s expectations, and his crew’s need for clarity. And when I asked, “Can we get every foreman doing that?” there was pushback. People have different ways, they said. They didn’t want to synchronize. And inside I thought, please. We can all see the system that works. Why are we so stubborn that we refuse to implement it? To the foremen who are doing this, I want to say it clearly. You are my heroes. Your workers are my heroes. You are changing the industry one huddle at a time.

Pride Comes From Delivering What Was Ordered

Here is the part that hits deeper than checklists and meetings. People want to be proud of what they build. Workers want to go home feeling like they created something excellent. Foremen want to feel respected because they led a crew to do high-quality work. Superintendents want to feel calm because the site is stable. Owners want to feel confident that they are getting what they paid for.

That pride does not come from yelling harder. It does not come from working longer. It comes from building the product the customer ordered. It comes from knowing what “right” looks like and building it that way consistently. When we fail at that, the jobsite becomes a courtroom instead of a production system. We spend our days defending decisions instead of producing flow. And that is why I say, if you don’t know what the customer wants, you don’t know what you are doing. Not because you are incompetent, but because your system is incomplete.

Voice of the Customer to Field Execution

Some people call it voice of the customer. Some call it customer needs. Some teams use conditions of satisfaction. I am not picky about the label. I am picky about the result. For every scope and every area, the team must identify what the customer, designer, engineer, end users, and inspectors expect. That expectation must become field-ready information that a foreman can teach and a crew can execute.

Sometimes this is done through conditions of satisfaction at the project level. Sometimes it is done through alignment conversations with the architect where we clarify exposed areas, alignments, and architectural priorities. On complex spaces like lobbies, strong teams create an area feature of work description, then translate it into an area feature of work board or visual so the craft knows exactly what matters and what “good” looks like.

When we do it by scope, we rely on features of work descriptions, feature of work boards, feature of work visuals, and checklists. This is not paperwork. This is customer service translated into production. A quality process typically includes pre-mobilization, the right submittals, a pre-construction meeting to onboard and orient the superintendent and foreman, a first-in-place mockup, and an initial inspection to confirm the foreman and crew are headed in the right direction.

If your crew is installing without a clear feature of work board or checklist that incorporates the conditions of satisfaction, the designer’s intent, the inspector’s expectations, the owner’s priorities, and the exposed components, then you are not building what the customer wants. You are building what you assume. That is why quality becomes inconsistent and why relationships become strained.

This is also why I believe our industry must evolve. In addition to RFIs, submittals, and normal contract items, these features of work visuals and checklists need to become required deliverables that are clear enough for the crew to use. The goal is not to create more paperwork. The goal is to create less confusion and less rework.

Here is what this looks like in the field when it is done with intention and respect, and this is where the small amount of bulleted structure can help you visualize the flow without turning this into a checklist. A foreman’s day becomes calmer when the system includes:

  • A clear understanding of customer requirements for that day’s work, especially exposed areas, finishes, and alignment priorities.
  • A feature of work board or visual that translates those requirements into installable expectations the crew can see and reference.
  • A short daily teaching rhythm in the crew preparation huddle so the standard becomes shared understanding, not tribal knowledge.

Those are not extra steps. Those are the steps that prevent the “extra steps” of rework.

The 25-Minute Crew Preparation Huddle and Stop, Call, Wait

Now let’s get very practical, because this is where foremen win. If you are a foreman, you use your 25-minute crew preparation huddle to teach the expectations and protect your crew from guessing. You review the feature of work board. You review the checklist. You confirm what the inspector will look for. You confirm what the owner cares about. You make sure your lead people and sub-foremen can repeat it back. Then you turn it into installation.

The next day, you come back and ask, “Did we deviate? What did we learn? What needs to improve? What questions came up?” That is how standards get better. That is how the crew learns. That is how the system becomes stronger over time.

Then you connect it to pre-task planning. The best pre-task plans I have seen are visual, because construction is visual. One side focuses on safety with space to draw the plan. The other side focuses on quality with space to draw and answer questions. When the pre-task plan connects directly to the feature of work board, the crew is not guessing. They are executing a shared standard.

This is where the stop, call, and wait concept becomes a gift to the crew. If it smells funny, looks wrong, sounds wrong, feels wrong, anything is off, the worker stops, calls, and waits. The foreman comes, references the feature of work board, confirms any deviation, and resets the crew. If we taught that consistently, quality would be licked. I mean it. We would have it figured out because we would stop installing wrong work early instead of discovering it late.

And here is why this connects to LeanTakt and flow. LeanTakt is not just about lines on a schedule. LeanTakt is about making work predictable so crews can move through zones without chaos. Rework destroys flow. Unclear customer expectations destroy flow. Quality at the source protects flow. When we pair customer clarity with daily foreman teaching, we stabilize the job and the schedule becomes real instead of aspirational.

If your project needs superintendent coaching, project support, or leadership development, Elevate Construction can help your field teams stabilize, schedule, and flow. If you are reading this as a superintendent, project manager, or owner, you also have a role. You must ensure the field has the information, visuals, and process to execute the requirements.

It is not enough to say, “Build per plans and specs,” and hope it works out. The field needs the requirements translated into executable standards. That is leadership. That is respect. To make this tangible, and again using a second small bullet section only to help you see where projects usually break, the common gaps I see are these:

  • The team cannot clearly identify which areas are exposed, featured, or architecturally sensitive until it is too late to plan properly.
  • The feature of work board exists in someone’s head or in a binder, but not in a visual format the crew actually uses in the field.
  • The foreman is expected to “just know” and “just manage it,” without a daily training rhythm that builds shared understanding.

When you close those gaps, you stop fighting quality and start producing it.

Build the Ice Cream They Ordered

So here is the challenge I want to leave you with. Tomorrow morning, ask yourself and your crew one question before you release them into production. Do we know what the customer wants here, specifically. If the answer is not crystal clear, slow down long enough to clarify it. Highlight exposed areas. Confirm alignments. Make a quick feature of work visual. Teach it in your huddle. Reinforce stop, call, and wait. Do that for one week and watch what happens to your rework, your inspector relationship, your crew confidence, and your project flow.

Elevate Construction exists to elevate the entire construction experience for workers, leaders, and companies. We do that by building systems that respect people, create clarity, and produce flow. That is how we create remarkable projects and remarkable careers.

I will end with a quote that should humble all of us and also empower us. W. Edwards Deming said, “Quality is everyone’s responsibility.” In the field, that responsibility becomes real when we know what the customer wants and we build it right the first time. On we go. 

FAQs

What does customer service mean in construction?
Customer service in construction means delivering the product the customer requested, with the finishes, alignments, and performance they expect, without forcing them to accept substitutions or surprises.

How can a foreman prevent rework caused by unclear expectations?
A foreman prevents rework by clarifying customer requirements, using a feature of work board or checklist, teaching expectations in a daily crew preparation huddle, and reinforcing stop, call, and wait.

What is a feature of work board and how is it used?
A feature of work board is a visual standard that shows what “right” looks like for a scope or area, including customer requirements and key quality checkpoints, so the crew can install with clarity.

How does stop, call, and wait improve quality and safety?
It prevents workers from installing uncertain work, triggers immediate foreman support, and reduces rework, which lowers risk and keeps production stable.

How does LeanTakt connect to quality at the source?
LeanTakt relies on predictable work and clean handoffs. Quality at the source reduces rework and chaos, which stabilizes flow and makes zone-based scheduling reliable.

If you want to learn more we have:

-Takt Virtual Training: (Click here)
-Check out our Youtube channel for more info: (Click here) 
-Listen to the Elevate Construction podcast: (Click here) 
-Check out our training programs and certifications: (Click here)
-The Takt Book: (Click here)

Discover Jason’s Expertise:

Meet Jason Schroeder, the driving force behind Elevate Construction IST. As the company’s owner and principal consultant, he’s dedicated to taking construction to new heights. With a wealth of industry experience, he’s crafted the Field Engineer Boot Camp and Superintendent Boot Camp – intensive training programs engineered to cultivate top-tier leaders capable of steering their teams towards success. Jason’s vision? To expand his training initiatives across the nation, empowering construction firms to soar to unprecedented levels of excellence.

On we go

Breaking Crazy!

