T R E N D L I N E S W W W . T H E Z W E I G L E T T E R . C O M M a r c h 1 2 , 2 0 1 8 , I s s u e 1 2 3 9
Value ratios
The litmus test for decision making
I f you’ve ever actually done a litmus test you know that one of the best things about it is that it’s fast. Dip the paper in the solution or put a drop of solution on the paper and “voila,” the results are shown immediately! That’s gratifying. Decision-making for leaders is kind of like that as well. You have to be able to respond to opportunities and threats quickly. It should be almost reflexive. Either it passes the litmus test or not. This is a necessary quality to have in a rapidly changing environment. What may seem to some that you are making decisions impulsively or with incomplete information is at least partially incorrect. You have done your homework. You have done your research. Your planning has helped you to “pre-think” the decision. That way you know what to do when faced with whatever you are facing – good or bad. A lot of firm principals have a real hard time with this. It hurts their effectiveness, though, and reduces their ability to keep things moving in a positive direction. People like working for people who can make a decision. It is motivational for them. For instance, we made a new employee here very happy recently. She needed some new equipment to fit out our e-learning studio. She made a detailed request. The request was granted within 30 minutes and she ordered her stuff. This was compared to the last place she worked where it would have taken weeks
“You have to be able to respond to opportunities and threats quickly. It should be almost reflexive. Either it passes the litmus test or not.”
Zweig Group recently released the 2018 Valuation Survey . Researchers found that valuations performed for an ESOP, ERISA, or IRS requirement produced value ratios that exceeded the overall median in five out of six value ratio categories. This may be because firms using an ESOP structure are typically more advanced from a financial perspective than other firms. Of firms seeking financing, many of these went through private equity channels to raise money. The overall median for the equity value to profit ratio was 3.43. OPEN FOR PARTICIPATION zweiggroup.com/survey-participation/
Mark Zweig
F I R M I N D E X Arup........................................................8 Fitzpatrick and Partners. .......................10 Gensler.................................................10 JQ.........................................................12 Klotz Associates, Inc...............................2 Merriman Anderson/Architects................4 Woods Bagot........................................10
MORE COLUMNS xz M&A INSIGHTS: Why me? Page 3 xz FROM THE CHAIRMAN: Shared infrastructure Page 9 xz GUEST SPEAKER: Better is better Page 11
Conference call: Christine Franklin See MARK ZWEIG, page 2
Page 6
T H E V O I C E O F R E A S O N F O R A / E / P & E N V I R O N M E N TA L C O N S U L T I N G F I R M S
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TRANSACT IONS / / ON THE MOVE D. WAYNE KLOTZ IS RECIPIENT OF THE 2018 OUTSTANDING PRACTITIONER INWATER RESOURCES ENGINEERING AWARD D. Wayne Klotz has been announced as the recipient of the 2018 AAWRE Outstanding Practitioner in Water Resources Engineering Award by the American Academy of Water Resources Engineers, a subsidiary of the American Society of Civil Engineers. Klotz is being recognized for his significant contributions in the practice of water resources engineering and his visionary leadership in the civil engineering profession.
Take your advice from Mark Zweig to-go.
Scholarship in Civil Engineering at both universities. His accolades include ASCE’s 2005 Edmund Friedman Professional Recognition Award, the 2011 Texas Engineer of the Year Award, and the 2011 Houston Engineer of the Year Award. Texas A&M named him a distinguished graduate in 2004, and ASCE’s Texas Section and that section’s Houston Branch have recognized his contributions with awards. The American Water Works Association honored him with lifetime membership for his more than 30 years of dedication to the association and the water profession. Klotz made significant contributions throughout his 45-year career to the disciplines of environmental and water resources through engineering practice. Klotz has been involved with ASCE at every level, including serving as its President and has supported several other professional engineering organizations. In 2010, Klotz led ASCE to cofound the Institute for Sustainable Infrastructure and served as Chair in 2013. He has served on the board ever since, shepherding the institute’s education of civil engineers in sustainable design, certification of thousands of individuals nationwide and recognition of the first Gold Award for sustainable infrastructure. Wayne achieved ISI certification and encourages civil engineers nationwide to do the same. Today, some 350 projects are estimated to be using ISI’s Envision guidelines for sustainable infrastructure, and nearly 5,000 engineering professionals have earned their Envision Sustainability Professional designation. His overall engagement in policy for water resources demonstrates his commitment to securing and providing a safe, clean, abundant water supply to the Houston area, state of Texas and the nation, and is demonstrated by his involvement in every major water initiative in this region for over 30 years. His experience has allowed him to work on major projects throughout Texas.
