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Building Products Digest
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February 2015
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Building Products Digest
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WHAT IT TAKES TO BE A SUCCESSFUL DECKING SELLER
12 INDUSTRY TRENDS
COMPOSITE FENCING HOPES TO EMULATE DECKING’S GAINS
14 INDUSTRY TRENDS
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Building-Products.com
ACROSS the Board By Patrick Adams
BPD
Building Products Digest www.building-products.com
Big shoes to fill
T
HE FIRST TIME I heard that phrase, I was 11 years old working my first job at an auto repair shop as a “gopher.” My Dad was a working man and had told me that if I ever intended on driving when I was 16, I had better get a job and begin saving for my first car and the costs that go along with it. The owner of the shop was a family friend and told me the last gopher had been promoted to a mechanic after years of working hard. I heard it again when I finally took over my Grandfather’s largest key account in our family business—an account that literally built my grandparents’ business. The c.e.o. told me that my Grandfather was the hardest working, most honorable man he had ever met and had never let them down. I also heard it from my Father-in-law, a man who worked hard for his family his entire life, when I discussed ultimately marrying his daughter. He told me that my wife was raised “right,” worked hard through school and her career, had big dreams in life, and that, as her partner, I had big shoes to fill. Now, I hear that phrase echoing in my head as I follow hard-working, respected men like David Cutler and Alan Oakes, and I think about all the people who have taken a chance on me and believed in me and my family. I have already had the great pleasure of meeting many great, hard-working people in this industry who have offered their help and their ears without hesitation during my introduction to the industry. They are the same people who ask about how David Cutler is enjoying retirement and tell me that Alan Oakes is the hardest working man in the industry. Big shoes… hard work… great men. We all have big shoes to fill. Why do we do what we do? Why do we get up before the sun every morning and come home in the dark, tired and aching but with a smile on our face when we walk in and see our family? It’s because we all have a debt to pay to those who have helped us, had faith in us, and have given us the big shoes to fill. The shoes of our family legacy, of future generations, of our employees who become extended family, and our customers who become lifelong friends. I have looked for an industry my entire publishing career, which has spanned many companies over 25 years, that understands these things and that I can call “home.” I think I have finally found it! Building Products Digest and its sister publication The Merchant Magazine have served this industry for over 90 years. Since trees were cut by hand and hauled by horses. Through wars and the Great Depression to some of our great country’s proudest moments, these publications have been the voice of the industry. As I see it, they are your publications and I am only the next captain to guide them through the next generation and assure they continue to serve you. Yes, I have big shoes to fill and I am thankful for the opportunity to work hard and try to fill them. I wouldn’t have it any other way! In advance, I thank all of you for the opportunity to work with you to continue building this great industry and the legacy of these amazing publications. Also, don’t be afraid to use those “big shoes” for a kick when I deserve it! My door is always open and I would love to hear from you! All the very best to you, your family, and your employees in this New Year,
Patrick S. Adams Publisher/President padams@building-products.com
Send your thoughts and messages on this transition and article to Patrick at letters@building-products.com to be published in the March issue!
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Building Products Digest
February 2015
A publication of 526 Media Group, Inc.
151 Kalmus Dr., Ste. D200, Costa Mesa, CA 92626
President/Publisher Patrick Adams padams@building-products.com Vice President Shelly Smith Adams sadams@building-products.com Co-Publisher Alan Oakes ajoakes@aol.com Publisher Emeritus David Cutler Editor/Production Manager David Koenig david@building-products.com Associate Editor Stephanie Ornelas sornelas@building-products.com Contributing Editors Carla Waldemar, James Olsen Advertising Sales Manager Chuck Casey chuck@building-products.com Circulation Manager Heather Kelly hkelly@building-products.com
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SUBSCRIPTIONS Heather Kelly Phone (714) 486-2735 Fax 714-486-2745 hkelly@building-products.com or send a check to 151 Kalmus Dr., Ste. D200, Costa Mesa, CA 92626 U.S.A.: One year (12 issues), $24 Two years, $39 Three years, $54 SINGLE COPIES $4 + shipping BACK ISSUES $5 + shipping FOREIGN (Contact hkelly@building-products.com for surface and air rates, including to Canada)
BUILDING PRODUCTS DIGEST is published monthly at 151 Kalmus Dr., Ste. D200, Costa Mesa, CA 92626, (714) 486-2735, Fax 714-486-2745, www.building-products.com, by 526 Media Group, Inc. (a California Corporation). It is an independently owned publication for building products retailers and wholesale distributors in 37 states East of the Rockies. Copyright®2015 by 526 Media Group, Inc. Cover and entire contents are fully protected and must not be reproduced in any manner without written permission. All Rights Reserved. BPD reserves the right to accept or reject any editorial or advertising matter, and assumes no liability for materials furnished to it.
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TALK Back We welcome your letters to the editor. Send comments to letters@building-products.com, Fax 714-486-2745, or BPD, 151 Kalmus Dr., Ste. D200, Costa Mesa, Ca. 92626. This month, readers bid farewell to retiring publisher Alan Oakes.
I have always enjoyed receiving BPD, and your editorial was always my first stopping point in the magazine. I cannot believe it has been 14 years since you purchased the magazine—and I cannot believe I was 37 back then! I have never missed an issue and find it to be one of the most informative and easy-to-read magazines in our trade. Over the years I have clipped out countless articles on new products, company and trade news, sales training (James Olsen has become a great personal friend of mine because of your magazine), accidents (so my team could learn from others’ mistakes), and, as I have become older, the “In Memoriam” section to honor and remember the great people who, like you and me, found a home in the building products industry. I never met you in person, but feel like I know you from the many years of reading your words. You have positively influenced me through your magazine and I will miss your bright smile at the end of your “Totally Random” comments. All the best to you, Alan! Edward A. San Juan E.F. San Juan, Inc. Youngstown, Fl.
Alan claims to have been guided by a lifetime work ethic. However, his ethic seems to entail frequent trips to distant places and many photos of himself with LBM women. It’s an ethic we all would like. Nevertheless, he has contributed to the creation of a trade publication that is highly respected by members of its industry and surprisingly underestimated by its competition. I have a special reason for appreciating Alan— whether because he was a wise publisher or because he was too busy admiring the females in his photos, he printed articles I wrote. Huck DeVenzio retired, Arch Wood Protection Atlanta, Ga. Good to hear that you are retiring! If you are able to enjoy it as much as I have, it will be the time of your life. I will miss reading your column and hope that you can somehow keep in touch. I was amazingly on the same page with most of your thinking and observations.You are going to feel a great feeling of freedom (once you get used to your new self). Joe Heltsley Papa Joe’s Enterprises I have been in this industry for over 40 years, primarily in mill sales with Georgia-Pacific. I have always looked forward to receiving BPD. My favorite part since you took over in 2001 has been reading your “Totally Random.” My second favorite would be seeing you with your arm around some good-looking
gal at a trade show. In all seriousness, I wish you the best during this next chapter of your life. You will certainly be missed. Sam Crowe Georgia-Pacific Atlanta, Ga. All the best to you and your new adventures. I’ve always counted your column among the few “must reads” in the multitude of publications that pile up on my desk. I have enjoyed hearing your journey and always liked the personal way you told us how you felt about what you were experiencing and thinking. Many times I would smile, nod my head, and say, “Yup, right on.” You are spot on with what a wonderful industry we are in. Enjoy your retirement—just don’t think you’ll be able to take it too easy…. Dick Tarr Lapointe Lumber Co. Augusta, Me. I just received my January BPD in the mail. Very nice departure column. I’m a few years away from that departure day myself, but I’m taking notes! Thanks for the generous editorial coverage for southern pine lumber over these years. The SFPA feature that begins on page 31 looked great. Now, keep in touch. Maybe I’ll run into you on the streets of Paris or Nice one day. Richard Wallace Southern Forest Products Association Metairie, La.
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Building-Products.com
February 2015
Building Products Digest
7
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MANAGEMENT Tips By Kelly Dame, Woodgrain Millwork
Supply chain strategies for a new year
A
s we kick off 2015, forecasts and trends are looking at continued recovery for the housing industry. Moulding and millwork suppliers will be operating with uncertainty and ambiguity as to how fast a recovery will happen and how quick they will be able to react to their customers. As industry professionals, it’s important to continually work with customers to help them understand what they can do to make their supply chain as resilient as possible in today’s economy. Our industry has seen a lot over the past few years: natural disasters, a housing recession, and overall little growth with increasing costs. Here are some supply chain strategies that will allow your company to be as prepared as possible with what 2015 may hold. Understanding your suppliers’ capabilities. Knowing your suppliers’ product and service capabilities encompasses everything from their product offering and production, to the operations and technology they use to
help operate efficiently. It is important to identify the suppliers’ flexibility in servicing your business, as well as their ability to react to your needs through sourcing and fulfillment strategies. With this information, you will be able to determine how your suppliers can help you effectively manage your supply chain and what solutions they can offer you to best service your business. The more you know about your suppliers, the better security and efficiency you have in your supply chain. Relationships and communication. Collaborative partnerships with your suppliers and customers will strengthen your supply chain and help you effectively manage your business. Information sharing is a vital part of these partnerships. What information and how it is shared is dependent on how you want to grow your business. Sharing information such as forecasts, sales and market trends will help with properly managing inventories to better service your customers.
EFFICIENCY AND COMMUNICATION along with collaborative partnerships between suppliers and customers will strengthen your supply chain and help you run your business successfully. Building-Products.com
Overall, through proper communication you can increase inventory turns, eliminate costly and unnecessary inventory, and grow your profitability. The partnerships you develop will provide you and your customers a security of supply and peace of mind with managed lead times. Internal Processes. Having the proper internal processes to effectively manage your supply chain is essential. Internal processes relate to the standard operating procedures (SOPs) that help manage all of the activities in your businesses. Having proper SOPs in place will help you eliminate waste from your operations and help manage the flow of your products and services into your business and back out to your customers. There is an abundance of technology available today that will help you with these processes. In many cases, the technology will also allow you to work better with your suppliers and customers, especially in cases where the technology can be fully integrated across the supply chain. Technology can help with information flow and access to that information, which in turn helps with efficiency and reaction times. Maintaining an efficient and effective supply chain will support the profitability and sustainability of your business in the coming year. Knowing where your strengths are in supply chain management will also help you align your business with suppliers that can have the most positive impact on your business. By understanding your suppliers' capabilities, establishing meaningful relationships, and polishing your internal processes, you will create a strong, resilient supply chain in an uncertain market. – Kelly Dame is c.e.o of Woodgrain Millwork. Reach him via www.woodgrain.com.