Read 23 min

The Six Human Needs and the “Crazy Eight”: How Construction Leaders Stop Losing It under Pressure

If you’re like me, you either have been “a little crazy” at times, or you’ve worked with someone who can go from calm to volcanic in about three seconds. And I don’t mean that as an insult. I mean that as a reality check. Construction will back you up against the wall so often that if you don’t have a system for your emotions, your emotions will run the system.

I’m bringing this up because I’ve watched good people lose credibility in one meeting. I’ve watched a relationship with a trade partner get damaged in thirty seconds. I’ve watched owners decide they don’t trust a team not because the team couldn’t build, but because the leader couldn’t regulate. And I’ve also lived it. There have been times I’ve walked away from a moment thinking, Jason… you lost today. You didn’t lose the schedule. You didn’t lose a bid. You lost your composure, and that’s a more expensive loss than most people realize.

This episode is about two concepts that snapped together for me like a light bulb: the six human needs and what I call the “crazy eight.” When you see how these work, you can finally understand why you react the way you do, why jobsite pressure triggers you, and how to stay in control when everything around you is pushing you toward the edge.

Why We Get Backed Up Against the Wall

In construction, pressure is not a season. It’s the weather. You’ve got contracts, schedule milestones, money on the line, trade partners pushing, owners’ negotiating, internal expectations, staffing gaps, and constant uncertainty. And the problem is not that pressure exists. The problem is how we respond to it.

Most of the blowups I’ve seen on project sites don’t come from evil intent. They come from a leader who is operating out of fear fear of losing control, fear of looking incompetent, fear of losing approval, fear of losing money, fear of losing certainty. That fear shows up as anger, sarcasm, shutdown, or even that weird oscillation where someone apologizes and then snaps again five minutes later. If you’ve ever thought, why am I acting like this, or why is my superintendent acting like this, you’re about to get a framework that actually explains it.

Losing the Meeting, Then Losing the Trust

I want to tell you a story that hit me hard. A friend of mine an incredible field leader was running a massive project, about $180 million. Multiple phases, multiple buildings, complexity everywhere. He was in a trade partner meeting, and the mason was not performing. Excuses started flying. The room got tense. And my buddy lost it. He berated that mason in front of everyone.

After the meeting, when the adrenaline wore off, the mason walked by the office and my buddy said something that still rings in my ears: “I lost today.” That’s the key. The real loss wasn’t just emotional. It was operational. It damaged credibility. It weakened trust. It strained relationships. And in construction, strained relationships create friction, and friction kills flow. If you care about Lean, if you care about reliability, if you care about LeanTakt, then you should care deeply about emotional discipline because your leadership behavior either stabilizes the system or destabilizes it.

You’re Not “Crazy” You’re Unmet

Here’s the turning point for me. Two weeks ago, my wife looked at me and said, “Jason, you’re being grumpy. You’re short with the kids. What is going on?” And I gave her the speech I’ve heard construction people give a thousand times: deadlines, pressure, business, and responsibilities. And she asked me one question that shut me up in a good way. She said, “Are you doing this to give and serve and have fun, or are you trapped in some imaginary deadline and trying to prove something?”

She was right. I had shifted my internal focus. I had moved from contribution and growth into significance and certainty. I was worried about clients, money, downloads, comments, approval. And because those needs are shaky and external, my mood became shaky and external. That’s when I realized this isn’t just personal. This is a construction leadership problem.

The Six Human Needs: What’s Driving You on the Job Site?

These concepts are widely known (Tony Robbins teaches them), but the way they apply to construction is where it gets powerful. The six human needs are: Certainty, variety, significance, love and connection, growth, and contribution. Think about certainty on a jobsite. Will we make the schedule? Will the owner approve this change? Will we keep the team staffed? Will I get blamed? Will I hit my bonus? Certainty is stability, predictability, security. Variety is the need for change, stimulation, and newness. Some people get bored easily. Some people crave a new project, a new challenge, a new environment.

Significance is the need to feel important, respected, valued, and recognized. In construction, this often shows up as title, authority, being right, being the hero, and being the one who “saved the job.” Love and connection is belonging. It’s being part of the team. It’s feeling like people are with you, not against you. Growth is learning. Improving. Developing. Becoming better. Contribution is giving. Serving. Creating value beyond yourself.

Now here’s where it becomes practical. Most people have all six needs, but they prioritize two. And if your top two are certainty and significance, you are at high risk for the cycle I’m about to describe because those needs depend heavily on factors you do not control.

The “Crazy Eight”: Why Leaders Swing From Sad to Mad

When one of your key needs gets threatened—especially certainty or significance you can enter a loop I call the “crazy eight.” Picture an infinity symbol. On one side is sad. On the other side is mad. You don’t stay sad long because the nervous system can’t tolerate it. So you swing to anger. Then you feel regret or shame and swing back to sadness. Then you swing back to anger again. Sad. Mad. Sad. Mad.

On a project site, this looks like a superintendent who shuts down, then explodes. A PM who gets quiet and resentful, then lashes out in an email. A foreman who pouts, then throws tools, then apologizes, then does it again. The cycle damages relationships, destroys trust, and creates emotional whiplash for the team.

And when people are trapped in that loop, they often try to break it through numbing. Sometimes that’s alcohol. Sometimes it’s gambling. Sometimes it’s endless scrolling. Sometimes it’s workaholism. Sometimes it’s worse. That part isn’t funny. It’s tragic. And it’s one reason leadership development in construction has to include emotional skill, not just production skill.

The Problem with the Top Four Needs: You Don’t Control Them

Here’s the hard truth: you cannot fully control certainty, variety, significance, or love and connection. You can influence them, but you can’t command them.

  • You cannot force the owner to approve something.
  • You cannot force trade partners to perform.
  • You cannot force someone to respect you.
  • You cannot force people to connect with you the way you want.

But you can control growth and contribution. You can choose to learn. You can choose to serve. You can choose to reframe your day around improvement and giving.

That’s the strategic move. When a leader shifts their identity from “I need to be respected and safe” to “I’m here to grow and contribute,” they stop being controlled by external chaos. They stop being held hostage by the meeting, the email, the owner’s tone, the trade partner’s attitude. They get their power back. And once a leader gets their power back, the team stabilizes. The project stabilizes. The culture stabilizes.

How This Applies to Lean Construction and LeanTakt

If you want flow, you must reduce variation. Emotional blowups are variation. They create rework, mistrust, defensive communication, and hidden constraints. They cause people to stop telling the truth. They make foremen avoid the superintendent. They make trade partners hedge and protect themselves. They make planning unreliable. And then everyone wonders why Lean doesn’t stick.

LeanTakt is not just a scheduling technique. It’s a commitment to stability, reliable handoffs, and trust-based coordination. Leaders who live in the crazy eight cannot sustain LeanTakt. Leaders who operate from growth and contribution can. That’s why this isn’t a “soft” topic. It’s hard operations.

How to Stay Out of the Crazy Eight on a Jobsite

The first step is awareness. When you feel the surge, ask yourself one question: which need feels threatened right now? Is it certainty, because you’re afraid of losing schedule or money? Is it significance, because someone disrespected you? Is it love and connection, because you feel alone on the project? Name it. If you can name it, you can manage it. The second step is choosing a controllable focus. In that moment, deliberately pivot to growth and contribution. Ask, what can I learn here? What can I give here? What would a calm, grounded leader do to serve the outcome?

The third step is reinforcement. You don’t “willpower” your way out of patterns under stress. You build a system. For me, I put reminders where I will see them. I use prompts that bring me back to purpose. Some people use morning routines, meditation, accountability partners, coaching, or structured reflection. The method matters less than the consistency. You need leverage and reinforcement, or you’ll revert under pressure. If your project needs superintendent coaching, project support, or leadership development, Elevate Construction can help your field teams stabilize, schedule, and flow.

A Small Bullet Section That Helps in Real Life

When you feel yourself entering the sad–mad loop on a project, these quick resets help without turning your day into a therapy session:

  • Take thirty seconds and label the threatened need: certainty, significance, connection, or variety.
  • Ask one contribution question: “What outcome serves the team and the project right now?”
  • Choose one growth action: learn, clarify, coach, or align then move.

That’s not fluff. That’s leadership under pressure.

Dignity, Effectiveness, and a Better Construction Culture

At Elevate Construction, our mission is not to make people “act nicer.” Our mission is to build leaders and systems that create a better construction experience for workers, foremen, field engineers, superintendents, and companies. Emotional regulation is part of that because people deserve stability. People deserve clarity. People deserve leaders who don’t turn stress into damage.