In support of AAWRE’s mission to “advance the practice” – to broaden and deepen the body of knowledge for practicing engineers, AAWRE was founded in 2004 to improve the practice, elevate the standards and advance the profession of water resources engineering. The AAWRE Outstanding Practitioner in Water Resources Engineering Awardwas established in 2014 to recognize a diplomate, water resources engineer who has demonstrated a significant contribution to the engineering practice based on either a single outstanding achievement or through a body of work related to the practice of environmental or water resources engineering. Klotz is the fourth recipient of the Outstanding Practitioner in Water Resources Engineering Award. Klotz was named a diplomate, water resources engineer in 2007 and he was the president of Houston-based Klotz Associates, Inc. Klotz was appointed to the Coastal Water Authority’s board of directors in 2011 by Houston’s Mayor Annise Parker, and serves as board president. He also served as co-chair for public works on Parker’s transition team and was a member the U.S. Department of Homeland Security’s Community Resilience Task Force. In addition, Klotz chaired Mayor Sylvester Turner’s tranisiton committee. Klotz earned a bachelor’s degree in civil engineering from Texas A&M University in 1974 and a master’s degree in civil engineering, from the University of Houston in 1976, and he has established the Klotz Associates Endowed
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1200 North College Ave. Fayetteville, AR 72703 Mark Zweig | Publisher mzweig@zweiggroup.com Richard Massey | Managing Editor rmassey@zweiggroup.com Christina Zweig | Contributing Editor christinaz@zweiggroup.com Sara Parkman | Editor and Designer sparkman@zweiggroup.com Liisa Andreassen | Correspondent landreassen@zweiggroup.com
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Email: info@zweiggroup.com Online: thezweigletter.com Twitter: twitter.com/zweigletter Facebook: facebook.com/thezweigletter Published continuously since 1992 by Zweig Group, Fayetteville, Arkansas, USA. ISSN 1068-1310. Issued weekly (48 issues/year) $250 for one-year print subscription; free electronic subscription at thezweigletter.com/subscribe Article reprints: For high-quality reprints, including Eprints and NXTprints, please contact The YGS Group at 717-399- 1900, ext. 139, or email TheZweigLetter@ TheYGSGroup.com. © Copyright 2018, Zweig Group. All rights reserved.
MARK ZWEIG, from page 1
and the request either modified or only partly granted. She was very grateful for the quick decision and it allowed her to feel more enthused about her job and her work environment. There are a million other examples. The point is this: know what you are trying to do with your business. Have a clear idea of the end in mind. Ask yourself every time you have to make a decision if what you are doing is best for the long-term health of the company or not, and whether or not it is consistent with your stated plans and goals. If so, go. If not, no go. Seems like a simple idea. The point is you can work on your ability to act faster by simply acting faster. That takes pre-planning but the time spent, and time saved, is well worth it! MARK ZWEIG is Zweig Group’s chairman and founder. Contact him at mzweig@zweiggroup.com.
© Copyright 2018. Zweig Group. All rights reserved.
THE ZWEIG LETTER March 12, 2018, ISSUE 1239
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O P I N I O N
Why me?
While clients want to be in the hands of an expert, they also want that expert to care deeply about the success of their project.
A best practice in business development/project initiation that you can adopt today is to always ask clients why they hired your team. Not just new clients – ask existing clients why they continue to trust you and your colleagues with valuable work. It’s important to know what we are doing that the market likes, and it’s a lot more fun to share this feedback than it is to share the “here’s what you’re doing wrong” feedback that we all have to endure sometimes.
Jamie Claire Kiser
there’s one thing I am, it’s alive and able to respond to an email or call. Responsiveness is quite literally the easiest differentiator – the “low hanging fruit” – and yet it is repeatedly, consistently cited as either an area of excellence or an area for improvement on client perception studies. Clients value responsive- “My favorite reason to be hired for a job is a glowing recommendation from a client. Something that I very rarely hear is that our technical expertise or resume was the most impressive.”
My favorite reason to be hired for a job is a glowing recommendation from a client. Something that I very rarely hear is that our technical expertise or resume was the most impressive. While clients want to be in the hands of an expert, in my experience, what clients really want is to be in the hands of an expert who cares deeply about the success of the project. I believe that the way we treat people matters, and that energy and ambition are more important than credentials (but again, I am a University of Arkansas grad). While I’ve heard dozens of reasons why a client engaged us, sometimes I hear reasons that shock me. Some specific examples in the “shock” category are below: ❚ ❚ Competitors took a week to respond to an in- quiry/RFP, or didn’t bother to respond at all. If
See JAMIE CLAIRE KISER, page 4
THE ZWEIG LETTER March 12, 2018, ISSUE 1239
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BUSINESS NEWS THE DREVER COMMENCES “PARTHENON” MARBLE MAKEOVER Drever Capital Management’s 1.5-million-square-foot redevelopment of the former First National Bank of Dallas building in the heart of the Dallas Central Business District has commenced removal and restoration of the historic marble slab panels on the building’s façade. The highest quality materials available were sourced during the construction of the historic building, originally importing the dense, handsomely veined white marble slabs from the same quarry in Greece as the marble used to build the still-standing Parthenon. Steve McCoy, president of Drever Construction Co., worked with lead architect, Merriman Anderson/Architects , and contractor, Andres Construction, to develop a solution to remove, restore, and reinstall the slabs with new connections that will secure and stabilize the tower’s exterior for decades to come. The process provides a surplus of marble and terrazzo that, to the delight of the project’s interior designers, will be reutilized in the building’s interiors. The project is scheduled to be complete by the end of 2018. “The process will allow this irreplaceable stone to not only be restored to its former glory, but remain as a sound element of the building’s structure for many years to come,” says McCoy. “The fact that the team was able to find a way for the excess marble to be repurposed adds another layer of history to this already impressive structure.” Dallas-based architects, Merriman Anderson/ Architects, are the lead architects and
