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THINKING AHEAD WITH NAWLA

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By Carl Lamb

Leaving the pandemic better than before

When the COVID-19 pandemic blew up, we at Snavely Forest Products knew that sitting passively by in hopes the crisis would work itself out wasn’t a realistic solution. Hope is not a plan!

With that in mind, our company began making decisions and operating from two distinct, but parallel mindsets. First, we looked at the outbreak through the lens of what steps did we need to take immediately to address the circumstances at hand. And, second, we envisioned what kind of company we wanted to be as we emerged on the other side of this calamity.

Over-Communication Early On

We sprang into action at once, assembling a COVID team whose purpose it was to ensure that Snavely—which has locations throughout the U.S.—remained in compliance with local, state, and federal pandemic requirements. Just as importantly, we recognized the need to educate our employees.

Although we quickly reduced office occupancy in the branches to 10% or less of staff, as a distribution business our front-line workers also include material handlers and drivers who don’t have the option of working remotely. Product has to get onto the trucks, and the drivers have to deliver to our customers. The workers showcate, to our people. Because of the CDC-recommended procedures and processes implemented, and because of all the internal discussion surrounding those actions, we got to a point very quickly where the fear of the unknown started to die down. And that was good. With a workforce that was reassured of their safety on the job, we were free to focus on business even as we stayed on top of all of the requirements.

ing up every day on site to handle these key tasks are the heroes of our organization, and we owed it to them to make sure they were safer here than anywhere else.

Not only that, we knew it was important to keep them in the loop as to what Snavely was doing to achieve that goal—what protocols were being put into place, and why. Even today, when the world has largely settled into its “new normal,” our COO provides a quarterly update on what’s going on and what’s been done in response. But our overarching goal at the onset of the pandemic was to communicate, even over-communiImproving for the Future

At the same time that one team— consisting of our director of safety,

A Special Series from North American Wholesale Lumber Association

About NAWLA

North American Wholesale Lumber Association is the association that delivers unparalleled access to relationships and resources that improve business strategy and performance through sales growth, cost savings, and operational efficiencies for wholesalers and manufacturers of forest products and other building materials that conduct business in North America. Learn how NAWLA can help your business at nawla.org.

some executive leadership, materials handlers, and operations managers—worked diligently on safety and compliance, we had another that was dedicated to mapping out Snavely’s exit from the crisis. What do we look like coming out of the pandemic? What do we want to look like coming out of the pandemic? How can we improve?

Technological enhancements surfaced as a huge part of the answer to those questions, as we tried to figure out how to make our sales and marketing team more effective while working remote. One of the most impactful improvements was the adoption of an adaptive phone system. It rings right through users’ computers at home as though they’re sitting at their desk in the office. In addition, video chats on Teams and Zoom also made a lot of tasks very easy, allowing us to be face-to-face with our shareholders, customers, and vendors.

As this panel continues its work, Snavely is also exploring how to do more digital marketing, different ways of putting presentations together, electronic PODs, and automated systems. With the progress we’ve already made on the technology front, our remote workers are just as connected and, in my opinion, more productive than ever before.

These changes have been good not only for the employees, but for the company as well. While our existing employees are thriving in the work-from-home culture, Snavely is finding that technology facilitates onboarding and training without a need to be in the office. Labor continues to be a challenge for this industry, and qualified candidates are in demand everywhere, so being able to say that a candidate’s physical location may not matter so much is an enviable position to be in. You don’t have to have somebody commuting an hour or 45 minutes each way if the job doesn’t demand it.

In addition to the gains derived through technological innovations, our company is also getting feedback directly from customers on how to improve. Instead of a general, routine check-in to see if everything’s okay, we’re asking questions like: • What’s the most important thing customers need from us right now?

• How can we help during these uncertain times? • What do they expect us to do differently today than we normally do or that we’re doing right now? • What challenges do they expect to face during the recovery period and how do we help them there?

The Other Side of the Pandemic

If you had told me a year ago that my work day would come to look like this—50% videoconferencing, for example—I would’ve said, “No way.” But that’s what it’s transformed to. If you had told me that not only are we going to be hit with this pandemic, but we’re going to move our employees to working from home and take our sales force off the road—but that business is going to better than it was before—I never would’ve believed that, either. But that’s a fact, too.

The pandemic forced a lot of changes; but at the end of the day, our business is still a relationship business— although how we manage those relationships may look a little different. Still, it doesn’t matter which portion of building materials we’re talking about, if you’ve done a good job with your vendors in treating them as partners and talking openly and honestly, you get through the challenges (like the current shortage of supply). It may not always be easy, but you’re going to make it work.

That’s why NAWLA and similar organizations are so important. As the world begins to open back up, an in-person Traders Market is a strong possibility this year; and if it happens, it’ll represent a prime opportunity to cultivate some of those all-important relationships. There’s a major pent-up demand to get back to seeing people in person, even as we’ve managed to make everything work in the interim.

With video conferencing, it’s true that you can walk away with some sense of a personal connection. You can see and read the body language of the person on the other side of the screen, so you get “some of it.” But being in person, you get “all of it.” There’s no substitute for that.

– Carl Lamb is a shareholder and vice president of Eastern Operations for Snavely Forest Products, Pittsburgh, Pa. Learn more at snavelyforestproducts.com.