February 2015
Building Products Digest
9
FEATURE Story By Bill Ross, Fiberon
What it takes to be a successful decking seller
B
ECAUSE OF MY background as an owner, builder, distributor and manufacturer, as well as immediate past president of the North American Deck & Rail Association, I am frequently asked, “What does it take, as a dealer, to be really successful in selling decking?” The question can be translated to: “What does it take to win?” Being successful in business, in sports, or in relationships requires largely the same mental perspective of ownership. Success is not about trying. Oh, well, I tried. I cringe when I hear this phrase because too often these words are the self-consolation of those who never really committed to success. It’s not about trying; it’s about doing. It’s about doing whatever it takes to be victorious, provided it is ethically and morally correct. Most of us say we want to win, but most of us don’t do what it takes to win because, while we have the desire, we lack the will and commitment. Perhaps because I grew up on Guam in the late ’60s and early ’70s where we had little in the way of TV, I do not watch sports on TV. Nonetheless, I have always liked to participate in all types of team and individual sports. Like many, I find sports to be an apt metaphor for what it takes to enjoy success in business, which is a likewise competitive environment. Think about the effort to play a sport, any sport. The vast majority of what one does, whether novice or professional is identical. Even if you never played golf before, almost all of what you do between driving to the course and finishing the game is the same. Whether you win or lose, whether you are great or incompetent, almost all of what you do is the same quantitatively. What is the difference then between winning and losing? Winners arrive fully committed, well prepared, and determined to win. The rest, they show up uncommitted, without enough practice, and determined to “try.” Oh, well, I tried—it’s the self-consolation of those who never planned or expected to win. And, as in sports, success in business boils down to commitment, taking responsibility, being prepared and consequently positioned, legitimately, to be successful. Returning to question: what does it take to be successful in selling decking? Based on broad experience and conversing with successful and unsuccessful retailers, I am convinced that it boils down to the difference between the atti-
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Building Products Digest
February 2015
tude and actions of those who Want to Win vs. those who Plan to Win. That difference is small; it may be a 5% difference in effort, probably much less. The matrix on the next page points out some key differences. Here’s an example. Not long ago, I met with the owner of a three-yard building materials retailer. His stores were in prime decking territory and he had invested widely in the category. He was not making the revenue or ROI that he wanted. I spent about an hour at his anchor store just looking and listening. He carried broad inventory for the size of his stores, but no real depth. His business was perfect for fill-in, but not for large selling jobs. These he got “fresh materials” for by ordering job-packs from his supplier. Also, there was overlap in the value/economic proposition of the products he stocked. He inventoried a couple colors of middle-of-the-line products that, from to 10 feet away, all looked the same. There were a wide variety of displays, including fullsize displays outside. Some of these were for products he carried in stock, but many were for product he did not stock at all. Inside it was a cat’s breakfast of displays representing this, that and the other thing. To his credit, his counter people were engaged in decking. Each had their own separate counter, merchandised the products they liked to sell, and sold them well. The problem was that each liked and sold a different product. This meant that, although they bought a lot of product, because it was from a lot of suppliers, they never gained leverage with any supplier. You could see how this happened. He didn’t so much plan this scenario intentionally; instead it evolved into this current situation. He saw himself as deeply involved in the category and believed that his company was a player in the decking category. I told him I saw his situation differently. I shared with him that it was apparent that he was committed to the category. That wasn’t the problem. He cast a wide net, hoping to catch whatever opportunity walked in the door. It was true that they had just about anything one could think of, but that his company didn’t actually stand for anything. They hadn’t developed a clear plan of what products to stock and fully focus their selling efforts upon. Each seller would tell a different story, and those often conflicted what the other would say. He had inventory, but not enough to Building-Products.com
get most jobs done. So while the store saw it as easy-toorder, the customer might want to leave with it now or have had bad experiences with Special Orders and No Return policies. The displays did exactly the opposite of what he wanted. Rather than provide value by the plethora of options, they resulted in confusion. The salespeople—the experts—made the task more daunting because there was no coordinated message or focus. I suggested that he would enjoy more sales, improved margins, and better inventory ROI if he stopped trying to be something to everyone. He should instead narrow his focus and become great at something, winning customers and suppliers’ loyalty in the process. I shared that he needed to first analyze the market and develop a strategic product plan that provided him with a strong competitive position and margin improvement, while giving his customers performance and aesthetic options at different price points. • With his volume potential, he should seek to be important to his supplier(s) and negotiate better prices, terms, rebates and support, as opposed to where he was today, which was important to no one and the right to none of these profit-building perks. • He should narrow his assortment and stock those selected products deep enough to sell multiple jobs and purge the products that did not fit his new plan. • The sales desk’s decking display offerings needed to be made uniform. His sales team needed to be aligned in thinking and sales efforts. He had to get them to buy into the products they were going to inventory and always
default to promoting and selling those lines first. • The displays needed to be pared down to just what he stocked and the rest of the displays need to be removed from the showroom and yard. He might want to keep samples and literature of those products that he did not stock, but they should be out of sight and only retrieved to close a sale that would otherwise be lost. A year later, he had put some of these suggestions in place and he shared that his revenues had improved and his inventory was turning better. More importantly, his margins had improved significantly because he had negotiated better with his suppliers. My friend Rick often says, “It’s not rocket surgery.” It is a seemingly illogical combination of the rocket science and brain surgery metaphors, but I think it perfectly illustrates that which should be über apparent. At the end of the day, it is part what we do, part how well we do it, and part how consistently we do it, that make the difference. To Rick’s declaration, I add what Aristotle wrote 2300 years ago: “We are what we repeatedly do. Excellence, therefore, is not an act, but a habit.” The same is true of trying and mediocrity. They are habits. If you are unhappy with your results, ask yourself, “What small changes do I need to make to go from mediocrity to excellence, from a business that Wants to Win to one that Plans to Win?” – Bill Ross is v.p. of sales for Fiberon, New London, N.C., and immediate past president of the North American Deck & Rail Association. Reach him at billr@fiberon.com.
Want to Win
Inventory
Product
Displays
People
Attitude
Building-Products.com
Plan to Win
Unless you are in a remote or a rural market, you cannot be very successful without inventory. It is a strategic balance between being broad and deep enough to be an important customer of your supplier and meeting the performance and aesthetic expectation of your customers.
Inventory is not merely carrying a product in stock; it’s about being an advocate for your customer and your products. It’s a strategic decision to stand for something. It can be a single line or several, but it’s not a casual choice. Each product has its place and function. It’s less important what they are than that they become a component of which customers you will be able to attract.
No one thing is more under-optimized than product selection. At the showing up level, it is merely having product, providing access to what you stock. It results in sales, even good sales, but falls short from those who are Prepared to Win.
Assortment is partly about providing a spectrum of performance/economic value. More importantly, it’s about being an advocate for the customer and helping them make choices. This is accomplished by making choices as a company, acting as customers’ agents to provide products you truly endorse.
This includes samples, literature and manufacturer and/or custom displays. There is a geographical preference for full-size displays in the Midwest that gets stronger as one moves west. I’m not sure those in the West can’t visualize as well as those in the East, but I am resolute that what you believe works will instill in your efforts more that will result in being successful.
These displays may or may not be different or better than average. They do have certain important elements that are consistently better, they are generally better maintained, signed and outfitted with ambiance elements, like grills, umbrellas, furniture, plants or water features
At the end of the day, people (even a single dedicated person) are the crucial element. At the basic level, it’s a product maven, someone who is knowledgeable about the category and the products and can appropriately engage the consumer or user.
In the end, it’s all about the people. Their interest in the product, process and customers’ needs largely define the business’ opportunity. Does the customer call up and get whoever, whatever the skill level, or is there a go-to person? Is the customer’s name remembered? Is there a relationship that’s deeper than the dollars exchanged? Is the customer cared about?
Those who Want to Win really want to win, but they are not “all in.” They may do all the things needed, but they fall short—sometimes just so—of what’s needed.
This is the defining line between the two groups. Those that Plan to Win do the important things well. And they do them over and over again.
February 2015
Building Products Digest
11
INDUSTRY Trends Composite Fencing
Composite fencing hopes to emulate decking’s success
T
HE ARRIVAL OF composites in the 1980s quickly transformed the decking industry, and manufacturers have continued to help keep it fresh with their continuous introductions of new colors, patterns and styles. Yet composites have not made nearly the same impact in fencing, despite offering many of the same advantages. “As with decking and railing, composites offer a lot of benefits as fence boards,” notes Brent Gwatney, senior vice president of sales and marketing for MoistureShield.
FENCING has proven to be a more difficult market to penetrate than decking for composite manufacturers. (Photos by MoistureShield)
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Building Products Digest
February 2015
“You don’t have to paint or stain them, and they last much longer than traditional wood fencing. And, composites look great and come in flat-top or dog eared profiles and various colors, so you can build with them just like you would with wood.” But, he adds, “composites haven’t taken off for fencing the same way they have for decks largely because of cost. The unit cost of composites isn’t all that different from wood, but the square footage of a fence is so much greater than a deck, that total cost for a fence becomes noticeable to homeowners.” Edmund Rose, CFC Distributors, points to composites’ biggest, more affordable competitors among privacy fencing material: wood and vinyl. “Most composite material has two to four times as much volume of product in it by comparison to vinyl materials,” Rose explains. “For example, the wall thickness on a Trex post is four times greater than a standard vinyl post. Even though it has wood in it, a composite has more plastic than a vinyl fence. So, more materials, more cost.” Production costs can be higher, as well. Rose says, “Bottom line: the product comes to market at a higher price point than other manmade fencing materials.” Paul O’Reilly, general manager of fencing for Fiberon, agrees that while cost is a primary barrier to wider use, the material itself—as currently formulated—appears better suited, structurally, to decking rather than fencing. “On the surface, people think it offers all the same advantanges,” he explains. “Composite fencing looks and feels fabulous. Everyone wants it. But using a composite board that’s less than 1” thick vertically can be challenging, due to the lack of rigidity. The wood (framing structure) overpowers the picket. Wherever the wood goes, the picket follows.” To get around this, projects are increasingly using composite fencing as in-fill, mixed in with posts made of other materials, such as aluminum. Trex increased the rigidity of its Seclusions composite fencing by giving the panels an interlocking design and adding an aluminum insert in the bottom rail. Indeed, acceptance may be hampered by making comBuilding-Products.com
posite fencing that look too much like the standard wood boards they replace. “Some manufacturers have taken the approach of emulating a stockade, dog ear-style fence (back rails and flat face pickets),” Rose says. “Given its cost, consumers have pushed back; a premium product should have a premium appearance. We sell more composites that are specifically designed with a unique upscale appearance (picture frame, board-on-board, neighborfriendly) as an engineered system rather than as a picketand-rail solution.” Another challenge to wider acceptance, according to Gwatney, is historical. “Homes in subdivisions almost always were built with wood fences, and homeowners tend to just leave the fence alone. When they have to replace it, they’re likely to go back to what they had,” he says. “However, we’re starting to see innovative builders use composite fencing in creative ways, such as weaving it in with traditional wood planks.” Fiberon’s Bill Ross adds that while his company has had success getting its composite fencing into big-box stores, the fencing market as a whole has been difficult to penetrate because it is so segmented. “Fencing is subdivided into a number of large categories—metal and non-metal, necessity and amenity, industrial and consumer—and has a very irrational distribution network,” he says. “Manufacturers sell completed products directly to distributors, retailers, users and consumers. Manufacturers sell components and lineals for finished fabrication directly to distributors, retailers, fabrica-
tors and users. Fencing is sold via online, retail store, installed. Non-metal fencing for residential use is divided into wood and vinyl. Each of these two sub-groups, because of supply, fabrication and installation differences, have their own channels and user groups, and crossover is minimal.” The biggest barrier, Rose notes, is consumer awareness. “Overwhelmingly, this is the primary issue,” he says. “We field phone calls daily from consumers, contractors and box-store associates who say they recently discovered there are composite fencing options.” “Composite decking has been around for twice as long as fencing. Most composite fences have been produced for a decade or less. Name brand recognition and general adoption of composite decking occurred quite some time ago. Additionally, composites were the next generation of decking materials, whereas vinyl fencing was the first major alternative to wood for privacy fencing. If composite decking had had a similar situation where it was competing against another pre-existing synthetic material, it might have taken longer to get a toehold.” As well, there are far fewer producers of composite fencing than there are of composite decking. That translates not only into less supply, but also less marketing to drive increased demand. Yet, manufacturers see composite fencing’s ascendance as inevitable. “If the picket becomes a little more rigid and 35% cheaper, it will really take off,” says O’Reilly. “I have no doubt.”
Fencing Demand Continues to Climb Demand for fencing in the U.S. is forecast to rise 7.0% per year to $9.0 billion in 2018, totaling 875 million linear ft., according to a new Freedonia Group report. Advances will be spurred by an anticipated rebound in building construction spending from a low 2013 base. Growth will also be boosted by rising consumer interest in such high-value fencing materials as ornamental metal and plastic and composite lumber fencing. Many consumers are opting for fences made from these materials based on their ability to improve the appearance and value of the properties where they are installed. Demand for fencing in the large residential market is forecast to rise at an aboveaverage pace through 2018, fueled by a strong rebound in housing completions. The residential improvement and repair segment will further support demand advances as homeowners who put off or canceled home improvement projects during the 2007-2009 recession and its aftermath undertake them going forward. Residential fences are typically installed to improve the exterior appearance of properties or to enhance privacy. U.S. non-residential building construction applications are expected to exhibit even more rapid advances in fencing demand, reaching $2.3 billion. Strong gains in non-residential building construction expenditures will spur growth. The office and commercial construc-
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tion segment will register the most rapid advances in fencing demand as owners of hotels, resorts, shopping malls, casinos and retail sites install fencing to create security barriers, delineate parking areas, and enhance privacy in an aesthetically pleasing manner. Among the different fencing materials, plastic and composite and concrete fencing are expected to see the most rapid gains in demand in value terms through 2018. Concrete fencing demand will be boosted by increasing consumer interest in durable yet attractive privacy fencing. U.S. demand for plastic and composite fencing will be driven by the growing use of these materials as more durable alternatives to wood fencing. Plastic and composite fencing has longer lifespans and requires less maintenance than wood fencing. Metal fencing accounted for the largest share of fencing demand in terms of both value and linear feet in 2013 and will continue to do so through 2018. While chain link fencing will continue to be used as an inexpensive yet durable way to mark boundaries and secure properties, ornamental metal fencing will post the strongest demand advances of all metal fencing products. Ornamental metal fencing will increasingly be specified by home and business owners as an attractive alternative to chain link fencing because it enhances the exterior appearance and value of their properties.
February 2015
Building Products Digest
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INDUSTRY Trends Oriented Strand Board
OSB offers urban style, structural sustainability
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of Millennials are presenting special opportunities for growth of OSB products. Millenials, also known as Generation Y, desire a more urban, contemporary look and favor products that are more conscious of the environment. OSB is a viable design option to complement both trends. Industry experts are seeing more of a demand for exposed applications. Although OSB is primarily placed in areas that are unseen, growing trends raised up by Gen Y-ers are leading to a more contemportary look, thus bringing OSB out of its shell and into the limelight. Because of its natural wood tone and textured appearance, OSB has been a product of choice to bring an ESIGN PREFERENCES
URBAN DESIGN meets eco-friendly with LP Building Products’ LongLength sheathing, which has a contemporary look and also helps meet specific environmental building codes.