If you want to change the industry, start where you have the most influence: your own mindset, your own reactions, your own leadership standards. When leaders stop “losing it,” the whole project gets safer, calmer, more predictable, and more capable of flow.

Your Challenge

Here’s your challenge this week: identify your top two human needs, and then watch yourself on the jobsite when one of them gets threatened. The moment you feel the surge, pivot to growth and contribution. Do it once. Then do it again. That’s how new leadership patterns are built one choice at a time, under real pressure. As Marcus Aurelius wrote, “You have power over your mind not outside events. Realize this, and you will find strength.” On we go. 

FAQs

What are the six human needs and why do they matter in construction?
The six human needs are certainty, variety, significance, love and connection, growth, and contribution. They matter because jobsite pressure often threatens the first four, triggering emotional reactions that damage trust and disrupt project flow.

What is the “crazy eight” cycle?
It’s a loop where people swing between sadness and anger when a key need feels threatened. Leaders can bounce from shutdown to outburst and back again, which creates instability for teams and projects.

How do I know which human needs drive me most?
Most people prioritize two needs more than the others. If you frequently feel triggered by disrespect, you may be driven by significance. If you feel triggered by uncertainty and risk, certainty may be high for you. Awareness is the first step to control.

How does this connect to Lean and LeanTakt?
Lean and LeanTakt depend on stability, trust, reliable communication, and consistent execution. Emotional blowups create variation, hidden constraints, defensive behavior, and unreliable planning directly harming flow.

What’s one practical thing I can do today to stay out of the cycle?
When you feel triggered, name the threatened need and deliberately pivot to growth and contribution by asking, “What can I learn here?” and “How can I serve the team and the outcome right now?”

If you want to learn more we have:

-Takt Virtual Training: (Click here)
-Check out our Youtube channel for more info: (Click here) 
-Listen to the Elevate Construction podcast: (Click here) 
-Check out our training programs and certifications: (Click here)
-The Takt Book: (Click here)

Discover Jason’s Expertise:

Meet Jason Schroeder, the driving force behind Elevate Construction IST. As the company’s owner and principal consultant, he’s dedicated to taking construction to new heights. With a wealth of industry experience, he’s crafted the Field Engineer Boot Camp and Superintendent Boot Camp – intensive training programs engineered to cultivate top-tier leaders capable of steering their teams towards success. Jason’s vision? To expand his training initiatives across the nation, empowering construction firms to soar to unprecedented levels of excellence.

On we go

Don’t Do These Things!

Read 22 min

The 20 Career Traps That Quietly Stall Construction Leaders

There’s a painful moment in construction when you realize you’re working hard, you care, you’re putting in the hours, and yet your career is not moving. You keep getting the same kinds of projects, the same kinds of assignments, the same level of trust, and the same ceiling. Nobody says, “You’re stuck,” but you can feel it. And if we’re being honest, a lot of people live there for years.

This blog topic came from a simple principle that I love because it’s blunt and true: if you want to be successful, you have to do what successful people do. And the flip side is just as real. If you keep doing what unsuccessful people do, you’ll get the same results they get. That sounds obvious until you watch a young field engineer or foreman pattern their whole operating system after a superintendent or project manager who never gets promoted. They learn the habits, the tone, the excuses, the shortcuts, and the mindset. Then, a decade later, they’re shocked they landed in the same place. I’m not saying this to shame anybody. I’m saying it because I’ve seen it too many times, and I want you to win.

The Construction Pain We Don’t Talk About Enough

In our industry, we love to diagnose “the job” as the problem. The drawings were bad. The owner changed their mind. The trades didn’t show up. The weather hit us. The schedule was unrealistic. Sometimes those are real constraints. But there’s another truth underneath all of that: people don’t rise to the level of their ambitions, they fall to the level of their training and their habits. That’s not a motivational quote. That’s operations. You can bring Lean, Last Planner, takt planning, and LeanTakt into an organization, and you should. You can build systems that stabilize the work, protect flow, and create reliability. But none of it sticks if the leaders running the system are carrying career-stalling behaviors that sabotage trust, communication, learning, and execution. The system and the person always meet in the field, and the weaker one loses.

The Failure Pattern

Here’s the failure pattern I see most often: someone has talent, intelligence, and potential, but they build their identity around being “naturally good.” They want to be right on the first try. They want to be seen as smart. They avoid feedback because feedback threatens the identity. They avoid training because training implies they’re not already elite. And eventually the job exposes them. Construction is too complex and too variable for ego-based execution to survive.

A Short Field Story That Still Stings

I once went to help a field engineer who kept laying things out wrong. Not small wrong. I’m talking feet off, anchor bolts wrong, repeated misses that cost time and money and credibility. We trained, we walked through it, we tried again. And every time he said, “I got it,” but he wasn’t actually changing the process. What I found was simple: he would not adopt a double-check, triple-check system. He believed his intelligence should be enough to get it right the first time, every time. And that belief cost him. Field engineering and surveying don’t care how smart you are. They reward humility, verification, and disciplined process. If you want “right the first time,” you earn it by checking like you assume you’re wrong. That’s why this list matters. These are not personality quirks. These are career outcomes.

The 20 “You Will Fail If” Traps (And What to Replace Them With)

1) You will fail if you don’t hold people accountable.
A wimpy leader is not “nice.” A wimpy leader is dangerous. In construction, uncorrected bad behavior becomes normalized. That’s how cleanliness slips, organization decays, safety erodes, and quality defects multiply. Accountability is respect. It tells people the standard is real, and it protects workers from chaos.

2) You will fail if you aren’t organized.
If you can’t track commitments, you can’t lead complexity. I’ve said it before and I’ll say it again: unorganized leaders stall out. Organization is not a preference. It’s a leadership requirement because the project is a living system, and systems require control.

3) You will fail if you can’t delegate.
The jump from Super 2 to Super 3 (or PM2 to PM3) is not IQ. It’s delegation. If everything has to run through you, you become the bottleneck. The team can’t scale, and the work can’t flow. Delegation is not dumping tasks. It’s setting clear expectations, confirming understanding, following up, and building capability.

4) You will fail if you don’t speak up.
I love introverts. I respect quiet strength. But silence is not leadership. Construction leaders are professional communicators. If you refuse to communicate because “that’s not who I am,” you’re choosing comfort over effectiveness, and the field will punish that decision.

5) You will fail if you aren’t mentally sharp and alert.
This is not about being born smart. This is about maintaining cognitive capacity. Your body is the vehicle your mind drives. If you treat your body poorly, stop learning, and live in a mental fog, your decision-making degrades. That shows up as missed details, slow reactions, poor planning, and emotional instability under pressure.

6) You will fail if you don’t acquire technical skills.
You need tools in your tool belt. Learn the fundamentals of your trade: layout discipline, lift drawings, modeling literacy, schedule literacy, and the systems that keep work stable. These skills are not optional if you want to lead bigger, more complex work.

7) You will fail if you communicate poorly.
Speaking up is not enough. Clear, respectful, solution-oriented communication builds trust. Offensive remarks, sloppy emails, unclear directives, and confusing expectations destroy it. The field needs clarity because ambiguity creates variation, and variation creates waste.

8) You will fail if you don’t learn continuously.
The best leaders I know are always reading, training, and sharpening their thinking. They don’t protect their ego by pretending they already know everything. They protect the project by staying in a learning posture. Learning is not a hobby. It’s a strategic advantage.

9) You will fail if you lack drive and passion.
Construction is too hard for low energy leadership. The job will take what you give it. If you show up like Eeyore every day, your team will feel it. Energy, enthusiasm, and urgency are leadership inputs that change outcomes.

10) You will fail if you have a bad attitude.
A bad attitude is contagious. It creates cynicism, excuses, and passive resistance. You can be brilliant and still fail if people can’t stand working with you. Attitude is part of performance.

11) You will fail if you are dishonest.
Trust is the currency of leadership. Once people believe you hide the truth, manipulate facts, or avoid accountability, they stop following you. You can’t LeanTakt your way out of broken trust.

12) You will fail if you refuse feedback.
Feedback is how you see your blind spots. Leaders who reject feedback don’t improve; they repeat. And over time, the organization stops investing in them because the return is too low.

13) You will fail if you engage in criminal behavior.
This is straightforward. Bad decisions off the job become limits on the job. Your future self pays interest on today’s shortcuts.

