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Showing posts with label better margins. Show all posts
Showing posts with label better margins. Show all posts

Wednesday, April 19, 2017

Homebuilders: What's Different About 2017?

Interesting John McManus article in a recent Builderonline titled: Spring 2017: A Different Market. Take a look here.

FieldCollaborate: Tools for Today
McManus suggests that the just out of recovery market of 2 years ago is no longer.  Previously, demand for new homes was from the higher-end buyer.  Buyers weren't too concerned about qualifying and had definite ideas about what they wanted in their new home. To some extent, pricing was elastic.

Today, McManus says, it's a different market.  Now, the growth spot is lower-end, further out geographically with lots of communities open and selling homes. More competition, in other words, with a clear focus on price.

The change has put lots of stress on builders.  Lower sale price homes dictate a focus on margins. Costs are going up. It all translates into more of a push for volume.

McManus quotes a builder: We haven't spent so much time and focus on start-to-completion cycle times in six or seven years as we are right now.  It's really basic stuff of doing what we do, only doing it better and faster. Otherwise, we can't get the margins we need.

This type of market needs tools to help manage, measure and report.  Take a look at CPS' FieldCollaborate -- construction software designed to help you define, track and analyze your cycle time and highlight problems meeting your goals.  Improve communications -- both internally and with vendors. Reduce callbacks with task-specific quality checklists. Keep your field managers off their phones with automated followup and reminders.  We can help you meet the challenges presented in today's market.


Tuesday, October 20, 2015

Home Builder Scheduling: More on the "Small Ball" Approach

There's quite a lot going on in the new home market these days: momentum is positive, more homes are being built and sold.  Low interest rates are still to be found,  household formation is growing, millennials finally seem interested in home ownership and...there are ongoing labor shortages in certain, key industries and markets making the construction part of the business ever challenging.

There's also growing interest in maximizing the concept of job scheduling in the effort to "bring order from chaos" in new home construction.

There's no doubt about it: new home construction is unlike many other production processes. However, Scott Sedum, in a ProBuilder article suggests there is one inviolate rule: The best builders are the best schedulers. Every builder recognizes that, as Fletcher Groves notes in Practice Makes Process:  "the reason an enterprise exists is to make money and... that value is delivered through the work that the enterprise performs and the work has to be performed in some manner of workflow."
Getting Down to the Basics

There can be a tendency to say (or mutter): "I already schedule -- and haven't really noticed much difference in the chaos!"

That's where "starting at the beginning" will pay off.  The art of scheduling needs to be much more than creating a list of tasks to be done today. Taking the time to review, analyze and enhance organizational processes will pay off -- as that review process will highlight areas needing attention leading to better scheduling.

And, as much as it might hurt, it pays off to start at the beginning. Remember KISS?  Regardless of whether you're building single-or multifamily homes, production or custom, in Alaska or the desert -- make an effort, as Sedum suggests, to reduce extra steps, paperwork, trips, calls.  That's what, Groves points out, allows you to complete more work, at a lower cost, with fewer resources. End result: increased efficiency resulting in better margins.

OK; where to start?  Remember our mentioning taking a SF Giants "small ball" approach? Details matter; we'll suggest 3 detail points that will help improve your scheduling process:
  • Make simplification a daily objective -- throughout the organization. Finding out where you can simplify things (whether paperwork, approvals, or phone calls) is the first step in increasing efficiency -- and should be a part of schedule review process.
  • Create a complete "start to finish" checklist -- nothing is more painful (for the organization and the pocketbook) than discovering a grading mistake when the slab is about to be poured. This list should be your start document -- and will generate one or more tasks in the schedule. 
  • Absolutely include "BUYER" items in the schedule --  Touchpoints are today's mantra. And, they don't  start or finish in the sales office. The pre-construction meeting, walk through and home orientation are not only critical to your relationship -- they take time.  Make sure to include them in your schedule -- both because they're tasks and to highlight their importance.
Groves mentions process review needs to be much more than documenting today's workflow -- it is the front end of an improvement methodology.  We'll look at more key points in upcoming Blogs!