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Building Products Digest
ENVIRONMENTAL FACTORS play a big role in the upcoming demand for OSB, as the majority of mills are required to meet or exceed specific environmental regulations in their area.
edgy, environmental look to construction projects, as it can be stained, varnished or painted as desired, making it a perfect choice for interior design. Proving especially popular within the retail and leisure industries, OSB is being used as a dramatic focal point, such as a partitioning wall or as an interesting interior frame. There is also a growing demand to use OSB as shelving, a dramatic floor surface and for striking interior paneling. “That's the thing about OSB, it can be used for most building tasks you can think of and its natural appearance – backed up by very favorable undisputed green credentials – make it particularly appealing for retail and leisure builds, where being natural or green is a badge of honor, and OSB is shorthand for this," said Alastair Kerr, general director of the Wood Panel Industry Federation. The concern for energy efficient and environmentally-sound building products is a growing priority. Companies are finding OSB is becoming the natural solution. The February 2015
engineered wood panel boasts a number of green credentials, from its sourcing and manufacturing, to its transportation. Attitudes are continually shifting in favor of greener solutions, as young industry professionals are searching for environmentally-kind materials, those which meet specific building codes. LP Building Products’ LongLength XL OSB sheathing is a good example as the product is designed to help meet codes in high wind and hurricane zones. “Not only does the product meet bracing needs, but with proper installation, it helps meet uplift requirements, all as a part of a single wall system,” said Lorraine Bittles, OSB marketing manager for LP Building Products. “That means reduced material and labor costs as well as less waste.” The growing trend of urban design and the demand for eco-sensitive products, especially by millenials, will pave the way for a continued desire for OSB material. Building-Products.com
PRODUCT Spotlight Southern Cypress
Cypress is “in” L
UMBER DEALERS are acknowledging that cypress is quickly becoming a go-to building product. The durable, versatile, and beautiful species is being used to enhance curb appeal and outdoor living space at new and renovated homes. According to Hal Mitchell of Atlanta Hardwood Corp., Mableton, Ga., design professionals and homeowners are excited about all that cypress offers. “Cypress is a unique species in that its versatility makes it
a great material to be used inside and outside the home,” Mitchell said. “Whether as siding or interior architectural details, cypress provides the appearance and durability that are in demand. We expect this trend to continue.” One high-profile example is the new NextGenHomeTV “First to the Future Home.” The design and construction of the Palm Coast Florida home is being featured in an online video series with well-known host Ty
Pennington. The webisodes, available at www.nghtv.com, highlight the latest products and technologies, as well as traditional building materials. For the Palm Coast project, cypress gets the spotlight. According to Paul Barnett, president and executive producer of nghtv.com, the team selected cypress because of its good looks and longlasting performance. “What sets cypress apart is its rich grain, natural durability, and flexibility with choos-
LONG-LASTING PERFORMANCE and extreme durability are among the many reasons why dealers are quickly looking to cypress as a go-to building product—much like this cypress pergola built by Vicki Payne, as she renovated a 30-year-old home in Charlotte, N.C. (Photo courtesy of For Your Home)
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NATURAL BEAUTY meets stability in NextGenHomeTV’s “First to the Future Home.” Cypress is one feature that is highlighted many times, as it was selected because of its good looks and longlasting performance. (Photo courtesy of NGHTV.com.)
ing a finish,” he said. “There’s something special about the look and feel of wood that makes it appeal to homeowners, probably more so than any other material.” “When we began installing the cypress siding and soffit on the exterior of the home, we were blown away by the natural beauty and color of the wood. We liked it so much that we decided to carry it into the interior of the home,” Barnett added. While cypress has long been regarded as a top choice for wood siding, Linwood Truitt of Beasley Forest Products in Hazlehurst, Ga., says landscape designers are specifying cypress timbers to create functional outdoor living spaces. “As more people learn about the strength and natural durability of cypress, they are using it to create structures that have predominately been built from cedar, redwood, or pressure-treated species,” Truitt said. In an episode of the popular PBS home-improvement series, For Your Home, hostess and TV personality, Vicki Payne, relied on cypress in the Building-Products.com
construction of a magnificent pergola, as she renovated a 30-year old home in Charlotte, N.C. “Outdoor living areas were an important component of the overall look and function of the transformed home,” Payne said. “Cypress offered clean lines with strong features that allowed me to design a striking, 10-foot-tall pergola, requiring minimal cross supports and brackets. I love the natural durability of cypress and know this pergola will last a long, long time. “I continue hearing wonderful comments about the pergola from everyone who visits the home. They especially like to touch the wood and always ask what type it is. I get a kick out of what we were able to create using cypress. It’s truly stunning.” To see cypress’ role in the home’s makeover, tune in to your local Public Broadcasting Service (PBS) stations or log onto www.foryourhome.com. – For more information on building with cypress, please visit the Southern Cypress Manufacturers Association’s website at www.cypressinfo.org. February 2015
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COMPETITIVE Intelligence By Carla Waldemar
Blizzard of activity
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HEW, WHAT A WINTER!
No, not November in upstate New York, but 2009 in southern Minnesota. That’s the season employees of Overson Lumber Co. in St. James watched in horror as heavy, wind-pummeled snow caused the outfit’s main storage shed to collapse. Luckily, a half-block’s worth of additional buildings remained intact, so business life could go on. But that vital storage shed had to be replaced ASAP. “Fortunately, insurance helped out considerably,” says owner Lanny Overson. By spring 2010, it was up and running. And—what the heck?—given nature’s prod, Lanny decided, not long after, that the time was right to undertake a complete remodelingcum-expansion of the entire operation, including the site’s showroom and offices. Turning lemons (or, icicles) into lemonade, the whole disaster (“Just a mess!”) and rebound had been captured on YouTube, and the viral account created an unplanned marketing boost. Since the company’s grand reopening in October 2012, sales have skyrocketed well beyond previous highs. It’s not that they were all that shabby before the snowstorm for the building center Lanny’s parents purchased in 1965. His father knew the score; he’d managed yards in several small towns and traveled the road with lumber as his focus. So when he came across the dealer in St. James who was ready to retire, the Oversons seized the opportunity to run their own show.
MINNESOTA’S Overson Lumber took advantage of nature’s prodding and recently remodeled and expanded its St. James operation.
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Their son, Lanny, has been top gun (along with his brother) since 1978. But it was far from his original career plan. Graduating from the University of Minnesota’s IT department with a degree in aero-engineering, he did what kids did back in the Sixties—he joined the Peace Corps. That stint took him to Chile, where he married and intended to settle in, until, as he tells it, “They voted Marxist and it was ‘Yankee, Go Home.’ So I did. I worked in electrical sales in the Minneapolis area, then in steel plate fabrication and construction, mostly oil refinery-type work, until my parents approached me about buying into the family business in 1978.” Something he’d never considered, but an offer he couldn’t refuse. “I liked the appeal of living in a rural community and the opportunity to maintain and improve the rural economy.” So, with his brother, he purchased the St. James store. Then one in Sleepy Eye. Another in Lamberton. Yet another in Wabasso, and still another in Jackson, plus a coop in Westbrook: all in all, six building supply operations centered in small, southern Minnesota towns. Then he topped off the mini-empire by building from scratch an interior design center he called Idea Haus in (uber-German) New Ulm in 2010—a project, he reveals, which has been “remarkably successful.” The location draws customers from lots of neighboring communities because everything’s in one place—cabinetry, flooring, carpeting, laminate, ceramic tile and more— inviting them to kick the tires. And it’s close to the Sleepy Eye store to fill immediate product needs. There’s a trained interior design staff on hand to help contractors who utilize the service, too. “They’re experts on the actual building, but they may need to help their customers with the details,” Lanny explains. The design professionals at Idea Haus also make the rounds to the outlying Overson stores to share the latest trends and ideas with these employees, which today total 37 full-timers. Just who are the Overson customers? “Mostly local contractors and do-it-yourselfers, but we handle a little bit of everything—lots of remodel and general home improvement and maintenance; also new-home construction, farm buildings, and light commercial. Some of our stores have an outside salesperson; in others, it’s the sales estimator in each store.” New business comes primarily from word of mouth: “People know us.” Overson also sponsors contractor meetings and seminars at which suppliers demonstrate current innovations in construction and train staff on new products. Actually, Overson is big—better make that huge—on Building-Products.com
training. “We utilize computer programs, the Northwestern Lumber Association, our buying co-op. Our district manager is always organizing presentations, and the accounting manager trains all the bookkeepers. For us,” Lanny underscores the mantra, “training is very, very important.” It pays off in almost zero turnover in key positions. “We’ve only had two managers leave in the last 25, 30 years,” the boss has earned the right to brag. “Our employees like the culture of the company and being a key part of their communities.” And they’ve always got a voice. “We hold monthly managers’ meetings, which are two-way discussions. Each GM knows his own locale, its peculiarities, and they’re free to adapt to them. Each has different competition, and they understand and act on that.” Lanny’s own training, starting with the swerve in the road that steered him from engineering into helming a skein of home improvement centers, has been considerably less formal: mostly OTJ and d-i-y. “Did you stumble a bit before becoming more nimble?” a reporter had to ask. “Oh, you’re right!” he laughs. “You have to listen to feedback and be open to constant change. Every situation,” he’s learned, “has its pros and cons. You have to adapt to change: changing economic climates—and weather climates,” he adds, with the winter of 2009 still front-of-mind. And adapt he did. Following that attention-getting snowfall, he embarked on an all-embracing remodeling project for the St. James yard. “When we rebuilt the shed, we added racks and increased its height to accommodate more modern equipment, like forklifts. Then for the showroom, we revamped our outdoor signage. In the interior, we took the opportunity to add new fixtures, new displays, and many new SKUs, significantly increasing our inventory.
Building-Products.com
We added more hardware, plumbing and electrical, and updated everything. And we were delighted with the customers’ response. Everyone was impressed by the experience. Our Idea Haus helped with the design, adding new counter stations to show off our popular Cambria line; we also added quite a bit more cabinetry.” And the grand reopening opened customers’ eyes. “People told us, ‘We had no idea how broad and deep your selection is!’” There was no escaping the recent recession, of course. “It was definitely felt,” he reports, “but rural areas tend to remain pretty steady. Throughout it, agriculture continued to do very well, so Mr. Farmer had to have the new buildings he wanted. So now, with the recovery,” Lanny chuckles, “Mrs. Farmer can start on her new kitchen, windows, and house remodeling.” The future looks mellow, too. Expansion? Never say never. But for now, “At Overson we want to maintain our established sites in the areas we’re best versed in. Yet,” Lanny reiterates his basic lesson, “things are always changing—like, new engineering products coming along.” So although the company has wisely set a succession plan into place, at a spry 70 years of age, Lanny has no plans of slowing down to cruising speed. “It’s just such an exciting business to be in!” he explains. Carla Waldemar cwaldemar@comcast.net
February 2015
Building Products Digest
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OLSEN On Sales By James Olsen
Working a convention
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a fantastic way to connect with current clients and to find new ones. A convention worked incorrectly is a colossal waste of time and money. ONVENTIONS ARE
Pre-Convention
We need to schedule specific meetings with our current clients. Don’t just say, “I’ll see you there.” If we don’t set up specific breakfast, lunch or dinner plans, someone else will, and we will get a rushed handshake and our competitors will get the important human connection. We can have non-meal meetings with customers, but “breaking bread” is a better way to connect on a human level. It’s in our DNA. Eating with other people builds bonds of trust. Once our clients start to relax, they will open up about their business issues (and how we can help them) more than they ever will over the phone or in their office. Have a specific goal in mind for each meeting. Bonding is important, but don’t waste it. Double down on the trust by being specific with each customer about what you want from the relationship.
Working a Booth
If our company has a booth at the convention, we need to work it. I see too many salespeople talking amongst themselves, often with their backs to convention traffic! We need to be out front greeting everyone who comes by with a warm, inviting smile. Get cards from everyone. If they didn’t bring a card, have a notepad at the ready to take down their critical information. Our choice of promotional materials is important. We give our customers something of value. When Reality Sales Training works a booth we sell our sales books and CDs. Giving something away creates a bond. Getting customers to spend their money on your products creates an even stronger bond. Drawings and contests are another way to create a connection. If you are working the booth for several days, take cards and tell everyone you will have a drawing for _____ on the last day of the convention. A friend of mine worked a convention selling water systems. He needed people to come to his booth. He started to give away Burger King-type crowns to kids. When another child saw the crown and wanted it, his parents would have to bring them to my friend’s booth.
Have Fun, Don’t Party
John Wooden, winner of 10 national championships as coach of the UCLA Bruins, said, “Be quick, don’t hurry.” The same holds true for us. “Have fun, don’t party.” We can have fun with our clients, but we must stay under control. “Stay one drink behind your client” is good advice. If you are the person at the convention who is sloppy drunk and loud, people will remember and talk about it—tons of negative advertising. Don’t do it. Save the blowouts for close, non-business friends.
This Is My Rifle
The Rifleman’s Creed was created in 1941 by General William H. Rupertus shortly after the attack on Pearl Harbor. We need to feel the same way about our business cards as Marines feel about their rifles. “This is my rifle/card. There are many like it, but this one is mine. My rifle/card is my best friend. It is my life. I must master it as I must master my life. My rifle/card, without me, is useless. Without my rifle/card, I am useless….” It goes on from there, but you get my point. Do not go to conventions without your business cards. If we don’t have our cards, we have defined ourselves as non-professionals. One of the best ways to make new connections is to get people’s (our future customer’s) cards. It’s tough to get cards when we don’t have cards, and it is difficult to not give a card to a person who is smiling at you while handing you theirs. Keep business cards in two places—one pack in our bag and the other on our person or carry-on.