14) You will fail if you harass or discriminate.
Harassment and discrimination are not only wrong, they are destructive to teams, culture, and human dignity. You cannot lead people you don’t respect. And if you don’t respect people, you don’t belong in leadership.

15) You will fail if you don’t care about people.
You don’t have to be everyone’s best friend. But you do have to care. Workers are not machines. Trades are not obstacles. People are the project. If you treat humans like problems, you create problems.

16) You will fail if you lack people skills.
Owners, trades, workers, designers, inspectors, and your internal team all need to be able to work with you. People skills are job skills. Collaboration is not fluff. It’s how the work actually gets done.

17) You will fail if you repeat mistakes.
Everyone makes mistakes. The difference is whether you learn. Repeating the same miss is not “bad luck.” It’s a missing system, missing discipline, or missing humility. Fix the process, not the story.

18) You will fail if you only have bad project experience.
If all you’ve seen is chaos, you start believing chaos is normal. That learned hopelessness becomes a ceiling. You need exposure to a well-run job so your mind can recalibrate to what “good” actually looks like. If you’ve never seen flow, you’ll struggle to build flow.

19) You will fail if you have no grit.
Some seasons require endurance. You must be able to push through hard things without becoming bitter, sloppy, or reactive. Grit is not aggression. It’s sustained discipline under pressure.

20) You will fail if you only take and never give.
The best leaders create value first. They serve the team, protect the workers, and build systems that help others win. People promote leaders who multiply success, not leaders who consume it.

What This Means on Real Projects

When I say “don’t do these things,” I’m not asking for perfection. I’m asking for awareness and replacement. Neutralize the weakness, then build your strengths. That’s the path. If your project needs superintendent coaching, project support, or leadership development, Elevate Construction can help your field teams stabilize, schedule, and flow. And yes, this connects directly to LeanTakt and operational excellence. Flow does not happen by accident. It happens when leaders are organized, communicative, trained, humble, and consistent enough to protect the system. When your leadership habits align with your production system, your project stops feeling like constant firefighting and starts feeling like controlled progress. If you want a simple way to start, pick two actions this week: first, identify one of the twenty traps that shows up in your world, and second, choose one practice that replaces it. For example, if your trap is “I don’t double check,” your replacement practice is a written verification checklist and a culture of peer checks before release.

Your Challenge

Here’s my challenge to you: stop copying the habits of leaders who complain, coast, and stall. Go find the people who are getting promoted, who are trusted, who build stable jobs, who respect workers, and who deliver flow. Watch them. Ask for feedback. Train like an athlete. Then go do what they do, even when it’s uncomfortable. As W. Edwards Deming said, “It is not enough to do your best; you must know what to do, and then do your best.”

FAQs

What does “You will fail if” actually mean in construction leadership?
It means there are predictable behaviors that create predictable outcomes. You can work hard and still stall if your habits undermine trust, clarity, learning, and execution. This is about replacing failure patterns with disciplined systems.

Why is double-checking and triple-checking such a big deal for field engineers and superintendents?
Because construction is variable and high-stakes. Verification is how you prevent rework, delays, cost overruns, and loss of credibility. “Right the first time” is earned through disciplined checks, not confidence.

How does LeanTakt connect to career growth for superintendents and PMs?
LeanTakt requires leaders who can stabilize work, maintain flow, and communicate clearly across zones and trades. Leaders who build reliability become trusted with bigger work because they reduce risk and increase predictability.

What if I’ve only been on bad projects and I feel stuck in that mindset?
That’s more common than people admit. You need exposure to a well-run project, a mentor who has seen excellence, and a personal commitment to learning systems that create stability. Your environment shapes your standards, but you can choose new standards.

How can Elevate Construction help a team that’s struggling with leadership habits and consistency?
We help teams build operational control through coaching, training, and field-ready systems that support superintendents, foremen, and project teams. The goal is stable planning, clear communication, reliable flow, and dignity for the workforce.

If you want to learn more we have:

-Takt Virtual Training: (Click here)
-Check out our Youtube channel for more info: (Click here) 
-Listen to the Elevate Construction podcast: (Click here) 
-Check out our training programs and certifications: (Click here)
-The Takt Book: (Click here)

Discover Jason’s Expertise:

Meet Jason Schroeder, the driving force behind Elevate Construction IST. As the company’s owner and principal consultant, he’s dedicated to taking construction to new heights. With a wealth of industry experience, he’s crafted the Field Engineer Boot Camp and Superintendent Boot Camp – intensive training programs engineered to cultivate top-tier leaders capable of steering their teams towards success. Jason’s vision? To expand his training initiatives across the nation, empowering construction firms to soar to unprecedented levels of excellence.

On we go

A- Field Engineering

Read 22 min

Write It Down or It Won’t Happen

There’s a moment on every project when you realize your career is not being limited by your intelligence. It’s being limited by your organization. It’s not your personality type. It’s not whether you’re introverted or extroverted. It’s not whether you “have a bad memory” or “never learned good handwriting.” It’s whether you have a system that captures reality, communicates it clearly, and turns it into action. This is why I’m so direct about writing things down and communicating well, especially for field engineers. If you don’t build these habits early, you’ll hit a ceiling. You’ll get stuck at that “Superintendent 2” level or “PM2” level where you can still function if someone else is organizing the world around you, but you can’t scale yourself. If you do build these habits, you can go as far as you want, because now you can handle complexity without drowning in it.

In construction, the job doesn’t care how smart you are. The job rewards the person who can track the details, create clarity, and execute consistently. The most organized eats the unorganized. That’s not an insult. That’s not a judgment. That’s just the way the field works.

Confusion at the Point of Work

Let’s name the pain we’ve all seen. The crew gets a lift drawing and they can’t read it because the symbols aren’t familiar or the callouts aren’t consistent. Someone gets layout marks on lath and the operator can’t tell what it means, so the work gets delayed or guessed at. A field engineer calls in sick and someone opens their field book to try and pick up where they left off, and it’s chicken scratch, half-finished notes, and untraceable logic. A designer gets an RFI that reads like a rushed text message, no context, no options, no solution, and now the project waits while everyone tries to interpret what should have been clear. This is what kills flow. Not just schedule flow, but crew flow. It creates variation, rework, mistrust, and wasted motion. It creates the kind of jobsite where everyone is “busy,” but nothing is stable. And if you want LeanTakt flow, if you want a project that actually moves in rhythm, this is one of the first roots you have to pull out. LeanTakt depends on clarity and handoffs. Clarity depends on communication. Communication depends on writing things down and doing it in a way other people can understand.

We Treat Communication Like a Personality Trait

Here’s the failure pattern I want to call out with some respect, because I’ve lived it. We treat communication like something you either “have” or you don’t. We treat organization like it’s just personal preference. We let people excuse sloppy writing, sloppy labeling, sloppy emails, and sloppy notes as if it’s harmless. Then we wonder why the field is full of confusion and why the same mistakes repeat. The truth is, communication is not a personality trait. It’s a professional skill. And if you’re going to lead in this industry, you have to get good at it. I love introverts. I love extroverts. I’ve worked with both. I’ve learned from both. But I’m going to say something that needs to be said plainly: if you are not communicating frequently, clearly, and professionally, you are not leading as well as you could. And if someone refuses to communicate, they have no business being in leadership. That’s not about being harsh. That’s about protecting workers, protecting quality, and protecting the project.

A Short Field Story That Changed My Life

I learned this lesson the hard way, and I’m grateful I did. I was a field engineer on the Whole Foods World Headquarters project. We were deep in the basement, multiple stories down in limestone, hot and intense, doing layout for wall lines and embeds that had to be right. I had made mistakes before, and the superintendent came down to check behind me and help me correct it. He asked, “Where’s your layout on the form?” I showed him my marks and my offsets. Then he said, “Where’s your reference mark on the other wall so they can set the form to your line?” And I pointed to a little line I had made. It wasn’t labeled. He lost it. Hard hat down. Tape thrown. He said something like, “What am I going to have to do to beat it into your head that you need to label these lines? How is anyone supposed to set the form correctly if you don’t write it down?” Now, I’m not saying his delivery was perfect. But I will say this: he was right. A mark without a label is worthless. It has no goodness in it. It cannot be relied upon. It cannot be checked. It cannot be audited. It cannot be used to coordinate the work. And that day did something to me. It burned in a truth that has protected my career ever since. I will never again make a mark without labeling it properly.