Jack Mackin has been named president of Concord

Lumber Corp., Littleton, Ma. Tim Lancaster, who had been acting CEO, will stay on as a member of the board of directors, serving alongside CFO David Perry and

Duncan Facey. Ed Schatz will continue as chairman of the board. Bob Lane has retired after 45 years in the SYP business, the last 35 years as sales mgr. for The Timbermen Inc. of

Camak, Ga. Mark Hayes has been appointed president of Kodiak

Building Partners divisions Forest Tek Lumber,

Tavernier, Fl., and Overseas Lumber Supply, Big Pine

Key, Fl. He succeeds Jamie Brown, who resigned to pursue other interests. Gregg Argall has been promoted to VP of national accounts for BlueLinx, Marietta, Ga. Dave Zelch, ex-Sherwin-

Williams, is now general mgr. of BlueLinx’s branches in

Minneapolis and Duluth, Mn. Bryan McCarty has joined the outside sales team at Ritter

Lumber & Millwork, Lufkin, Tx. John Collier is new to sales at Blue Water Lumber Co.,

Daphne, Al. Casey Carey, ex-LS Building Products, is now customer relations mgr. for Wilson Lumber Co., Huntsville, Al. Jason Stanley, ex-Northwest Hardwoods, is now operations mgr. of Collins’ Kane Hardwood division in

Kane, Pa. Kevin Silveira, ex-National Lumber Co., has joined The

Lester Group, Martinsville, Va., as vice president. Will Norman, ex-UFP, is the new general mgr. of operations for Carter Lumber, Oakwood, Ga. Tim Callahan has been named chairman of the board of Pennsylvania Lumbermens Mutual Insurance Co.,

Philadelphia, Pa. Paul Ryan has been promoted to president and CEO of

LMC, Wayne, Pa. He succeeds John Somerville, who is retiring this month after 11 years with LMC. Mike Pastore, following Spartanburg Forest Products being acquired by UFP, has become UFP Retail Solutions’ national accounts sales mgr. to Home Depot. Paul Conley, ex-El & El Wood Products, has joined DW

Distribution, DeSoto, Tx., as VP of door fabrication. Adam Biggs has been promoted to branch mgr. at Richards

Building Supply, South Bend, In. Matthew Ackley, ex-USG, has joined Cornerstone

Building Brands, Cary, N.C., as president, engineered building systems. Bobby Chamberlain has joined Do it Best Corp., Fort

Wayne, In., as an LBM business development mgr. Also new are merchandise coordinator Elyssa Pozorski and consumer marketing specialists Megan Millsap and Wes

Schooley. Recently promoted: Michael McCoy, global sourcing merchandise mgr.; Ryan Robie, rental program mgr.; Carolyn Rorick, LBM operations specialist; and

Lauren Wilson, safety & general merchandise mgr.

Saratoga Forest Management – Producer of the widely renowned “Saratoga

Straights” ESLP premium #2 8-9’ PET. When you want the best, you know where to go. Goshen Forest Products – Producer of small log products in GRDF, specializing in 2x4 thru 4x8 in 8-9-10’ PET #1 & #2.

CALL TYRONE KONECNY & HIS TEAM AT 801-893-9900

We’re here to serve you and have fun doing it!

Brian Jack transferred from 84

Lumber, Raleigh-Durham, N.C., to

Summerville, S.C., as operations mgr. Jacob Sherrill was promoted to sales coordinator in Winter

Garden, Fl. Blair Madison is a new field merchandiser in 84, Pa. Phil Utech has joined the inside sales staff at Wm. B. Morse Lumber Co.,

Rochester, N.Y. Andy Gubbe, ex-Guardian, is new to inside sales at Huttig Building

Products, Dallas, Tx. Erin Johnson, ex-ProSource Wholesale, is now with Louisiana-Pacific, as a territory sales mgr. for Central

Texas. James Thomas has been promoted to Midwest territory sales mgr. for Noise Barriers, Lake Forest,

Il. Justin Malohn is new as engineering mgr. Lindsey Moore is now senior project mgr., and Kris

Barnebey, project mgr. Jonathan Bennet, ex-Home Depot, was appointed executive VP and chief commercial officer at Beacon,

Herndon, Va. Brian Wanke, ex-Allied Building Products, is now

Beacon branch mgr. in Howell, Mi. Lorna D. Christie has resigned after five years as CEO of the National

Hardwood Lumber Association,

Memphis, Tn. The NHLA executive committee is working on a transition plan. Robert Fouquet, ex-Ainsworth/

Norbord, and Ernesto Wagner joined Forest Economic Advisors,

Littleton, Ma., as partners. Fouquet, based in Vancouver, B.C., will cover engineered wood products;

Wagner will cover South America. Jim Bishop, Vesta Lee Lumber,

Bonner Springs, Ks., was elected chair of the National Lumber &

Building Material Dealers Association, succeeding Bob Sanford,

Sanford & Hawley, Unionville,

Ct. Mark Zemrowski, Von Tobel,

Valparaiso, In., is now vice chair, and Sandy Zelka, Curtis Lumber,

Ballston Spa, N.Y., is treasurer.

LMC’s John Somerville received

NLBMDA’s Lifetime Distinguished

Service Award. Helena Handbasket has been named financial advisor to Mungus-Fungus

Forest Products, Climax, Nv., report co-owners Hugh Mungus and

Freddy Fungus.

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