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Post-Convention
Before we go to the convention we should have a post-convention plan. Be ready to execute that plan, immediately on our return. Strike while the connection is hot. It also shows that we are professional and that we care. If we wait too long, the opposite. Take pictures and post them on your company website. Let everyone know that you are in the game. James Olsen Reality Sales Training (503) 544-3572 james@realitysalestraining.com Building-Products.com
FAMILY Business By Wayne Rivers
What leadership style works worst for family businesses?
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EADERSHIP — THAT commonly used but nebulous term—is present to one degree or another in all family businesses. New research in the Journal of Family Business Strategy sheds light on which leadership variations are the most desirable in facilitating family business succession – as well as which is the worst. First, a bit about leadership in general. The term itself is very difficult to define although there is no shortage of people trying to do so. Between the years 1986 and 1996, there were 17,800 articles published on leadership, and that number has surely increased in the time since. A quick search on Amazon reveals that there are 18,855 leadership books available. And every author has his unique take on what it is, what it does, what makes for the best leader, etc. For our purposes, let’s use John Maxwell’s simple definition and say that “leadership = influence.” The scholarly article at hand identifies three types of leadership, all of which are paternalistic. The author states that paternalism is a defining characteristic of the family ownership model because “…paternalism is like the relationship between a father and daughter or father and son,” so the family leadership model is translated into the family business. Paternalistic leadership is present in founder-led family businesses or in ones where a Generation Two (G2) sibling has assumed a role similar to the one established by her father. As family firms succeed into G3, G4, and beyond, there is less and less likelihood that one would find the same paternalistic leadership styles. Perhaps in the future as more family firms have female executives, academics may comment on maternalistic leadership styles! What are the three leadership styles? Authoritarian: The authoritarian asserts control and expects unquestioned obedience from subordinates. Benevolent: The benevolent paternalist respects subordinates, cares for them, satisfies their individual feelings and needs, and provides them with support. Moral: The moral paternalist leads with superior personal virtues and by example. Two of the leadership styles are associated with successful intergenerational transition, and one is associated with detrimental succession outcomes. Can you guess which one that might be? You got it! Family business leaders who think they know best, make all decisions unilaterally, and think that the decisions
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they make on behalf of others are always best contribute to feelings of dissatisfaction and inertia among their successors. They are seen as “judge and jury on everything” and tend to meddle in the affairs of even annointed successors. Authoritarian leadership may be acceptable or even desirable at some stage of a family company’s evolution, but when it comes to succession, authoritarians present many difficulties and make the job of continuing the family business and the founder’s legacy much more difficult. What alternatives are available for family firms that are both interested in successful intergenerational transition and have an authoritarian leader who may harm—consciously or subconsciously—the succession process?
1. Utilize a family business advisory board.
Boards which are comprised of one or more, in Leon Danco's words, “risk-taking peers” are able to look authoritarians in the eye with nothing to lose and give them blunt counsel. It’s a very different dynamic when an authoritarian’s peer tells him to go jump in the lake rather than his daughter. A risk-taking peer, ideally from a business larger, more complex, and more successful than the authoritarian’s, is a wonderful balance point between the generations who, while interested in the same long term goal, may propose dramatically different paths for getting there.
2. Hire nonfamily, professional management.
A professional business manager can serve as the bridge between senior and junior generations. Bridge managers should be somewhat younger than the senior generation but older than the successors. In addition to being a management bridge, they can be a demographic bridge, as well.
3. “Man up” (and this applies to women, as well!).
Grow some courage and stand up to authoritarian behavior. One reason authoritarians utilize this style is that they may sense weakness among the next generation. Standing up to an authoritarian, although he may not appreciate at the time, is the only way to demonstrate that the next generation has the backbone that it takes to continue the senior generation leader’s success. Strong leaders appreciate and expect strength in their successors.
4. Walk away.
There are times when that most wonderful, essential (Please turn to page 36) Building-Products.com
Koppers Exits Poles, Buys KMG
To better focus on its railroad maintenance products, Koppers has exited the utility pole business in the U.S. and purchased a creosote distribution company. Cox Industries Inc., Orangeburg, S.C., purchased Koppers’ existing pole inventory, lease agreements for pole distribution yards, and related manufacturing assets. The sale does not include Koppers’ wood treating plant in Florence, S.C., its primary production facility, which it will retain to supply chemicals for treating crossties and other railroad products. Cox v.p.-marketing Keith Harris said, “We will treat from our own facilities and on a contract basis with the Koppers facility in Florence. The purchase gave us two additional peeling locations, 13 additional distribution yards, and a new sales office in Pittsburgh.” Cox already operated seven industrial treating plants in North Carolina, South Carolina, Alabama, Virginia and Georgia, producing utility poles, cross-arms, piling and marine construction materials. The new locations are in Iowa, Maryland, Connecticut, Kansas, Oklahoma, Ohio, New York, Minnesota, Colorado, Wisconsin, South Carolina, and Alabama. The new sales office in Pittsburgh allows “for the successful transition of Koppers employees to Cox.” Koppers continues to operate its utility pole business in Australia. Separately, Koppers paid $15.5 million for leased rail cars, storage tanks, and creosote distribution agreements from KMG Chemicals, Houston, Tx. The company has also postponed construction of a planned naphthalene plant in Stickney, Il., that would replace its existing facility in Follansbee, W.V.
DEALER Briefs Ohio Valley Lumber Co., Ambridge, Pa., has closed
after 102 years.
Wellsboro Building Supply, Wellsboro, Pa., has relocated to the former Patterson Home Center site, providing room for expanded inventory. C.A. Smith Lumber, Ludlow, Ma., has added a new
storage facility.
Busy Beaver Building Centers, Pittsburgh, Pa., will open store #16 in Fairmont, W.V., by June. Northwest Lumber & Hardware, Cornwall, Ct., lost two buildings, equipment and inventory in a devastating Jan. 12 fire of undetermined origin. Park Falls Building Supply, Park Falls, Wi., has completed an interior remodel, following two fires 10 months ago. A grand re-opening is planned for April. Baker Hardware, Lincoln, Ne., is liquidating after 106 years. The property has been sold to a redeveloper, who takes over April 1. Murphy’s QP Hardware, Lincoln, Ne., is closing after
close to 60 years.
SCC Ace Hardware, Sun City Center, Fl., was set to close at the end of January after four decades. Ace Hardware, Dahlonega, Ga., owner Wyman Walden will add a 12,000-sq. ft. store in Dawsonville, Ga., this summer. He is considering aligning the new store with either Ace or True Value. It will be overseen by his daughter, Brittany Mundy. Lakewood Ace Hardware , Lakewood, Tx., has moved into a new 12,000-sq. ft. building. Hackney Hardware, Dexter, Mi., expanded by 600 sq. ft. to make room for housewares. Rocky’s Ace Hardware, Springfield, Ma., will add a 10,000-sq. ft. branch this spring in Middleton, Ma. Warner Robins Building Supply, Warner Robins, Ga., and Weiss Ace Hardware , Glenview, Il., were named Business of the Year by their local Chambers of Commerce. Habitat for Humanity is opening new ReStore discount LBM outlets this spring in Owosso, Mi.; Houston, Tx.; and at the former Grossman’s Bargain Outlet site in Westfield, Ma. A ReStore in Atlanta, Ga., recently moved to a larger location, while the Danville, Va., store is relocating this month to a bigger facility. Anniversaries: P.J. Currier Lumber Co., Amherst, N.H., 65th … Hamshaw Lumber, Keene, N.H., 35th …
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February 2015
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SUPPLIER Briefs Taylor Lumber Worldwide, McDermott, Oh., is adding a facility in Jackson, Oh. The former Merillat Cabinet factory closed two years ago. Erickson Lumber is shuttering its 60-year-old sawmill in L’Anse, Mi. The companion Erickson True
Value Hardware & Lumber remains open.
Barney Robinson Hardwoods & Lumber Co., Fort Worth, Tx., was damaged in a Jan. 10 fire.
Canfor Corp., Vancouver, B.C., has completed the phase one purchase of Beadles and Balfour Lumber
Cos.
The deal for the two sawmills in Thomasville and Moultrie, Ga., gives Canfor 55% ownership now and the remainder in two years.
Mountain Lumber & Pallet Co. , Mt. Airy, N.C., suffered heavy damage in a Jan. 9 fire.
Georgia-Pacific has determined that the three-year closure of its Hawthorne, Fl., plywood plant will be permanent. Lindquist Lumber & PostFrame Buildings, Floodwood, Mn., was destroyed in a Jan. 7 electrical fire.
D & D Lumber’s Reed City, Mi., sawmill was destroyed in a Dec. 18 fire of undetermined origin. Walton Lumber Co., Mineral, Va., agreed to sell 854 acres of Maryland forestland to the state for $3.1 million. Snavely Forest Products , Baltimore, Md., is now distributing Palram’s Palight Trimboard in the mid-Atlantic region. Boise Cascade’s Delanco, N.J., DC is now distributing Gossen Deck and Porch to New Jersey and eastern Pennsylvania. Bayer MaterialScience LLC, Pittsburgh, Pa., has been certified as a Spray Polyurethane Foam Allianceaccredited supplier. 26
Building Products Digest
February 2015
PAL/ENAP Merger on Track
LBM Advantage, Inc. will be the name of the combined PAL and ENAP buying groups, pending shareholder approval of the merger Feb. 19. “LBM Advantage is focused on the future and the benefits our $1.5 billion in annual purchasing power will bring to current and prospective members,” said PAL c.e.o. and president Paul Dean. Already approved by both co-op’s boards, the merger would bring together 447 member companies operating 742 lumberyards across 33 states. LBM Advantage will operate from existing offices in New Windsor, N.Y.; Grand Rapids, Mi.; and Monroe, La.
Tornado Hits Georgia Mill
A sudden tornado struck Langdale Forest Products, Valdosta, Ga., injuring seven employees and collapsing several buildings. The Dec. 29 twister resulted in four serious injuries, three minor injuries, and damage to three buildings, equipment, inventory and vehicles. Several victims were trapped under debris, including one worker who was under metal from the collapsed building.
ECi Buys Spruce Computer
ECi Software Solutions, Fort Worth, Tx., has acquired Spruce Computer Systems, Albany, N.Y.based provider of software solutions for lumberyards, building materials suppliers, and home centers. Rob Fitzpatrick, the current president of Spruce, will take over as president of ECi’s Lumber, Building Materials & Hardlines (LBMH) Division, combining the Spruce, Advantage and RockSolid platforms under one business unit. These solutions serve more than 3,000 customers around the world. “We are very excited to become part of the ECi family,” Fitzpatrick said. “While we have competed with each other in the LBMH market over the years, Spruce has always held ECi in the highest regard. We felt that by joining forces we could better serve businesses in the LBMH sector. Our combined resources and industry expertise will translate to an even higher level of innovation, support and service.” Building-Products.com
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THINKING Ahead By Anthony Muck, DMSi Software, and Committee Member, NAWLA
Purchasing:
How to use suggested purchase orders
T
article in a three-part series where NAWLA volunteers offer their perspectives on purchasing. Last month, Carter Forest Products’ Martin Carter outlined his thoughts on successfully buying lumber in an office wholesale context. Here, we’ll look at one specific way to help with inventory management and efficiency for both the warehouse and front office, the Suggested Purchase Order (SPO). SPOs are built in to many enterprise resource planning (ERP) software programs, including DMSi’s Agility. Ours is based on Gordon Graham’s theories on distribution inventory management, and adapted based on feedback from customers. If you do not have this capability available to you, you can use the information below to perform similar calculations with your own usage data. Using an SPO allows you to create suggested purchase orders based on supplier, product group, or buyer. The system then determines the need for each time based on inventory status and reorder data. SPOs provide instant information on inventory availability, then suggest a purchase order based on that item’s sales and costs it out. To understand how the SPO arrives at its conclusion, it’s helpful to know how it works and it’s calculated. There are three key items: Economic Order Quantity Parameters (purchasing and carrying costs), Reorder Point (usage, lead time, and safety stock), and Reorder Calculations. HIS IS THE SECOND
Economic Order Quantity
The EOQ is the amount you need to buy when the system determines your inventory level is at a point where material needs to be purchased. Prior to running reorder calculations, there are two parameters that must be set to determine the EOQ: purchasing cost and carrying cost. Purchasing cost is determined from costs incurred in order to buy material, which includes things like payroll for the buying and receiving staff, part of the costs for the AP staff, and overhead such as the computers and phones they use. These costs would then be divided by the number of PO line items for a year. When just beginning to use SPOs, some customers default and start with 6.00. The other parameter is the carrying cost factor. These are the costs of holding/carrying inventory in your facility (see sidebar for carrying costs calculations). This could be different by branch as some of the variables might change. Once the various costs are determined, you divide
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Building Products Digest
February 2015
them by the average inventory value during the past year. When just beginning to use SPOs, some customers default and start with 30%. Both the purchasing cost and carrying cost must be determined in an SPO program in order to calculate buying decisions. They should be recalculated and updated once a year in every branch using current expense data.