Clarity Is Respect

I want you to hear this as more than a technical lesson. Clear writing and clear communication are forms of respect. They respect the craft worker who has to build. They respect the next person who has to verify. They respect the superintendent who has to coordinate. They respect the designer who has to respond. They respect the schedule. They respect the budget. They respect the project. When you label your layout correctly, you are not just “being neat.” You are preventing confusion. You are preventing rework. You are preventing unsafe improvisation. You are creating stability for the people who will touch that work after you. This is quality at the source. Not just in concrete placement and waterproofing, but in communication itself.

Write It Down, Then Communicate It Professionally

There are two truths that will change your life in construction if you take them seriously. The first one is the old legal idea: if it isn’t written down, it didn’t happen. You can’t prove it. You can’t track it. You can’t defend it. The second one is the proactive idea: if it isn’t written down, it won’t happen. It won’t be remembered. It won’t be executed. It won’t be followed up. It will disappear into the chaos of the day. So here is the framework in plain field terms. You capture your world by writing it down. Then you lead your world by communicating it clearly. That means your to-do list matters. Your field notes matter. Your layout marks matter. Your lift drawings matter. Your emails matter. Your RFIs matter. Every one of those is a communication act, and every one of those needs to be professional.

If you want a practical tool that fits the jobsite reality, use your field book. Use it intentionally. Use the front-to-back pages for field notes and the back-to-front pages for your to-do list. Keep it in one place. Write everything down. Do not rely on your memory. Do not rely on the hope that you’ll “get to it later.” A field engineer with a disciplined field book is a field engineer who can be trusted. And trust is the currency of the field.

What Professional Communication Looks Like in the Field

Professional communication is not about being fancy. It’s about being clear. In layout, every mark should have meaning that can be interpreted by someone else. Elevation marks should include what benchmark was used, what the number represents, and what it is for. Offsets should be labeled. Control points should be referenced. You are not writing for yourself. You are writing for the crew, the next shift, and the future. In lift drawings, you coordinate the language with the craft. You align symbols, callouts, and conventions. You don’t assume everyone reads drawings the same way you do. You make it readable. You make it buildable. You make it checkable. In emails and RFIs, you write like a professional. You provide context. You state the problem clearly. You propose solutions when possible. You keep the end customer in mind. You don’t send rushed, unclear, reactive messages that create more confusion than they solve. And yes, your handwriting matters. If your writing is unreadable, you are making your teammates pay for your lack of discipline.

One Simple Practice That Improves Everything

I’m going to give you one practice that feels small but changes everything if you adopt it. Start printing in block letters, in capitals. No cursive. No scribble. No lowercase chicken scratch. I was taught this by a general superintendent, and it was a game changer because it improved the precision with which I communicated. It improved my calculations. It improved my field notes. It improved my layout clarity. It improved how other people could follow my work. And here’s the part that might ruffle feathers, but I’m going to say it anyway because I want you to win. Stop being a victim about communication. Don’t say you have bad handwriting. Get better. Don’t say you don’t remember names. Build a system. Don’t say you don’t like writing things down. Discipline yourself. Don’t say you’re not good with computers. Learn. How you do one thing is how you do everything. If you want to lead bigger work, you have to do the small things like a professional.

A Natural Place Where Elevate Construction Helps

These habits don’t just “happen.” They are trained. They are coached. They are reinforced. The field does not improve by wishing. It improves by installing systems that create repeatable behaviors. If your project needs superintendent coaching, project support, or leadership development, Elevate Construction can help your field teams stabilize, schedule, and flow. When we coach teams, we don’t just talk about high-level concepts. We build real habits on real projects. We help field engineers become clear communicators. We help foremen scale clarity. We help superintendents install systems that prevent chaos. And we tie it all back to flow, quality, and respect.

Double the Effort, Double the Frequency

Whatever your current level of communication is, double your effort to make it clear and double the frequency with which you communicate. That does not mean making emails longer. It means making communication more intentional, more precise, and more useful. Write it down. Label it. Make it readable. Make it traceable. Make it professional. Here’s your challenge. Starting tomorrow, do not leave a mark without a label. Do not end a day without updating your field book. Do not send a message you wouldn’t be proud to have forwarded to the owner. Build your system now, while the stakes are manageable, so you can lead when the stakes are high. I’ll leave you with a quote that fits this mindset: “Without a standard, there can be no improvement.” — Taiichi Ohno If you want to improve your field performance, start with the standard of how you write, how you record, and how you communicate.

FAQs

What is the best way for a field engineer to stay organized every day?
Use a simple, consistent system that captures everything. A field book works extremely well when you keep field notes front-to-back and your to-do list back-to-front, updating it daily without relying on memory.

Why does labeling layout marks matter so much?
Because unlabeled marks can’t be verified, trusted, or used by others. Proper labeling prevents misinterpretation, reduces rework, and makes layout executable for the craft and checkable for supervision.

How can I improve my professional communication as a field engineer?
Practice daily by writing clear notes, using consistent symbols and terms, and sending proactive emails and RFIs that include context and suggested solutions. Communication is a skill, and repetition builds it.

What is a simple handwriting improvement that helps in the field?
Print in block capital letters. It improves readability, reduces confusion, and helps other people follow your notes, calculations, and layout references without guessing.

How does communication connect to LeanTakt and flow?
LeanTakt depends on reliable handoffs and clear execution. When drawings, layout, and messages are unclear, flow breaks down. When communication is professional and consistent, work becomes stable and predictable.

If you want to learn more we have:

-Takt Virtual Training: (Click here)
-Check out our Youtube channel for more info: (Click here) 
-Listen to the Elevate Construction podcast: (Click here) 
-Check out our training programs and certifications: (Click here)
-The Takt Book: (Click here)

Discover Jason’s Expertise:

Meet Jason Schroeder, the driving force behind Elevate Construction IST. As the company’s owner and principal consultant, he’s dedicated to taking construction to new heights. With a wealth of industry experience, he’s crafted the Field Engineer Boot Camp and Superintendent Boot Camp – intensive training programs engineered to cultivate top-tier leaders capable of steering their teams towards success. Jason’s vision? To expand his training initiatives across the nation, empowering construction firms to soar to unprecedented levels of excellence.

On we go

Crew Preparation Huddles

Read 23 min

The 25-Minute Crew Preparation Huddle: The Missing Link Between Plans and Production

Most projects don’t fail because people don’t care. They fail because the day starts sloppy, the expectations are fuzzy, and the crew spends the first two hours hunting instead of building. Then everybody wonders why production is behind, why quality is inconsistent, and why the superintendent feels like they’re herding cats instead of running a project. That is exactly why I keep pushing this concept: the 25-minute crew preparation huddle. If we want to improve the effectiveness of workers and foremen, we have to stop treating preparation like optional overhead and start treating it like the foundation of operational excellence.

I’m going to say this in a way that matters to the field. If you want quality at the source, if you want safety to be predictable, if you want LeanTakt flow to hold, you have to prepare the crew before you launch the day. Not with a long speech. Not with a clipboard performance. With a short, disciplined routine that trains, sets direction, and eliminates the waste before it starts.

The Construction Pain Nobody Wants to Admit

Every day, I see the same pain pattern on jobsites. Crews show up, but the work isn’t ready. Tools are scattered. Materials are missing or uninspected. The plan is vague. The hazards haven’t been thought through. The pre-task plan gets done like paperwork instead of a real thinking exercise. And then we act surprised when the crew spends the day reacting. That daily chaos feels normal to a lot of people. But it’s not normal. It’s not acceptable. And it’s not necessary. What’s happening is the industry has trained itself to start work before it’s ready. We start the clock and hope the day finds its rhythm. That’s a gamble, not leadership.

We Skip the Moment That Creates Flow

The failure pattern is simple: we do a jobsite worker huddle and think we’re done. The worker huddle is essential. I want it on every project. Five to ten minutes in the morning, jobsite-wide or area-based on a mega project, where we set the tone, cover critical safety items, build the social group, scale communication, and give people a shared understanding of what the day is about. But that huddle is not enough by itself. It’s the “why” and the “what.” It’s not the “how.” The “how” happens at the crew level. And if foremen don’t own that moment, the day will drift into false alignment. Everyone thinks they’re on the same page, but the details are missing, and that’s where the job bleeds. That’s why the crew preparation huddle exists. It is the bridge between the project plan and the craft execution. It is where foremen turn intent into action.

