Jerry Aliberti Gets Highlighted by TatsTalks
Jerry Aliberti • July 4, 2024
Operating a Successful Project in Construction
TatsTalks
highlighted me in an article with my insights and content on how to be successful in your construction project. Check out the article to learn how to get every project started effectively, stay on budget, avoid common worksite problems, and much more. I share information that gives every project the highest chance of success before the first shovel hits the ground. Click here
to see the article written by Robert Puharich.

The Challenge So I'm talking to this contractor last week who runs a $60 million construction company, and he tells me he walked into his office Monday morning ready to finally call that developer who's been dangling a 2.5-year project in front of him. This thing is right up his alley, and he knows his team could absolutely crush it. But before he can even grab his phone, here come the interruptions. His project manager needs approval on a change order, his superintendent wants to switch concrete suppliers, and his estimator is asking whether to include some risky scope in a bid that's due today. By lunch, he'd fielded twelve decisions that, honestly, his team should be handling without him. Now my first question to him was about where his lower-level executives were in all this, but for today, I want to focus on something else entirely. Why are so many questions landing on his desk in the first place? Meanwhile, and as you guessed, that developer call never happened, and he's sitting there thinking, "I built this whole company so I could work on growing it, not so I could approve every material swap and schedule change." The Impact Here's the thing that's killing me about this situation. While he's stuck approving routine decisions, his competitors are out there building the relationships that land the next big contract. That developer I mentioned? He requires months of strategic relationship building, but my friend can't block out the time because there's always another operational fire to put out. His backlog should be growing, but instead, he's spending his energy on stuff that keeps him busy instead of stuff that makes him money. The brutal part is his team has gotten comfortable just asking him instead of thinking it through, because why take responsibility when the boss will just make the call for you? The Shift So here's something powerful I've been working on with my clients that you can start immediately, and I'm telling you, this will absolutely change how your business runs. Starting Monday morning, you and your key people are keeping a decision journal for thirty days. Every time someone comes to you with a question, write it down. What they asked, what triggered it, what you told them. Have them track the same thing on their end.

The Challenge In construction, reputation is your currency. It is what keeps the phones ringing, keeps your bids in the mix, and determines who trusts you with the next big project. Yet too many contractors overlook how much their partners shape that reputation. For general contractors, the subcontractors you invite to your jobs are a mirror of your standards. For subcontractors, the general contractors you attach your name to send an equally loud message. The uncomfortable reality is that your partners become an extension of you. If they cut corners, miss deadlines, or operate chaotically, you wear that stain too. Do this often enough and people start questioning your judgment. On the other hand, when you consistently build alongside reliable, disciplined partners, the industry begins to see you differently. Suddenly, you are not just another bidder; you are the company that delivers.