Reorder Point
Once EOQ parameters are set, you can determine the Reorder Point (ROP), or the point in time at which a PO needs to be issued to avoid using any safety stock. Timing is very important to customer service and having the material when the customer needs it. The three key elements of ROP are: Usage (amount of material sold or used in a specified timeframe), Lead Time (how long it takes to get material from your supplier), Safety Stock (additional material for the unexpected). Usage: Various settings in an SPO control what usage is included when calculating the ROP. History start date is the first one. If you import, override or convert history from a previous system, you will need to ensure the history start date reflects a date far enough back to allow to find that usage data. Additional settings on an SPO program will control when usage affects reordering. These include sales type and inventory level, for example. Some can be set to default to begin. Initially the usage data is written to item activity in an SPO program. Various item activity affects usage, including sales order invoicing, branch transfers, work order usage, remanufacturing and credit memos. And as previously noted, various settings control if this item activity will affect reordering. Item activity is used for calculating ABC codes for an item. When running reorder calculations, it is based on the data warehouse (DW). DW updates must be run, which will read the item activity data. You have the ability to view and/or update the usage data after it is written to the DW. After usage is updated, the DW is automatically updated as well. You can also export and or import usage data. Lead Time: The next factor in determining the ROP is an item’s lead time, which is how long it takes to receive material once it’s ordered. This plays an important role in how much inventory you carry. You have the option to manually set your lead times or not have certain receiving
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A Special Series from NAWLA affect the lead time, for example for special buys. You’ll want to unset the update lead times if you have suppliers that ship sporadically. Safety Stock: The last element in the ROP calculation is used to account for unexpected usage or delivery delays. Safety stock is determined based on Usage, Lead Time and Delivery Delay Factor. Here’s the formula: Safety Stock = Daily Usage x .7 x Delivery Delay In this formula, Daily Usage = Usage x Lead Time/30. The .7 is the statistical constant that covers unexpected high usage. Delivery delay = (Worst Lead Time – Average Lead Time)/Average Lead Time.
Reorder Calculations
Now that we have discussed the elements in the ROP and parameters for the EOQ, it’s time to discuss the options for running reorder calculations. These should be run monthly, and criteria can be saved for running reorder calculations. You can run for a range of product groups, buyers, items or suppliers. You can run forward with a trend for seasonal inventory (trend can be for 90 or 180 days). Or you can run backward for non-seasonal stock. The values determined from running reorder calculations are populated on the reorder info tab in an SPO program. The last calculated date is set so you know the last time the values were calculated. The ROP, EOQ, safety stock, ROP calculation method and projected monthly usage are all populated based on the calculations. You have the ability to override and fix the EOQ, safety stock, ROP calculation method and set as fixed.
If abnormal usage is found, the checkbox will be set. This indicates the system calculated the EOQ and ROP for the item or dimension using abnormal usage history or abnormal trend adjustment. An abnormal usage history is if one month is five times the monthly average. An abnormal trend adjustment is two times the prior year’s sales.
Right Quantities at the Right Time
An SPO can help determine the right quantities to buy at the right time. Factors used to determine this are the buy point (when to buy), the EOQ (how much to buy) and the safety stock (accounts for unexpected usage and abnormal lead times). When running SPOs, a recommended buy is calculated using the ROP and EOQ along with the item’s current inventory position, also called net quantity. Net quantity = On Hand – Committed + On Order – Backorders. Here is the recommended buy formula: Recommended Buy = Buy Point – Net Quantity + EOQ Along with the various settings already discussed to accurately run reorder calculations, before starting to create SPOs, you will need to ensure the a number of records are defined, including primary setting, supplier UOM, lead times, minimum order, and minimum packs. Now you have a better idea of the calculations and data elements used to determine when an SPO is needed and how much should be purchased on it. – Anthony Muck is mgr.-customer support for DMSi, Omaha, Ne., and a member of NAWLA’s communications committee.
How to Calculate EOQ Carrying Cost Factor Warehouse Space
$_________
The annual expense of warehouse space. If all space is company owned, use the cost of leasing equivalent space in the area. Include taxes and insurance paid on buildings in this amount.
Taxes
$_________
Actual taxes paid in the last year on inventory. Taxes on buildings should be part of the warehouse space cost figure.
Insurance
$_________
Insurance premiums paid in the last year on inventory. Insurance on buildings should be part of the warehouse cost figure.
Shrinkage/Obsolete Items
$_________
The value of inventory which was adjusted off during the last year, either because of physical count differences or because the material was deemed non-saleable.
$_________
Material Handling
The total annual expense in labor and material handling equipment needed to receive and stock all incoming merchandise. This should also include the cost to move and count inventory during the year. Customer order-filling expense is not included.
Cost of Money
$_________
The interest that could have been earned in a safe investment if the money had not been used to purchase inventory.
Total Costs
$_________
Totals Costs
Total Costs
/
Avg Inventory for Past Year
=
Carrying Cost Factor
$_________
/
$_________
=
__________
Building-Products.com
February 2015
Building Products Digest
31
Fire Hobbles Tn. Treating Plant
Appalachian Forest Products will rebuild its Mosheim, Tn., treating complex that was heavily damaged by a Jan. 7 fire. Nonetheless, less than a week after the blaze, all employees were back at work. The company hopes to have reconstruction completed by the end of the year. The blaze caused more than $500,000 in damage, consuming several buildings and stacks of treated southern pine. The fire was traced back to an air compressor room where a heater was installed the day before, but the official cause remains under investigation.
Wisconsin Competitors Join Forces
Barker Lumber, Delavan, Wi., has been sold to a friendly competitor, as previous owner Ron Kastein steps down after 40 years. The lumberyard will remain at its existing location. The company was sold on Jan. 6 to Chris Hill, owner of Home Lumber, Whitewater, Wi. Kastein believes it was the right time to sell and feels he’s leaving the 144-year-old company in good hands.
Simpson Selling 4 Mills to Interfor
Simpson Lumber Co. has agreed to sell its sawmill operations in Com-mencement Bay (Port of Tacoma) and Longview, Wa.; Meldrim, Ga.; and Georgetown, S.C., to Interfor Corp., Vancouver, B.C. Simpson will close its Southeast lumber sales office in Wilmington, N.C. It will retain its sawmills in and around Shelton, Wa.
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Building Products Digest
February 2015
The mills to be sold have a combined annual lumber capacity of 750 million bd. ft. and produced 555 million bd. ft. in 2014. The additions will increase Interfor’s total capacity by 30% to 3.1 billion bd. ft. Interfor said the properties complement its existing facilities in the Pacific Northwest and Southeast. The deal is expected to close in the first quarter.
BSF Buys Texas Truss Maker
Builders FirstSource, Dallas, Tx., has purchased Empire Truss, Huntsville, Tx. With truss plants in Huntsville and Ferris, Tx., Empire last year generated sales of $11 million. Casey Collum, co-founder of Empire Truss, will continue to run the operation under the Builders FirstSource banner.
Falling Lumber Crushes Worker
A 23-year-old employee at Lowe’s, Lubbock, Tx., was killed Jan. 2, when a stack of lumber fell on top of him. According to fire chief Steve Holland, Rodolfo “Rudy” Treviño Jr. and a co-worker were moving wood from an upper rack when the rack’s steel beams gave way. He was declared dead on the scene. OSHA continues investigating.
Ohio Truss Plant Growing
Dutchcraft Truss & Metal, Minerva, Oh., is on the verge of expanding to increase production. The $60,000 expansion will include adding staff and 3,380 sq. ft. of building space, to increase wood truss production. Construction is to begin early this month.
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Mississippi Dealers Merge
Joiner’s Discount Building Supply, Carthage, Ms., has been acquired by two-unit HomeFront Home Improvement Center, Greenwood, Ms. Dale and Evon Joiner purchased the 50-year-old business in 1986. They will both stay on under HomeFront, Dale in outside sales, Evon as operator of an in-store jewelry shop.
HD Supply Expands White Cap, Sells Back Crown Bolt
HD Supply, Atlanta, Ga., has added three strategic new locations to its HD Supply Construction & Industrial– White Cap division and agreed to sell its fastener and builders hardware distribution division back to Home Depot, Atlanta, Ga. White Cap opened a 20,000-sq. ft. waterfront district location in Boston, Ma.; a 37,000-sq. ft. facility in downtown Los Angeles, Ca.; and a store in Killeen, Tx. The new locations are part of its growth strategy to increase market share in its 15 priority districts. HD Supply also agreed to sell HD Supply Hardware Solutions back to Home Depot, which spun off HD Supply in 2007. Depot is the hardware
division’s primary customer. It had previously been known as Crown Bolt, Aliso Viejo, Ca.
Klausner Closer in N.C., Fl.
Klausner Lumber Two has begun hiring for its new sawmill in Enfield, N.C., targeting an early summer startup of the $110-million, 125-acre mill. Construction and site prep began early last year, but were hampered by bad weather. When finished, it will employ 350. Klausner Lumber One, Live Oak., Fl., already has its first shift in place and is receiving logs. The plan is to beef up to 350 workers across four shifts by the end of the year. Austria-based Klausner is committed to also building a mill in Rowesville, S.C.
Brothers Split Businesses
Sibling partners Stan and Jim Brickl have divvied up their West Salem, Wi., businesses, as they prepare for eventual succession. Jim is now sole owner of Select Trusses & Lumber, the 32-year-old truss/component plant, and Stan is now sole owner of Brickl Bros., the 45-year-old design/build firm.
“Jim and I are getting to a point in our lives and careers where it’s time to put things in order for the next generation of leadership and ownership at our companies,” said Stan Brickl. “Separating and simplifying ownership is important to ensure the longterm, sustained success of both companies.”
ABC Buys N.Y. Drywall Dealer
ABC Supply Co., Beloit, Wi., has acquired the assets of exterior building products distributor Wameling Drywall Corp., which operates as Gilbert Supply Co., Marcy, N.Y. Anthony Wameling, former president and co-owner, is joining ABC Supply. Vincent Conley, former v.p. and co-owner, has retired.
Mill Equipment Traps Worker
A millworker suffered extensive injuries to his arm and shoulder in a Jan. 9 accident at Griffin Lumber Co., Cordele, Ga. According to co-workers, Corey Allen Lynn, 29, got his jacket caught in a machine, which rolled in the coat and his arm until co-workers could turn off the equipment. Lynn had been on the job about two weeks.
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Building Products Digest
February 2015
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RoyOMartin Starts Safety Program
RoyOMartin, Alexandria, La., has launched a six-month, company-wide campaign to increase safety awareness among employees and their family members. Coming on the heels of the organization’s safest year in history, the new “I Believe in Zero” campaign strengthens executive leadership’s continued commitment to striving for a workplace with zero injuries. With one of the lowest total incident rates in the wood-products manufacturing industry, RoyOMartin has received national recognition by APA and other industry groups for its employee safety, health and wellness programs. “The idea behind ‘I Believe in Zero’ is to focus on the personal-responsibility factor of our safety culture,” said senior v.p. and c.o.o. Scott Poole. “While teamwork and the buddy system are essential to an effective safety program, we must each believe that it is our individual responsibility to take the necessary steps to follow safety precautions— both at work and at home—and otherwise stay safe.” Throughout the next six months, employees and family members will be exposed to a variety of multimedia communications designed to reinforce the message that all injuries can be prevented. Keys to this program’s success will include the personal commitment of each team member, as well as increased near-miss reporting, performing quality safety audits, and making daily safety contacts at each RoyOMartin operation. “‘I Believe in Zero’ is a cultural change,” added Terry Secrest, v.p. of OSB and corporate safety director. “The message this campaign sends will be a way of life, not a program of the month. The best way to achieve zero accidents is for each of us to look out for one another, follow safety procedures, and accept nothing but a safe workplace.”
Family Business (Continued from page 22)
quality for family business succession is missing, and if that’s the case, NextGen family members should have the courage to recognize the situation for what it is, put aside foolish hopes that “Mom and Dad will see the light if we just take them to one more seminar,” and find employment in a place where they can get their economic needs met without all the weeping and gnashing of teeth present in the family company. Oh, by the way, that wonderful, essential, often missing quality is reasonableness. It’s awfully hard to reason with people who insist on behaving unreasonably! In most contexts, the term paternalistic leadership tends to be used in a derogatory way. However, paternalistic leadership doesn't have to be a negative and may be a great blessing if the senior generations’ hearts are in the right places. Irrespective of the leadership dynamics of the senior generation, it’s incumbent on all stakeholders from all generations to come together and do the hard, sometimes dirty work necessary to assure succession planning bears fruit in the family business. – Wayne Rivers is the co-founder and president of the Family Business Institute, Raleigh, N.C., and author of such books as The Top Nine Reasons Family Businesses Fail. Reach him at wayne.rivers@familybusinessinstitute.com or (877) 326-2493.
Reprinted with permission of the Family Business Institute. No portion of this article may be reproduced without its permission.
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Building Products Digest
February 2015
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DO IT BEST Corp. president and c.e.o. Bob Taylor welcomed members to the co-op’s recent winter conference in Orlando, Fl., where attendees were given three days to rethink, reconnect and rejuvenate, while reinventing their businesses. Presenters included veteran retailer Doug Fleener, author Kevin Graff, and consultant Jon Schallert.