A Quick Field Picture of What This Fixes

I’ve watched crews lose half a day without realizing it. They start by grabbing tools, then they realize they need a different bit, then they walk to find the cart, then they wait on a lift, then they’re missing information, then someone calls for an inspection, then they have to reshuffle the sequence, then they finally begin work. Nobody is lazy. The system is just disorganized. Now picture the opposite. The crew starts together. They know the plan. They know the hazards. They know the quality expectation. The work area is clean. Tools and materials are staged. The pre-task plan has real thinking behind it. And if something feels abnormal, they stop, call, and wait. That isn’t “extra.” That is what professional execution looks like.

Workers Deserve a Setup That Helps Them Win

I care about this because it’s dignity. It’s respect. It’s leadership. A worker should not have to fight the jobsite just to do their job. A foreman should not have to sprint all day putting out fires that were predictable at 6:30 a.m. A superintendent shouldn’t have to police chaos that could have been prevented by a stable start. When we say we want to improve the effectiveness of workers and foremen, we’re really saying we want to build a system where people can succeed without being punished by variability. That’s what the 25-minute crew preparation huddle does. It stabilizes the day.

Three Huddles That Create a Predictable Day

If you want this to work, you have to see it as a system, not a standalone meeting. The day before, the foreman attends the foreman daily huddle and plans the next day in detail. The next morning, the crew attends the jobsite worker huddle where the project-level plan is communicated. Then the foreman takes their crew into a 25-minute crew preparation huddle where the plan becomes real at the point of installation. This is where LeanTakt becomes practical. LeanTakt is about rhythm and flow, but flow in the field requires stability at the crew level. The crew preparation huddle is where that stability is created.

What Happens in the 25 Minutes

This is not meant to be complicated. It’s meant to be disciplined, repeatable, and human. It’s a short block of time where the foreman sets the crew up to win and trains them to think like builders. A foreman can lead this with a simple visual board, a pre-task plan form, a quality checklist or feature of work board, and whatever tools their company provides. The tools are helpful, but the real power is the conversation and the habits. Here’s what I like to see integrated into that 25 minutes, in a way that feels natural and not like corporate theater.

First, the foreman anchors the crew with a positive shout-out for a behavior that aligns with safety, quality, or teamwork. That matters because people repeat what leaders recognize. Then the foreman asks for feedback. Not as a fake question. A real one. What is making your work harder? What roadblocks are you hitting? What do you need from me to be successful today?That question alone changes culture. It tells workers they’re seen and listened to, and it surfaces problems early before they become incidents or rework.

Next, the foreman covers one safety training topic for the day. Not everything. One thing that matters for today’s hazards. Something specific to the task, the environment, the sequence, and the crew. This is where the foreman teaches “normal vs. not normal,” a concept I’ve loved ever since Paul Akers talked about it so clearly. When something is normal, you proceed. When something is not normal, you stop, call, and wait. That one habit, taught consistently, can transform quality and safety.

Then the foreman shares a two-second lean improvement from yesterday or invites one from the crew. This is where we begin to scale the mindset that waste is not normal. This is where we train people to notice, to care, and to improve. It doesn’t have to be fancy. It can be as simple as moving a station closer, labeling a gang box, creating a better trash system, or fixing a repeated trip hazard.

After that, the crew walks the area, looks at the workface, and aligns on the plan. This is where the pre-task plan becomes real. The foreman fills out the PTP with the crew, and the crew participates by identifying hazards, confirming controls, and understanding the sequence.

While the foreman is completing that PTP, the crew can begin what Paul Akers calls 3S, which is the simplified version of 5S and is often more practical in the field. They sort, set in order, and sweep. They remove unneeded items, organize what belongs, and clean the area, not just to be neat, but to identify problems. A clean area reveals abnormal conditions. It reveals missing tools. It reveals hazards. It reveals quality issues. Cleanliness is not cosmetic. It is diagnostic.

Why This Is Not a Waste of Time

Some people hear “25 minutes” and immediately think, “We don’t have time.” That is exactly backwards. You don’t have time not to do this. An unprepared crew will waste more than 25 minutes before lunch. They will waste it in treasure hunts, rework, miscommunication, waiting, and unsafe improvisation. A prepared crew, even with 25 minutes invested up front, will usually outperform the unprepared crew in the remaining seven and a half hours. I’ve seen it too many times to debate it. If I owned a self-perform company, I would go even further. I would build the expectation that preparation is part of production. I would price it into my units because I know it returns value. The only reason people resist this is because they haven’t seen what stability does to output.

A Short Bullet Snapshot of What the Crew Should Leave With

  • A clear plan for the day, understood by the whole crew, not just the foreman.
  • Tools, equipment, and materials staged and verified so the crew isn’t hunting.
  • A signed, real pre-task plan based on actual hazards and controls at the workface.

That’s not fluff. That is the baseline for professionalism.

Reduce the Wastes Before They Start

During the crew preparation huddle, the foreman has an opportunity to teach the eight wastes in a way workers can apply immediately. In construction, I see certain wastes hit crews hardest, especially wasted motion, transportation, excess inventory, and overproduction. When you start the day by noticing these wastes, you prevent them from snowballing. This is where the foreman shifts from being a task assigner to being a builder of systems. A foreman who teaches workers to see waste is a foreman who creates a smarter crew. And when a crew is trained to see abnormal conditions, quality improves and safety becomes predictable. That is quality at the source.

How This Supports LeanTakt and Project Flow

LeanTakt is about protecting flow through zones, sequence, and predictable handoffs. But you can’t hold flow with fragile crews. Flow requires crews that start stable, understand the plan, and work with discipline. The crew preparation huddle makes the day executable. It aligns craft work with the plan. It reduces variation at the point of installation. It creates cleaner handoffs. It prevents the “we’ll figure it out in the field” mentality that destroys schedules. This is why I say the crew preparation huddle is not a meeting. It’s a production system.

Where Elevate Construction Can Help

A lot of teams want this, but they struggle to implement it consistently. That’s normal. New habits require coaching, reinforcement, and leadership alignment. If your project needs superintendent coaching, project support, or leadership development, Elevate Construction can help your field teams stabilize, schedule, and flow. We help teams install huddle systems that work, integrate quality at the source, and connect field behaviors to predictable performance. The goal is not to add meetings. The goal is to remove chaos.

Your Challenge

Here’s my challenge to every foreman reading this. Tomorrow morning, don’t start work until you’ve prepared your crew. Take the 25 minutes. Do the huddle. Ask for feedback. Teach one safety concept. Reinforce normal versus not normal. Walk the area. Complete the pre-task plan like it matters. Have the crew 3S their workface. Stage the tools. Set the standard. Then do it again the next day, and the next day, until it becomes who you are. Because foremen are the heartbeat of the jobsite. If we scale excellence, we will do it through foremen who train, communicate, and prepare their crews like professionals. I’ll leave you with a quote that fits this perfectly: “Standardized work is the foundation for continuous improvement.” — Toyota. If we want continuous improvement on our projects, we need a standard start to the day.

FAQs

What is a 25-minute crew preparation huddle?
It’s a short, crew-level meeting after the jobsite worker huddle where the foreman prepares the crew for the day by training, planning, staging, and completing the pre-task plan at the workface.

How is it different from the jobsite worker huddle?
The worker huddle aligns the whole site on the plan and key messages. The crew preparation huddle translates that plan into task-level execution for one specific crew, including hazards, quality expectations, and setup.

Does a crew preparation huddle reduce productivity?
No. It increases productivity by eliminating treasure hunts, waiting, rework, and confusion. Prepared crews typically outperform unprepared crews in the remaining workday because they start stable.

What should foremen cover during the 25 minutes?
Foremen should recognize positive behavior, gather worker feedback, train one safety topic, reinforce normal versus abnormal thinking, complete the pre-task plan with the crew, and enable the crew to 3S or 5S the area and stage tools and materials.

How does this support LeanTakt and flow?
LeanTakt requires reliable execution and stable handoffs. The crew preparation huddle reduces variation at the point of installation, improves readiness, and helps crews maintain rhythm zone to zone.

If you want to learn more we have:

-Takt Virtual Training: (Click here)
-Check out our Youtube channel for more info: (Click here) 
-Listen to the Elevate Construction podcast: (Click here) 
-Check out our training programs and certifications: (Click here)
-The Takt Book: (Click here)

Discover Jason’s Expertise:

Meet Jason Schroeder, the driving force behind Elevate Construction IST. As the company’s owner and principal consultant, he’s dedicated to taking construction to new heights. With a wealth of industry experience, he’s crafted the Field Engineer Boot Camp and Superintendent Boot Camp – intensive training programs engineered to cultivate top-tier leaders capable of steering their teams towards success. Jason’s vision? To expand his training initiatives across the nation, empowering construction firms to soar to unprecedented levels of excellence.

