4 minute read
A big idea for startups in Boise
from HBSD_1021
by ensembleiq
Franklin Building Supply leads the charge to incubate a construction-industry hub.
Boise has a rich history of construction innovation.
Levi Smith is no stranger to startups. Before he became the president of Boise, Idaho-based Franklin Building Supply, the native Texan founded an Austin barbeque business that shipped craft briskets nationwide to what he calls a “discerning base of customers.”
More recently, Smith has combined his personal passion for startups and entrepreneurialism with a professional interest in cultivating economic growth in Franklin Building Supply’s hometown of Boise. The result of those blended interests is a “vision for a home construction related startup ecosystem in Idaho.”
In other words, Smith wants to help make Boise an ipso facto capital of building supply innovation. Think of the connection between Hollywood and filmmaking, or New York City and high finance, and that’s kind of the idea.
“When I look at our industry, really no city or region in the United States has laid claim to being the place where construction industry startups, and specifically home-construction startups, call home,” Smith said. “And you need a concentration of talent, resources, capital, and all those things to really create the momentum.”
And according to Smith and thanks to events like the upcoming Hacking for Homebuilding event, the pieces are coming together. Businesses in Boise and Idaho are throwing their support into cultivating startup companies that can provide specific solutions, while adding fuel to the general economy.
— Levi Smith, Franklin Building Supply president
Hacking for Homebuilding, which combines elements of televisions’
Franklin Building Supply is the state’s largest independent pro dealer.
Shark Tank product pitch show and graduate level business classes, launched in 2020 with $17,500 prizes. The prize money has been doubled and the field has been expanded for the 2021 event, which builds to a climax during Boise Entrepreneur Week, the week of Oct. 18.
One key feature of the contest is its reverse-pitch format. That means that entrepreneurs are giving industry-specific problems to solve.
Among the 2021 Problem Statements, supplied by industry participants, are the following:
Job site theft;
Theft or vandalism of equipment trailers;
Lack of visualization tools;
No process to pass along legacy knowledge;
Training new hires working remotely;
Better training and accountability to installers;
Reduce waste of unused materials;
Tracking the last contractor to leave a property. Smith described that last problem statement as a particularly good example of the value of the reverse-pitch format. “You’d have to be in our industry for a while to realize that is a huge problem,” he said. “If you don’t know that the tile guys are done, for instance, you could lose a couple of costly days in the building cycle. You want to know who is the last person to leave. That is a unique problem in our industry.”
With Franklin Building Supply playing a central role, the movement has attracted participation from Boise Cascade, Therma-Tru Doors, Weyerhaeuser, IKO, OrePac Building Products among others.
It makes sense for Boise to step up and claim its position in building product innovation, he said.
“A lot of people have done a tremendous amount of work to get the ecosystem where it is today,” he said. “Boise and Idaho have a deep connection to our industry. It’s rich in timber and rich in history when you think about companies like Boise Cascade, there’s a lot of building tradition. Many leading companies maintain roots here. Trus-Joist was invented here. Why shouldn’t this be the place to make construction startups viable.”
Smith is upfront about his business interest in the movement taking place in Franklin Building Supply’s hometown.
Quality time with a Boise booster
Boise, Idaho-based Franklin Building Supply President Levi Smith speaks with HBSDealer’s Ken Clark in a recent episode of the One-on-One Video Series.
Smith and Franklin Building Supply, the state’s largest independent pro dealer, have played a central role in an effort to develop a startup ecosystem in Boise and Idaho. The idea is to create a hub of home-construction related startups, foster innovation and boost the general economy.
The Hacking for Homebuilding program, produced in concert with Boise State University›s Venture College and College of Engineering, is one of the highlights of the effort.
Watch the interview at hbsdealer.com/
Clark (top) and Smith examine the potential for Boise as a constructionstartup hub during a recent HBSDealer One-on-One interview.