Top 10 Green Products Named
Healthier insulation and better-performing air barriers are among the winners of BuildingGreen’s Top-10 Green Building Products awards for 2015. The 13th annual awards recognize green building products that make fundamental transformations to “business as usual” in the design and construction industry. Several of the top products, including Johns Manville’s ENRGY 3.E polyiso insulation, eliminated halogenated flame retardants, a longstanding health and environmental issue. Prosoco’s fluid-applied Cat 5 air barrier system contains no solvents, isocyanates or phthalate plasticizers, and it can be applied to damp surfaces. Cascadia Clip fiberglass thermal spacers help install
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Building Products Digest
February 2015
cladding over insulation, significantly reducing the thermal bridging through the insulation as compared with conventional attachment methods. Marvin was honored as the first company to offer Passive House Institute U.S.-certified windows. Other Top 10 picks included metered solar panels from the Clean Energy Collective that can be installed remotely, reformulated foam cushions from Ekla Home, petroleumfree plastic chairs from KI, Multistack MagLev centrifugal chillers, USAI’s Color Select tunable lighting, and FocalPoint’s high-flow-rate biofiltration system, which is designed to treat stormwater in dense urban areas.
APA Revamps Websites
APA–The Engineered Wood Association has reshaped and relaunched several websites, offering simplified navigation and improved search functionality of its EWP resources. Along with sister sites apacad.org, engineeredwood.org, performancepanels.com, and wooduniversity.org, apawood.org has been extensively upgraded for faster, easier access to hundreds of engineered wood resources, including more than 500 publications, 200 CAD details, videos, images, events and more. A new Technical Research section highlights APA’s work in wood product and systems testing. “With our redeveloped site, we’ve made a number of improvements that will make it easier for visitors to navigate the web pages and find information on engineered wood products, design recommendations, and training tools,” said Marilyn Thompson, market communications director for APA.
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ASSOCIATION Update Construction Suppliers Association will host its inaugural convention & LBM expo March 11-13 at the Golden Nugget, Biloxi, Ms. Northwestern Lumber Association will host a blueprint reading & material take-off seminar Feb. 11-12, at Hotel LaQuinta, Madison, Wi. NLA will hold its Iowa lumber convention Feb. 18-19 at Cedar Rapids Convention Center & DoubleTree Hotel, Cedar Rapids, Ia. Eastern Building Material Dealers Association is sponsoring the IDEAS trade show March 11 at the Valley Forge Casino, King of Prussia, Pa. Lumbermen’s Association of Texas & Louisiana is readying its 129th annual convention for April 8-9 at the Moody Gardens Resort Hotel, Galveston, Tx. North American Wholesale Lumber Association’s spring Wood Basics Course will be held at
Mississippi State University March 25. The course is a four-day immersion class that includes both classroom training and field operations. The curriculum includes the entire spectrum of the forest products industry: from seed to tree, from production to sales. Classes are taught by industry experts and cover all the topics relevant to success. North American Building Material Distributors Association has installed Rick Turk, Metro Hardwoods, as its new president. President-elect is Bill Sauter, OHARCO; v.p. Ray Prozzillo, A&M Supply; treasurer Wayne Moriarty, Atlantic Plywood; and immediate past president Don F. Schalk, C.H. Briggs Co. Directors include Jamie Barnes, McKillican International; Jon Minnaert, Aetna Plywood; Bill Stokke, Holdahl Co.; David Sullivan, Meyer Decorative Services; Tim Atkinson, Wilsonart LLC; Matthias Bulla, Grass America; Mark Carlisle, M.L. Campbell; Jim Jacquemard, C.A.
Technologies; Greg Simon, Far East American; and Todd Vogelsinger, Columbia Forest Products. NBMDA will hold its University of Innovative Distribution conference March 8-11 at JW Marriott Indianapolis, Indianapolis, In. National Frame Building Association has drafted former San Francisco Giants pitcher Dave Dravecky to deliver the keynote address at its annual frame building expo Feb. 18-20 at the Kentucky International Convention Center, Louisville, Ky. Appalachian Hardwood Manufacturers is staging its annual meeting Feb. 25-March 1 at the Hyatt Coconut Point, Bonita Springs, Fl. Indiana Hardwood Lumbermen’s Association will host its 117th annual convention & exposition March 10-12 at Indianapolis Marriott Downtown, Indianapolis, In. Southeastern Lumber Manufacturers Association will hold its spring meeting & expo March 11-13 at the Royal Sonesta, New Orleans, La.
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Building Products Digest
February 2015
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MOVERS & Shakers Russ Hallenbeck has been promoted to c.e.o. of Tibbetts Lumber/Cox Lumber, St. Petersburg, Fl. Bruce Kulzer, ex-Hood Distribution, has been named general mgr. of Cedar Creek, Oklahoma City, Ok. Brian Kanne is now sales mgr. and Keith Bryan general mgr. in Omaha, Ne. George Davis, exBlueLinx, is new to outside sales in the Atlanta, Ga., area. William “Jack” Coward and John Hill have retired as traders at Richmond International Forest Products, Glen Allen, Va., after 38 years and 40+ years, respectively, in the industry. Andrew Hess, ex-PAL, has been named general mgr. of the entry door division of Lumbermen’s Inc., Grand Rapids, Mi. Buck Goodwin, ex-Acadian Cypress & Hardwoods, has joined Wholesale Wood Products, Dothan, Al., to head up its hardwood division. Evan M. Kaffenes, ex-Werner Co., has been appointed v.p. and chief financial officer for Versatex Building Products, Pittsburgh, Pa. Brian Abraham is new to sales at Lumber One, Avon, Mn. Randy Beck, sales, Higginbotham Bros. & Co., Comanche, Tx., has retired after 37 years in the wholesale lumber business. Phil Garner joined Westech Building Products, Mount Vernon, In., as North America senior technical builder & architect representative. Erica Lipnitz is taking over True Value Hardware, St. Ignace, Mi., with the retirement of her father, John Lipnitz, after 46 years in the industry. George Jaman has been promoted to store mgr. at Huston Lumber & Supply Co., Watchung, N.J. Kevin Katz, longtime owner of Speier Ace Hardware, Louisville, Ky., is ready to retire and has placed the business up for sale. Craig Menear, president and c.e.o., Home Depot, Atlanta, Ga., is now also chairman, with the retirement of Frank Blake. John Rupert, ex-American Builders Supply, has rejoined the outside sales team at ABC Supply, Cape Coral, Fl. Scott Gray is new to the commodity trading staff at Stock Building Supply, Raleigh, N.C.
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Building Products Digest
Michael Walters has been promoted to general mgr. at 84 Lumber, Dayton, Tn. Tom Corrick will become c.e.o. of Boise Cascade Co., Boise, Id., effective March 6. He will replace Tom Carlile, who is retiring after 42 years with the company. Tom Haslam, ex-Fraser Timber, has joined ENAP, New Windsor, N.Y., as a commodity lumber trader to New England. Glenn Heinke has retired after 40 years the industry, the last 29 as a trader with ENAP. Miller Baynes is new to inside sales at ProBuild, Raleigh, N.C. Gregory E. Wilt is new to Parksite, Batavia, Il., as director of HR. Bill Mosby, Lansing Building Products, Richmond, Va., was promoted to executive v.p. and chief operations officer. Bryan Schaffrath is now branch mgr. in Chicago, Il. Evan Burgess, ex-ProBuild, is new to sales at Tucker Door & Trim, covering the Wilmington, N.C., area. Steve Heaton, ex-Parex USA, has rejoined Atlas Roofing Corp., Atlanta, Ga., as v.p. of sales & marketing for the polyiso division. He succeeds Tom Rowe, who is retiring after 21 years with Atlas. James Bachmann was promoted to president and c.e.o. of Continental Building Products, Herndon, Va. Dennis Romps, senior v.p. and corporate controller, has added the title of chief accounting officer. Bryan Kern has been named c.e.o. of Style Crest Enterprises, Fremont, Oh. Tom Kern is now chairman of the board. Bill Vogel has been promoted to executive v.p. of sales. Lars Hybel, ex-Electrolux, has been appointed v.p.-international of True Value Co., Chicago, Il. Janet Moreland has joined Chelsea Building Products, Oakmont, Pa., as customer service/product mgr. Jim Hunter has been appointed senior v.p. of sales & marketing for MaxLite, West Caldwell, N.J. Lynn Nuckolls has been named mgr. of Habitat for Humanity ReStore, Austin, Mn. Gary Heroux and Jeannie Ervin are interim mgrs. of Composite Panel Association, Leesburg, Va., during the search for a new executive director. The post has been vacant since Tom Julia resigned after 20+ years on the job. February 2015
Elizabeth Woodworth has been appointed v.p. of communications & community engagement for the Sustainable Forestry Initiative, Washington, D.C. Fred T. Stimpson III, c.e.o., Scotch Gulf Lumber Co., Mobile, Al., has begun a three-year term on the board of directors of the Federal Reserve Bank of Atlanta’s New Orleans, La., branch. Roy O. Martin III, RoyOMartin, Alexandria, La., was named 2015 chairman of Louisiana’s Board of Regents. RoyOMartin-OSB’s Terry Secrest and Marty Neiswender were honored by the Office of the Secretary of Defense for “Employer Support of the Guard and Reserve.” Bea Minor and Dee Major are composing a new ad jingle for MungusFungus Forest Products, Climax, Nv., report owners Hugh Mungus and Freddy Fungus.
APP Watch
App: LANDSCAPE LIGHTING TOOLKIT Produced by: EARTH CONSCIOUS APPS Price: $5.99 Platforms: iOS, Android A new mobile app helps d-i-yers and professionals design efficient, safe LED landscape lighting systems and correct improper installations. The Landscape Lighting Toolkit is a collection of electrical calculators and tutorials that help create more efficient designs, lower installation costs, increase safety, and troubleshoot issues in existing installations. It can maximize the effectiveness of each transformer and each run, lowering total costs. The only necessary information is wire gauge, length of run, voltage tap, and VA or W. Programmer Daniel Hall says, “Low voltage and LED technology specifically have introduced some complexities into landscape lighting that unfortunately aren’t widely understood.” – Download from iTunes App Store or Google Play Building-Products.com
MANAGEMENT Tips By Scott Simpson, BlueTarp Financial
Preparing to sell or transfer ownership of your business
credit reports as well as proprietary credit scoring models to evaluate customers’ credit quality and likelihood of default. Armed with this information, you can clearly represent the value of your customer base, as well as reduce risk and uncertainty for prospective buyers.
T
industry has a heritage of independent, multigenerational ownership, and that means lots of dealers are thinking about how to transition their business. If you’re one of them—whether you’re selling to an outside party or shifting ownership to a family member—you want a successful transition for everyone. To help ensure the best outcome, evaluate your company now with a critical eye towards what a new owner will be concerned about—things like cash flow, accounts receivable and customer strength. Your goal should be to reduce risk and uncertainty, and create stability and continuity. You can do this by implementing some best practices around your credit and collections operations. The two scenarios below provide HE BUILDING SUPPLY
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Building Products Digest
an outline of key considerations and suggested steps to help you successfully transition ownership.
Third-party sale
Establishing value Like staging a home for sale, you want to put your business in the best possible light to maximize its financial value so you can attract qualified buyers at the highest price. Transparent financials provide clarity on your operation and make it easier for potential buyers to understand where your company’s valuation fits when looking at similar sales. If you’ve been working with a professional credit management service, you’ll be able to offer prospective buyers a credit assessment of your customer portfolio. A credit service uses multiple business and consumer February 2015
Improving cash flow and credit risk Understanding your cash flow will be top-of-mind for a buyer who wants to plan how much cash will be needed to support operations after the sale. If you have several accounts that are chronically delinquent, that may require a new owner to tap the bank for operating capital—a move that can add risk and cost to the equation. Fluctuating payment trends and pastdue accounts can also be a red flag, and will indicate how much credit risk may come with the purchase. Improving your credit risk and cash flow can seem like a daunting task. Working with a professional credit management company can make your accounts receivable (AR) 100% current. That kind of consistency can take a lot of risk and uncertainty off the table before, during and after a sale. Providing continuity Fostering continuity can be an elusive, but important, aspect of any sale. After all, a buyer will want to maintain many of the relationships and processes that have led to your success. A professional credit service that manages your entire credit and collections function can help you achieve this goal by: • Maintaining consistency and professionalism in your credit and collecBuilding-Products.com
tions functions and eliminating concern about losing credit staff following a transition. • Providing new ownership clarity and transparency on the company’s financial health and setting realistic expectations for future credit risk and cash flow. • Assuring customers that established credit and collections functions and contacts will not change with a new owner.