On we go

    faq

    General Training Overview

    What construction leadership training programs does LeanTakt offer?
    LeanTakt offers Superintendent/PM Boot Camps, Virtual Takt Production System® Training, Onsite Takt Simulations, and Foreman & Field Engineer Training. Each program is tailored to different leadership levels in construction.
    Who should attend LeanTakt’s training programs?
    Superintendents, Project Managers, Foremen, Field Engineers, and trade partners who want to improve planning, communication, and execution on projects.
    How do these training programs improve project performance?
    They provide proven Lean and Takt systems that reduce chaos, improve reliability, strengthen collaboration, and accelerate project delivery.
    What makes LeanTakt’s training different from other construction courses?
    Our programs are hands-on, field-tested, and focused on practical application—not just classroom theory.
    Do I need prior Lean or takt planning experience to attend?
    No. Our programs cover foundational principles before moving into advanced applications.
    How quickly can I apply what I learn on real projects?
    Most participants begin applying new skills immediately, often the same week they complete the program.
    Are these trainings designed for both office and field leaders?
    Yes. We equip both project managers and superintendents with tools that connect field and office operations.
    What industries benefit most from LeanTakt training?
    Commercial, multifamily, residential, industrial, and infrastructure projects all benefit from flow-based planning.
    Do participants receive certificates after completing training?
    Yes. Every participant receives a LeanTakt Certificate of Completion.
    Is LeanTakt training recognized in the construction industry?
    Yes. Our programs are widely respected among leading GCs, subcontractors, and construction professionals.

    Superintendent / PM Boot Camp

    What is the Superintendent & Project Manager Boot Camp?
    It’s a 5-day immersive training for superintendents and PMs to master Lean leadership, takt planning, and project flow.
    How long does the Superintendent/PM Boot Camp last?
    Five full days of hands-on training.
    What topics are covered in the Boot Camp curriculum?
    Lean leadership, Takt Planning, logistics, daily planning, field-office communication, and team health.
    How does the Boot Camp improve leadership and scheduling skills?
    Yes. You’ll learn how to run day huddles, team meetings, worker huddles, and Lean coordination processes.
    Who is the Boot Camp best suited for?
    Construction leaders responsible for delivering projects, including Superintendents, PMs, and Field Leaders.
    What real-world challenges are simulated during the Boot Camp?
    Schedule breakdowns, trade conflicts, logistics issues, and communication gaps.
    Will I learn Takt Planning at the Boot Camp?
    Yes. Takt Planning is a core focus of the Boot Camp.
    How does this Boot Camp compare to traditional PM certification?
    It’s practical and execution-based rather than exam-based. You learn by doing, not just studying theory.
    Can my entire project team attend the Boot Camp together?
    Yes. Teams attending together often see the greatest results.
    What kind of real-world challenges do we simulate?
    Improved project flow, fewer delays, better team communication, and stronger leadership confidence.

    Takt Production System® Virtual Training

    What is the Virtual Takt Production System® Training?
    It’s an expert-led online program that teaches Lean construction teams how to implement takt planning.
    How does virtual takt training work?
    Delivered online via live sessions, interactive discussions, and digital tools.
    What are the benefits of online takt planning training?
    Convenience, global accessibility, real-time learning, and immediate application.
    Can I access the virtual training from anywhere?
    Yes. It’s fully web-based and accessible worldwide.
    Can I access the virtual training from anywhere?
    Yes. It’s fully web-based and accessible worldwide.
    What skills will I gain from the Virtual TPS® Training?
    Macro and micro Takt planning, weekly updates, flow management, and CPM integration.
    How long does the virtual training program take?
    The program is typically completed in multiple live sessions across several days.
    Can I watch recordings if I miss a session?
    Yes. Recordings are available to all participants.
    Do you offer group access or company licenses for the virtual training?
    Yes. Teams and companies can enroll together at discounted rates.
    How does the Virtual TPS® Training integrate with CPM tools?
    We show how to align Takt with CPM schedules like Primavera P6 or MS Project.

    Onsite Takt Simulation

    What is a Takt Simulation in construction training?
    It’s a live, interactive workshop that demonstrates takt planning on-site.
    How does the Takt Simulation workshop work?
    Teams participate in hands-on exercises to learn the flow and rhythm of a Takt-based project.
    Can I choose between a 1-day or 2-day Takt Simulation?
    Yes. We offer flexible formats to fit your team’s schedule and needs.
    Who should participate in the Takt Simulation workshop?
    Superintendents, PMs, site supervisors, contractors, and engineers.
    How does a Takt Simulation improve project planning?
    It shows teams how to structure zones, manage flow, and coordinate trades in real time.
    What will my team learn from the onsite simulation?
    How to build and maintain takt plans, manage buffers, and align trade partners.
    Is the simulation tailored to my specific project type?
    Yes. Scenarios can be customized to match your project.
    How do Takt Simulations improve trade partner coordination?
    They strengthen collaboration by making handoffs visible and predictable.
    What results can I expect from an onsite Takt Simulation?
    Improved schedule reliability, better trade collaboration, and reduced rework.
    How many people can join a Takt Simulation session?
    Group sizes are flexible, but typically 15–30 participants per session.

    Foreman & Field Engineer Training

    What is Foreman & Field Engineer Training?
    It’s an on-demand, practical program that equips foremen and engineers with leadership and planning skills.
    How does this training prepare emerging leaders?
    By teaching communication, crew management, and execution strategies.
    Is the training on-demand or scheduled?
    On-demand, tailored to your team’s timing and needs.
    What skills do foremen and engineers gain from this training?
    Planning, safety leadership, coordination, and communication.
    How does the training improve communication between field and office?
    It builds shared systems that align superintendents, engineers, and managers.
    Can the training be customized for my team’s needs?
    Yes. Programs are tailored for your project or company.
    What makes this program different from generic leadership courses?
    It’s construction-specific, field-tested, and focused on real project application.
    How do foremen and field engineers apply this training immediately?
    They can use new systems for planning, coordination, and daily crew management right away.
    Is the training suitable for small construction companies?
    Yes. Small and large teams alike benefit from building flow-based leadership skills.

    Testimonials

    Testimonials

    "The bootcamp I was apart of was amazing. Its was great while it was happening but also had a very profound long-term motivation that is still pushing me to do more, be more. It sounds a little strange to say that a construction bootcamp changed my life, but it has. It has opened my eyes to many possibilities on how a project can be successfully run. It’s also provided some very positive ideas on how people can and should be treated in construction.

    I am a hungry person by nature, so it doesn’t take a lot to get to participate. I loved the way it was not just about participating, it was also about doing it with conviction, passion, humility and if it wasn’t portrayed that way you had to do it again."

    "It's great to be a part of a company that has similar values to my own, especially regarding how we treat our trade partners. The idea of "you gotta make them feel worse to make them do better" has been preached at me for years. I struggled with this as you will not find a single psychology textbook stating these beliefs. In fact it is quite the opposite, and causing conflict is a recipe for disaster. I'm still honestly in shock I have found a company that has based its values on scientific facts based on human nature. That along with the Takt scheduling system makes everything even better. I am happy to be a part of a change that has been long overdue in our industry!"

    "Wicked team building, so valuable for the forehumans of the sub trades to know the how and why. Great tools and resources. Even though I am involved and use the tools every day, I feel like everything is fresh and at the forefront to use"

    "Jason and his team did an incredible job passing on the overall theory of what they do. After 3 days of running through the course I cannot see any holes in their concept. It works. it's proven to work and I am on board!"