Keeping it in the family
Preserving the legacy If you’re planning to transition your business to a family member, make sure the company is on solid financial footing to help preserve your legacy for generations to come. Getting your financial house in order now can help ensure that future leadership will be able to focus on serving customers and growing the business. You can start by identifying your top financial concerns that, in a perfect world, you’d like to reduce or eliminate for the next generation: • Lagging customer payment trends • Bad debt write-offs • Inconsistent cash flow • Time-consuming credit and collections processes • Reliance on bank lines of credit to fund operations Once you’ve created your list, you can tackle reducing the amount of risk and uncertainty that will be inherited with your company. Reducing risk and uncertainty Even for a family member who’s been involved with the business, assuming ownership will include a lot of new responsibilities, and you’ll want to reduce that burden as much as possible. A good place to start is with improvements to your credit management and collections. The result can mean the next generation has more time, energy, and money to focus on customers and growing the business rather than being bogged down by credit decisions and chasing payments. If you are working with a professional credit management service before the transition, you have an endto-end solution that handles everything from credit analysis and risk protection to customer service, billing, and collections. The uncertainty of cash flow will be eliminated with a guarantee that you’re paid for all sales, in full. The risk for your AR is (Please turn to page 53) Building-Products.com
February 2015
Building Products Digest
45
MARGIN Builders By Tim McTighe, Fifthroom.com
Enhance decking with outdoor structures
A
MERICANS SPEND thousands of dollars each year either building new decks or renovating old ones with little thought about the next steps in increasing their livability and outdoor entertaining features. While extravagances like fire pits and even full kitchens have become mainstays for many luxurious designs, there are numerous costeffective and relatively simple methods for homeowners at every price point to increase year-round deck
usage and aesthetics. After spending the vast majority of their initial energy on the specification of deck boards and layouts, many deck builders and do-it-yourselfers oftentimes overlook basics such as the addition of pergolas and other outdoor structures for adding functionality and pleasure to both events and quiet times. Wall-mounted or freestanding, pergolas offer an ideal way to fashionably provide shade to decks and patios for anywhere from several
PERGOLAS and other outdoor structures can increase the size of the deck package. This 10-ft.-by12-ft., cedar wall-mounted-pergola functions as a patio cover.
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Building Products Digest
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thousand dollars for a simple 8x8 structure to $10,000 or more for customized designs that include arches and intricately carved posts and beams. Pergolas can also be specified to match the style of any exterior space as well as customer tastes and preferences. For example, pergolas manufactured with treated pine posts, beams and runners that are then protected by heavy duty vinyl sleeves are known for their long-term durability and maintenance-free benefits that include never needing to be painted, stained or sanded. Numerous pergola models are also available to conform to a vast array of traditional or even rustic palates. Western red cedar is revered for its lustrous tones and subtle cedar fragrance, which can be selected with rough cut-styled beams that have not been surfaced, making for a coarse, bulkier finished product. In addition, pergolas designed with #1 grade southern yellow pine and treated with an eco-friendly carbon based formula offer long-time resistance to water and insects, but at a more economical price when compared to other pressure-treated materials. Each can also be stained or painted to match virtually any outdoor dĂŠcor, while the western red cedar will weather to a rich silver gray patina if left unstained and/or unsealed. In addition, pergolas can be decorated to provide wide ranging amenities to the decking experience. Plants, designer lighting, train vines, porch swings, and retractable canopies offer another layer of comfort and purpose. Building-Products.com
CLASSIC yet durable, this 12-ft.-by-16-ft., vinyl, four-beam pergola provides ease of maintenance.
Gazebos and ramadas attached directly to decks or positioned in other landscape locations also expand outdoor use by creating open and airy entertainment spots for large gatherings, or when enclosed with screen or glass, supplying a shelter from rain or for private hot tub use throughout the winter months. Available in virtually any shape or size and with the same options as pergolas for materials, gazebos can also be added to exterior packages for another $2,500 on the low end to tens of thousands for custom structures. Furthermore, for a truly luxurious look and feel that doesn’t cost a small fortune, builders and d-i-yers can complement the entire project with accessories ranging from garden bridges, walkways and arbors to planters, deck boxes and trellises. Again, with all available in lengths and sizes that are specifically designed to enhance, not clutter, landscape beauty and usability. Although many structures like pergolas can be constructed by experienced individuals within a day or two or even less, careful attention should ensure the structure is properly fastened to decking and/or houses depending on the application. This is especially true for areas that frequently suffer severe storms, high winds and snow accumulations. As a result, while pergolas, gazeBuilding-Products.com
bos and the like can be purchased in kits from multiple vendors, only dedicated experts can supply the appropriate insights, tips and advice for the selection and construction of outdoor structures. This includes answering questions on local and state building regulations as well as providing style and safety recommendations. For instance, in addition to offering personalized customer service from the company’s in-house architects, the Design Wizard at Fithroom.com is available 24/7 to help users specify and price their own structures, complete with shapes, sizes, material and roof types. So, never underestimate the addedvalue and benefits to the bottom line of recommending outdoor structures to the next decking project. In addition to being available at price points that are affordable under most customer budgets, they will provide a source of enjoyment that many homeowners fail to consider when building a new deck or replacing old ones. The key is partnering with reliable manufacturers that can not only help specify the project, but also support sales pitches with the proper experience and expertise. – Tim McTighe is president of Fifthroom.com, provider of a wide variety of outdoor structures and related products. Reach him at (888) 293-2339 or via www.fifthroom.com. February 2015
Building Products Digest
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NEW Products
Commercial Grade Fire Protection
Georgia-Pacific Gypsum’s ToughRock Fireguard 45 gypsum board is the only standard 1/2” interior wallboard to be enhanced with fire-resistant properties for use in a 45-minute UL classified fire rating. It can be used in place of 1/2” fire-rated wallboard, but lowers the transmission of sounds between rooms more effectively than lightweight 1/2” wallboard. GPGYPSUM.COM
Spider-Like Spray Insulation
JM Spider Plus blow-in insulation features interlocking fiber technology, allowing the fibers to spring and lock into cavities to fill all gaps and voids with no adhesive or netting. The product is ideal for residential manufactured buildings and leaves efficient, economical results.
JM.COM
Coyote Clip a Sure Fit
Sure Drive USA’s newest hidden deck clip, the Coyote Clip, offers a 90° installation process and fasteners that can be used for wood or steel joist systems. The ribs molded into the clip’s help control lateral movement and improve the deck’s structural integrity.
(303) 951-2578
SUREDRIVE.COM (800) 951-2222
Comfortable Detail Sanders
Simple, Sturdy Stretch Tape
The compact Mouse Sander from Black + Decker is ideal for all types of sanding projects. It can be gripped in three ways, providing maximum versatility. Its palm grip is ideal for sanding surfaces, a precision grip provides extreme maneuverability, and a handle grip adds accessibility into ultra-tight spaces.
ZIP System stretch tape from Huber easily stretches to fit sills, curves and corners with a single piece. Made of a high-performance composite acrylic, the tape conforms to challenging applications and locks out moisture even over mismatched surfaces. It can be pulled up and reapplied for hassle-free installation, providing a tight, energy-efficient seal.
BLACKANDDECKER.COM (410) 716-3699
HUBERWOOD.COM
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Building Products Digest
(800) 933-9220
February 2015
Building-Products.com
Secret Siding Corner
The new, one-piece VERSATEX PVC corner eliminates the labor-intensive patching, plugging and touch-up that a smooth, professional installation used to require. The hidden-fastener saves time and improves appearance in lap siding construction, providing zero-maintenance and weatherresistant properties.
VERSATEX.COM (412) 821-2346
Enhanced Sheathing
Designed for wind resistance, LP Building Products’ LongLength XL OSB sheathing comes pre-cut for common wall heights with an additional 1-1/8". The panels shift wind uplift through the sheathing, eliminating a significant amount of hardware.
LPCORP.COM (888) 820-0325
Building-Products.com
February 2015
Building Products Digest
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Easy-on Post Caps
Sustainable Plywood
Patriot Timber Products’ new RevolutionPly is made from plantation and sustainable wood sources and contains no tropical hardwoods. The plywood is ideal for a variety of applications including cabinetry, flooring underlayment, wall
paneling, millwork, and woodworking projects. Each sheet has a 100% uniform light red color and blemish-free face veneer that is smoothly sanded.
REVOLUTIONPLY.COM
Simpson Strong-Tie’s PCZ and EPCZ post caps feature inline post and header flanges, which provide greater flexibility in choosing the post size and simplify installation when making the post-to-beam connection.
STRONGTIE.COM ( 925) 560-9068
(336) 299-7755
Heavy-Duty Hole Saw
The levels also include an integrated rafter hook so it conveniently hangs on doorframes, offering a convenient on-site storage solution.
The new Milwaukee Hole Dozer bi-metal hole saw is built to withstand the most punishing applications. Equipped with a lifetime warranty against tooth breaks, the tool brings durability and increased productivity.
STANLEYTOOLS.COM
MILWAUKEETOOL.COM
Superior Levels
Stanley’s durable premium box beam levels feature a removable end cap so the square edge of the level fits flush in the corner of a room, allowing for an accurate mark from one wall to be transferred onto the next, to continue a level line around a room.
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(410) 206-0919
February 2015
(262) 790-6334
Building-Products.com
Dependable Floor Underlayment
Sturdy floor underlayment from Dependable, LLC will ensure sound deadening results and crack isolation, as well as floor reinforcement. KeedeRoll 100 and 300, two versions of uncoupling mats, provide both waterproofing and nonwaterproofing options. Additionally included is a synthetic self-furred fiberglass lath used as reinforcement for self-leveling products or thin-set mortar over plywood.
FLOORPREP.COM
Multi-Directional Laser
With the ability to quickly and accurately measure nearly any construction site, ELaser by ETemplate Systems measures in full 3D and up to a 160-ft. radius, recording as-built measurements in minutes. The system contains a fully rotational laser head and measures various conditions, including how level the floor and ceiling are, and how plumb the walls are. This results in fewer errors during installation.
ETEMPLATESYSTEMS.COM (866) 877-6933
(800) 227-3434
Building-Products.com
February 2015
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IN Memoriam William H. “Billy” Stimpson, 94, former c.e.o. of Gulf Lumber Co., Mobile, Al., died Jan. 17 in Mobile. As a boy, he spent his summers running a compass for a local timber estimator and, at age 13, for Southern Pine & Hardwood Lumber Co. He joined his father’s Stimrad Lumber Co. as v.p. of logging in 1945. Seven years later, he and his brothers declined to purchase Gulf Lumber from their father’s longtime partner, Ben May, but agreed to run it. Stimpson became c.e.o. when May died in 1973, retiring in 1992. He served as an Alabama Department of Conservation advisory board member from 1960 to 1970, Alabama Forestry Association president in 1967, SFPA president in 1977, National Forest Products Association chairman of governmental affairs in 1981, and NFPA president in 1982. He was elected to the Alabama Foresters Hall of Fame in 1984, and
was awarded the Alabama Wildlife Federation’s Governor’s Conservation Award in 1964, NAWLA’s Mulrooney Award in 1996, and ALA’s Kaul Statesman Award in 2000. Thomas P. Torrisi, 77, retired v.p. of Jackson Lumber & Millwork, Lawrence, Ma., died Dec. 29. Jesse R. Goodale II, 97, cofounder of Riverhead Building Supply, Riverhead, N.Y., died Dec. 20. He founded the business in 1948 with his brother, Harold, and uncle, Percy Ketcham. It now has 11 yards, a millwork plant, and eight showrooms. Virgil A. Paper, 82, owner of Paper’s Lumber & Supply, Durant, Ia., died Jan. 5. He and his wife, Marilyn, bought the ex-Schneckloth Lumber in 1987. Virgil O. Fry, 86, retired Houston, Tx., area lumberman, died Dec. 15. He worked for White Bros., Stahlman Lumber, and as sales manager for Wenco Distributors.
CLASSIFIED Marketplace Rates: $1.20 per word (25 word min.). Phone number counts as 1 word, address as 6. Centered copy/headline, $9 per line. Border, $9. Private box, $15. Column inch rate: $55 if art furnished “cameraready” (advertiser sets type), $65 if we set type. Questions? Call (714) 486-2735. Send ad to Fax 714-486-2745 or david@ building-products.com. Checks payable to 526 Media Group. Deadline: 18th of previous month.
PRODUCTS FOR SALE SHAVER WOOD PRODUCTS Southern Yellow Pine Timber Production
6x6, 6x8, 8x8, 10x10, 12x12
TRI-STATE LUMBER CO.