    "Loved the pull planning, Takt planning, and logistic model planning. Well thought out and professional"

    "The Super/PM Boot Camp was an excellent experience that furthered my understanding of Lean Practices. The collaboration, group involvement, passion about real project site experiences, and POSITIVE ENERGY. There are no dull moments when you head into this training. Jason and Mr. Montero were always on point and available to help in the break outs sessions. Easily approachable to talk too during breaks and YES, it was fun. I recommend this training for any PM or Superintendent that wants to further their career."

    agenda

    Day 1

    Foundations & Macro Planning

    day2

    Norm Planning & Flow Optimization

    day3

    Advanced Tools & Comparisons

    day4

    Buffers, Controls & Finalization

    day5

    Control Systems & Presentations

    faq

    UNDERSTANDING THE TRAINING

    What is the Virtual Takt Production System® Training by LeanTakt?
    It’s an expert-led online program designed to teach construction professionals how to implement Takt Planning to create flow, eliminate chaos, and align teams across the project lifecycle.
    Who should take the LeanTakt virtual training?
    This training is ideal for Superintendents, Project Managers, Engineers, Schedulers, Trade Partners, and Lean Champions looking to improve planning and execution.
    What topics are covered in the online Takt Production System® course?
    The course covers macro and micro Takt planning, zone creation, buffers, weekly updates, flow management, trade coordination, and integration with CPM tools.
    What makes LeanTakt’s virtual training different from other Lean construction courses?
    Unlike theory-based courses, this training is hands-on, practical, field-tested, and includes live coaching tailored to your actual projects.
    Do I get a certificate after completing the online training?
    Yes. Upon successful completion, participants receive a LeanTakt Certificate of Completion, which validates your knowledge and readiness to implement Takt.

    VALUE AND RESULTS

    What are the benefits of Takt Production System® training for my team?
    It helps teams eliminate bottlenecks, improve planning reliability, align trades, and reduce the chaos typically seen in traditional construction schedules.
    How much time and money can I save with Takt Planning?
    Many projects using Takt see 15–30% reductions in time and cost due to better coordination, fewer delays, and increased team accountability.
    What’s the ROI of virtual Takt training for construction teams?
    The ROI comes from faster project delivery, reduced rework, improved communication, and better resource utilization — often 10x the investment.
    Will this training reduce project delays or rework?
    Yes. By visualizing flow and aligning trades, Takt Planning reduces miscommunication and late handoffs — major causes of delay and rework.
    How soon can I expect to see results on my projects?
    Most teams report seeing improvement in coordination and productivity within the first 2–4 weeks of implementation.

    PLANNING AND SCHEDULING TOPICS

    What is Takt Planning and how is it used in construction?
    Takt Planning is a Lean scheduling method that creates flow by aligning work with time and space, using rhythm-based planning to coordinate teams and reduce waste.
    What’s the difference between macro and micro Takt plans?
    Macro Takt plans focus on the overall project flow and phase durations, while micro Takt plans break down detailed weekly tasks by zone and crew.
    Will I learn how to build a complete Takt plan from scratch?
    Yes. The training teaches you how to build both macro and micro Takt plans tailored to your project, including workflows, buffers, and sequencing.
    How do I update and maintain a Takt schedule each week?
    You’ll learn how to conduct weekly updates using lookaheads, trade feedback, zone progress, and digital tools to maintain schedule reliability.
    Can I integrate Takt Planning with CPM or Primavera P6?
    Yes. The training includes guidance on aligning Takt plans with CPM logic, showing how both systems can work together effectively.
    Will I have access to the instructors during the training?
    Yes. You’ll have opportunities to ask questions, share challenges, and get real-time feedback from LeanTakt coaches.
    Can I ask questions specific to my current project?
    Absolutely. In fact, we encourage it — the training is designed to help you apply Takt to your active jobs.
    Is support available after the training ends?
    Yes. You can access follow-up support, coaching, and community forums to help reinforce implementation.
    Can your tools be customized to my project or team?
    Yes. We offer customizable templates and implementation options to fit different project types, teams, and tech stacks.
    When is the best time in a project lifecycle to take this training?
    Ideally before or during preconstruction, but teams have seen success implementing it mid-project as well.

    APPLICATION & TEAM ADOPTION

    What changes does my team need to adopt Takt Planning?
    Teams must shift from reactive scheduling to proactive, flow-based planning with clear commitments, reliable handoffs, and a visual management mindset.
    Do I need any prior Lean or scheduling experience?
    No prior Lean experience is required. The course is structured to take you from foundational principles to advanced application.
    How long does it take for teams to adapt to Takt Planning?
    Most teams adapt within 2–6 weeks, depending on project size and how fully the system is adopted across roles.
    Can this training work for smaller companies or projects?
    Absolutely. Takt is scalable and especially powerful for small teams seeking better structure and predictability.
    What role do trade partners play in using Takt successfully?
    Trade partners are key collaborators. They help shape realistic flow, manage buffers, and provide feedback during weekly updates.

    VIRTUAL FORMAT & ACCESSIBILITY

    Can I access the virtual training from anywhere?
    Yes. The training is fully accessible online, making it ideal for distributed teams across regions or countries.
    Is this training available internationally?
    Yes. LeanTakt trains teams around the world and supports global implementations.
    Can I watch recordings if I miss a session?
    Yes. All sessions are recorded and made available for later viewing through your training portal.
    Do you offer group access or company licenses?
    Yes. Teams can enroll together at discounted rates, and we offer licenses for enterprise rollouts.
    What technology or setup do I need to join the virtual training?
    A reliable internet connection, webcam, Miro, Spreadsheets, and access to Zoom.

    faq

    GENERAL FAQS

    What is the Superintendent / PM Boot Camp?
    It’s a hands-on leadership training for Superintendents and Project Managers in the construction industry focused on Lean systems, planning, and communication.
    Who is this Boot Camp for?
    Construction professionals including Superintendents, Project Managers, Field Engineers, and Foremen looking to improve planning, leadership, and project flow.
    What makes this construction boot camp different?
    Real-world project simulations, expert coaching, Lean principles, team-based learning, and post-camp support — all built for field leaders.
    Is this just a seminar or classroom training?
    No. It’s a hands-on, immersive experience. You’ll plan, simulate, collaborate, and get feedback — not sit through lectures.
    What is the focus of the training?
    Leadership, project planning, communication, Lean systems, and integrating office-field coordination.

    CURRICULUM & OUTCOMES

    What topics are covered in the Boot Camp?
    Takt planning, day planning, logistics, pre-construction, team health, communication systems, and more.
    What is Takt Planning and why is it taught?
    Takt is a Lean planning method that creates flow and removes chaos. It helps teams deliver projects on time with less stress.
    Will I learn how to lead field teams more effectively?
    Yes. This boot camp focuses on real leadership challenges and gives you systems and strategies to lead high-performing teams.
    Do you cover daily huddles and meeting systems?
    Yes. You’ll learn how to run day huddles, team meetings, worker huddles, and Lean coordination processes.
    What kind of real-world challenges do we simulate?
    You’ll work through real project schedules, logistical constraints, leadership decisions, and field-office communication breakdowns.

    LOGISTICS & FORMAT

    Is the training in-person or virtual?
    It’s 100% in-person to maximize learning, feedback, and team-based interaction.
    How long is the Boot Camp?
    It runs for 5 full days.
    Where is the Boot Camp held?
    Locations vary — typically hosted in a professional training center or project setting. Contact us for the next available city/date.
    Do you offer follow-up coaching after the Boot Camp?
    Yes. Post-camp support is included so you can apply what you’ve learned on your projects.
    Can I ask questions about my actual project?
    Absolutely. That’s encouraged — bring your current challenges.

    PRICING & VALUE

    How much does the Boot Camp cost?
    $5,000 per person.
    Are there any group discounts?
    Yes — get 10% off when 4 or more people from the same company attend.
    What’s the ROI for sending my team?
    Better planning = fewer delays, smoother coordination, and higher team morale — all of which boost productivity and reduce costs.
    Will I see results immediately?
    Most participants apply what they’ve learned as soon as they return to the jobsite — especially with follow-up support.
    Can this replace other leadership training?
    In many cases, yes. This Boot Camp is tailored to construction professionals, unlike generic leadership seminars.

    SEO-BASED / HIGH-INTENT SEARCH QUESTIONS

    What is the best leadership training for construction Superintendents?
    Our Boot Camp offers real-world, field-focused leadership training tailored for construction leaders.
    What’s included in a Superintendent Boot Camp?
    Takt planning, day planning, logistics, pre-construction systems, huddles, simulations, and more.
    Where can I find Lean construction training near me?
    Check our upcoming in-person sessions or request a private boot camp in your city.
    How can I improve field and office communication on a project?
    This Boot Camp teaches you tools and systems to connect field and office workflows seamlessly.
    Is there a training to help reduce chaos on construction sites?
    Yes — this program is built specifically to turn project chaos into flow through structured leadership.

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