Reload Services & Storage Available Norfolk Southern Mainline Served Easy Access to I-40 & I-77 Company-Owned Truck Fleet
Tel. (662) 862-2125 • Fax 662-862-4900 email jgibson@tristatelumber.net
(704) 278-9291 • Fax (704) 278-9304 Cleveland, N.C. email steve.twiford@gmail.com or shavers.reload@gmail.com
WANTED TO BUY
WANTED TO BUY
PRODUCTS FOR SALE Your Southern Yellow Pine Timber Connection Specializing in 6x6, 6x8, 8x8, 10x10
Dave Spencer, 74, longtime treated wood buyer, died Dec. 28. He entered the industry in 1962 with Georgia-Pacific, Atlanta, Ga. He worked for Handy Dan and Builders Square, Atlanta, before joining Southeast Wood Treating, Montgomery, Al., as a lumber buyer in 1996. When Southeast Wood inked a lumber treating deal with G-P in 1998, he transitioned back to G-P, where he served as a lumber buyer for the treated lumber division until retiring in 2013. Nick K. Stavros, 80, founder of Metro Builders Supply, Tulsa, Ok., died Jan. 12. He started the company with his late wife, Jane, in 1974, expanding to 10 locations before retiring in 2012 and selling the business, now known as Metro Appliances & More. Aubrey A. Patrick, 66, v.p. and co-owner of Harleyville Builders Supply, Holly Hill, S.C., died Jan. 16. Jerome A. “Jerry” Lipetzky, 92, president of Clements Lumber, Clements, Mn., from 1971 to 1988, died Jan. 20. Ann Smith Curtis, 93, retired secretary and treasurer of Curtis Lumber Co., Johnston, S.C., died Jan. 12. She operated the business with her late husband, Douglas, for 45 years, until they retired in 1988. John E. Owens Jr., 93, owner of Owens Lumber & Hardware, Beebe, Ar., for over 50 years, died Jan. 11. John C. “Jack” Nuttle, 92, former general manager of Nuttle Lumber Co., Denton, Md., died Dec. 31. Eugene J. Compton, 87, former co-owner of Farmer’s Gerain & Lumber, Sunbury, Ia., died Dec. 21. Dennis Bast, 58, assistant manager for Northern Country Co-op’s lumber division, Stacyville, Ia., died Dec. 20. He joined as a yard man in 2001. Lawrence E. “Bud” Townsend, 78, owner of Bud Townsend Lumber Co., Blackwater, Mo., died Nov. 18. He started the company in 1962. Gareth D. Poer, 79, former salesman for Deal Lumber Co., Wichita, Ks., died Dec. 29. Don K. Rush, 79, former manager of Beachcliff Lumber Co., Elyria, Oh., died Jan. 11.
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Building-Products.com
DATE Book Listings are often submitted months in advance. Always verify dates and locations with sponsor before making plans to attend. Florida Hardware Co. – Feb. 14-15, market, Doubletree Convention Center, Orlando, Fl.; (800) 372-2110; www.floridahardware.com. PAL Co-op – Feb. 17-19, buyers show, Gaylord Palms Resort, Orlando, Fl.; (800) 748-0089; www.nationalbuyingpower.com. Northwestern Lumberman’s Assn. – Feb. 18-19, Iowa lumber convention, Cedar Rapids Convention Center, Cedar Rapids, Ia.; (763) 544-6822; www.nlassn.org. North American Wholesale Lumber Assn. – Feb. 25, regional meeting, Birmingham, Al.; (312) 321.5133; www.nawla.org. National Frame Building Expo – Feb. 18-20, Kentuky International Convention Center, Louisville, Ky.; (800) 726-9966; nfba.org. Orgill Inc. – Feb. 19-21, dealer market, Orange County Convention Center, Orlando, Fl.; (800) 347-2860; www.orgill.com. Appalachian Hardwood Manufacturers Association – Feb. 25March 3, annual meeting, Hyatt Coconut Point, Bonita Springs, Fl.; (336) 885-8315; www.appalachianwood.org. Long-Lewis Hardware – Feb. 28-March 1, market, Montgomery, Al.; (205) 322-2561; www.long-lewis.com. WoodWorks – March 4, Wood Solutions Fair, Atlanta, Ga.; (866) 966-3448; www.woodworks.org. Lumbermens Merchandising Corp. – March 4-6, annual meeting, Las Vegas, Nv.; (610) 293-7121; www.lmc.net. True Value Co. – March 6-8, spring market, Orlando, Fl.; (773) 6955000; www.truevaluecompany.com. Peak Auctioneering – March 7, LBM auction, Howard County Fairgrounds, Baltimore, Md.; (800) 245-9690; www.peakauction.com. International Home & Housewares Show – March 7-10, Chicago, Il.; (847) 292-4200; www.housewares.org.
Selling Your Business (Continued from page 45)
assumed by the credit management company and is reviewed on an ongoing basis by a credit analysis team who screens new customers and works with existing ones to help you continually identify and assess risk. Maintaining relationships You can ensure that your new family owner will have more time to focus on customer relationships by shifting your credit and collections function from in-house to a professional credit service. You gain stability and continuity by working with a professional credit service in several ways: • Customers are assured that established credit and collections functions will remain the same • Credit and collections will be handled by the same staff in the same professional, friendly way your customers have come to expect • Company leadership and sales will have more time and cash flow to confidently invest in the business, solve customer problems, and provide better service If you’re seriously considering the sale or transfer of ownership of your business, then now’s the time to get your financial house in order. By partnering with a professional credit service, you can rest assured that your company will be well positioned to make a profitable and successful transition when you’re ready. – Scott Simpson is president and c.e.o. of BlueTarp Financial, which helps dealers grow and protect their business by professionally managing their credit program from beginning to end. Reach him at (207) 797-5900 or ssimpson@bluetarp.com.
North American Building Material Distribution Association – March 8-11, University of Innovative Distribution, JW Marriott, Indianapolis, In.; 312-321-6845; www.nbmda.org. Northwestern Lumber Association – March 10-11, Nebraska lumber dealers convention, Younes Conference Center, Kearney, Ne.; (763) 544-6822; www.nlassn.org. Indiana Hardwood Lumbermen’s Association – March 10-12, convention & expo, Indianapolis Marriott Downtown, Indianapolis, In.; (800) 640-4452; www.ihla.org. Budma – March 10-13, Poznan, Poland; www.budma.com. Eastern Building Material Dealers Association – March 11, MidAtlantic Trade Show, Valley Forge Casino, Prussia, Pa.; (800) 296-3278; www.ebmda.org. Greenprints – March 11-12, Atlanta, Ga.; (404) 872-3549; www.greenprints.org. Construction Suppliers Association – March 11-13, convention & expo, Golden Nugget Biloxi, Ms.; (678) 674-1860; www. gocsa.com. National Wooden Pallet & Container Assn. – March 11-13, leadership conference, Az.; (703) 519-6104; www.palletcentral.com. Southeastern Lumber Manufacturers Association – March 11-13, spring meeting & expo, Royal Sonesta, New Orleans, La.; (770) 631-6701; www.slma.org. Ace Hardware Corp. – March 18-19, show, Las Vegas Convention Center, Las Vegas, Nv.; (888) 408-6742; www.acehardware.com. International Wood Products Assn. – March 18-20, annual convention, Las Vegas, Nv.; (703) 820-6696; www.iwpawood.org. North American Wholesale Lumber Association – March 22-24, Leadership Summit, The Western Kierland, Scottsdale, Al.; (800) 527-8258; www.nawla.org. Building-Products.com
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ADVERTISERS Index
IDEA File Come for Hardware, Stay for Dinner
Newcomers to
Vermillion, S.D. might drive past the local Ace Hardware with no idea that a nationally-recognized gourmet bakery and sandwich shop operates inside, which helps attract new customers of all kinds—and keeps them coming back for more. Once a Jones’ Food Center, the building was bought by Ace Hardware, with plans for a complete renovation. The market was home to the famous Mister Smith’s, a gourmet café known for their handcrafted deli sandwiches. “The sandwich shop is something everyone loves. People travel a long way to eat here,” said general manager Bob Starr. “We could tell the public did not want to see it go. Then someone threw out a great idea,” he recalled. According to Starr, upon closing Jones’, Ace Hardware owners decided to keep the sandwich shop and instead of tearing it down, they would simply build the hardware store around it. Starr, now responsible for running both Mister Smith’s and Ace Hardware, says the the one-of-a-kind cafe helps bring in not only a different kind of clientele, but also national attention, providing a special kind of uniqueness to the typical, everyday hardware store. It has also greatly increased their online presence, as satisfied customers feel the need to share their experiences on review websites such as Yelp.com, with the unique Ace Hardware location being a focal point. “We knew the café had a strong following and we just kept saying to ourselves, ‘We have to figure out a way to keep it,’” said Starr. Starr highlighted a few other benefits the hardware store has experienced upon deciding to keep and takeover the deli. “The good thing about having a gourmet deli in a hardware store is that it attracts all kinds of different customers, especially college students and those who are preparing to move into dorms and apartments and are in need of hardware equipment. This gives us a chance to upsell, which is great for overall sales. And because locals love the food, they always come back.” Starr also explained how the desire for great-tasting, authentic food pairs well with the daily needs that a local hardware store caters to. “Hardworking people come in our store with a lot on their minds; then they enjoy a nice meal without having to go too far,” Starr explained. “We are so pleased with the outcome. Having a deli in our hardware store has really complemented the business.”
For more on advertisers, call directly or visit their website.
AGS Stainless Inc. [www.agsstainless.com/mmag] ...................47 Arch Wood Protection [www.wolmanizedwood.com]........Cover 1 Boise Cascade [www.bcewp.com]..................................................4 B.W. Creative Railing Systems [www.bwcreativerailings.com] .40 Claymark [www.claymark.com] ...........................................Cover II Coastal Plywood [www.coastalplywood.com]...............................7 Crumpler Plastic Pipe [www.cpp-pipe.com] ................................53 DeckWise [www.deckwise.com] ...................................................26 Dekorators [www.deckorators.com].............................................23 Do it Best Corp. [www.independentsdoitbest.com]......................5 Diamond Pier [www.diamondpier.com]........................................38 Everwood Treatment Co. [www.everwoodtreatment.com].........35 Fasco America [www.fascoamerica.com]....................................36 Feeney, Inc. [www.feeneyinc.com] .................................................3 Hoover Treated Wood Products [www.frtw.com]........................21 Kelleher Corp. [www.kelleher.com] ..............................................15 KOMA Trimboards [www.komatrimboards.com] ..........................8 Kop-Coat [www.kop-coat.com] ............................................Cover II Koppers [koppersperformancechemicals.com] ...............Cover IV Leonard Lumber [www.leonardlumber.com] ...............................19 Lumbermens Association of Texas [www.lat.org] ......................41 Matthews Marking Products [www.matthewsmarking.com] ......50 NewTechWood [www.newtechwood.com]...................................34 Nova USA Wood [www.novausawood.com] ................................17 NyloBoard [www.nyloboard.com].................................................37 Pennsylvania & Indiana Lumbermens Mutual [plmins.com]......45 PPG Architectural Coatings [www.ppgac.com] ................Cover III Regal Ideas [www.regalideas.com]...............................................51 Roseburg Forest Products [www.roseburg.com] .......................27 RoyOMartin [www.royomartin.com] .............................................43 Simpson Strong-Tie [www.strongtie.com]..............................28-29 Siskiyou Forest Products [siskiyouforestproducts.com]...........49 Snavely Forest Products [www.snavelyforest.com] ...................33 Sunset Moulding [www.sunsetmoulding.com]............................15 Sure Drive USA [www.suredrive.com]..........................................24 Swanson Group Sales Co. [www.swansongroupinc.com].........25 Versatex [www.versatex.com].......................................................39 Woodbrowser [www.woodbrowser.com] .....................................32
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Building-Products.com
PPG MACHINECOAT PLUS ST EXTERIOR FINISH ÂŽ
SEMI-TRANSPARENT SYSTEM FOR WOOD
STANDARD SEMI-TRANSPARENT SYSTEM*
CEDAR SANDSTONE BASECOAT
MAHOGANY MAPLE REDWOOD WALNUT
PPG introduces a new semi-transparent system that combines the protection of a solid color ďŹ nish with the appearance of a semi-transparent stain.
PRODUCT FEATURES t 100% acrylic latex t Machine application formula for better overall consistency versus ďŹ eld application t Formulated with high durability pigments for maximum UV performance t Varied basecoat colors offer a wide range of color options t Excellent color retention
ASK PPG ABOUT DURACOLORÂŽ ST FOR FIBER CEMENT AND COMPOSITES
* Samples are shown with 1 coat of Sandstone Basecoat and 2 coats of Semi-Transparent Finish. These samples were all lab applied. 11( "SDIJUFDUVSBM 'JOJTIFT *OD t 0OF 11( 1MBDF t 1JUUTCVSHI 1" t t XXX QQHQSP DPN t XXX QQHNBDIJOFBQQMJFEDPBUJOHT DPN t NBDIBQQJOGP!QQH DPN The PPG logo is a registered trademark of PPG Industries Ohio, Inc. MachineCoat and DuraColor are registered trademarks of PPG Architectural Finishes, Inc.
BPD
151 Kalmus Dr. Ste. D200 Costa Mesa, CA 92626-5959
Building Products Digest
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It Seems Everybody Wants In On This Color Thing.
It’s easy to get on board with color, especially when those boards are pressure treated with the MicroShades® color pigment system. MicroShades is an in-solution, colorant system, specifically developed for wood products treated with preservatives from Koppers Performance Chemicals. Through innovative technology, the color pigments are pressure treated into the wood. Now treated wood is available in colors similar to cedar, redwood, and other wood tones. MicroShades is not a surface stain. So take a closer look at what’s new in treated wood, and see how quickly your project can go from ordinary, to Extraordinary!
www.kopperspc.com MicroShades pressure treated wood products are produced by independently owned and operated wood treating facilities. MicroShades pressure treated wood products are treated with Micronized Copper Azole. MicroShades® is a registered trademark of Koppers Performance Chemicals Inc. Colors shown in photo images may differ from actual product samples. Color availability may vary by market. © 1/2015