designers designing the reimagined interior and exterior, and are delighted with the decision to recycle the existing marble panels. “The original marble is from Mount Pentelikon, a mountain range located in Attica, Greece,” says Aimee Sanborn, AIA, principal, Merriman Anderson/Architects. “It’s a beautiful natural stone with wonderful veining. We were able to locate the quarry in Greece and have identified the exact species. To repurpose 100 percent of the existing exterior marble tells a compelling cradle-to-cradle story of upcycling.” The condition of the panels and the integrity of the building’s engineering necessitated the decision to refurbish the marble. Existing mechanical connections were separating from the original structure. The panels will be refurbished by cladding the natural stone to a structural aluminum honeycomb backer panel, which will insure the engineering integrity and the historical value of the original marble slabs. HyCOMB USA is responsible for the stone cutting and the application of the new structural aluminum honeycomb panel. Besides creating extra marble slabs for the building interiors, marble remnants from the cutting and cleaning process will be crushed and repurposed into terrazzo to be utilized in the elevator cab floors, elevator lobby flooring and flooring on the 9th floor amenity deck. “I commend Drever Capital Management for their unwavering commitment to the quality of this project,” remarked Jerry Merriman, AIA, president, Merriman Anderson/Architects. “Repurposing is generally more expensive and time consuming than demolishing and
replacing with new. The building’s owner, Maxwell Drever, appreciates the significance of this building to the history of downtown Dallas.” Soon after the building was acquired, the largest abatement project in Texas history was completed. More than 5 million square feet of asbestos-ridden material that included 50,000 linear feet of ductwork was removed from the building so that interior construction and the marble restoration could begin. Now known as THE DREVER, the skyscraper was originally designed by architects George Dahl and Thomas E. Stanley and has been home to Hunt Oil, the Dallas Petroleum Club, and the fictitious J.R. Ewing’s office set for Ewing Oil in the television hit program, Dallas . The mid-century 52-story tower’s distinctive façade was often compared to the pinstriped fabric of a traditional banker’s suit because of the repeating pattern of white marble and dark gray floor-to-ceiling windows. THE DREVER redevelopment will include a luxury high-rise offering 324 residential units, a Thompson Hotel planned with 218 rooms, spa, retail, office, and destination restaurants. Maxwell Drever, chairman of Drever Capital Management, known for his team’s cost- effective multi-family redevelopments has said that he saw 1401 Elm “as a responsible rare investment opportunity for not only our family but especially for our legacy, impact investment-minded investors. It was a perfect fit for our ‘doing well by doing good’ investment philosophy of adding value to troubled properties and transforming neighborhoods.”
JAMIE CLAIRE KISER, from page 3
we push “our” way onto them from the initial call on, we are telling the client that they don’t know what they need, and we know better than they do. Can you imagine retaining some- one to help you who has already made it clear that they are always right? ❚ ❚ The project team we presented clearly likes working with each other. I am pleased to hear this. Building rapport and camaraderie on a project team is vital to presenting a unified front to clients and to co-workers. If you are ever concerned if your team is, in fact, a team, spend some time talking to them about their interactions with each other. Ask a team that’s constantly blamed for something internally to teach a lunch-and-learn and tell the rest of the group what they do and what they need in order to be successful, and how they like to interact internally and externally. Provide some vis- ibility to the “whipping boy” areas in the firm and see how that changes the conversation. Throwing colleagues under the bus to clients (even tacitly) is immediately recognized. If we’re willing to blame our co-workers, we won’t be there for our clients when they need us. Upon reflection, there’s really only one wrong answer to the question of why a client hired your firm: We proposed the lowest fee. JAMIE CLAIRE KISER is Zweig Group’s director of consulting. Contact her at jkiser@zweiggroup.com.
ness in a way that I can’t state more simply than this: They really, really care. ❚ ❚ We acted like we were part of the team from the intro- ductory call on. I had a now-client tell me that they were immediately impressed that Zweig Group consultants re- ferred to the firm on the other end of the phone as “we” and “us” instead of “you.” They said we made them feel that their concerns, questions, and values were shared, and they felt that we would take on their challenges as our own. This takes some reinforcement with your internal staff, but I visibly cringe when someone says “I” or “me” in a meeting when re- ferring to a team. “Upon reflection, there’s really only one wrong answer to the question of why a client hired your firm: We proposed the lowest fee.” ❚ ❚ You heard us when we explained our specific needs and allowed us to deviate from your normal process. This is vital to consulting in the A/E and management worlds. If we don’t hear what our clients say (and what they don’t say), and
© Copyright 2018. Zweig Group. All rights reserved.
THE ZWEIG LETTER March 12, 2018, ISSUE 1239
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Attendees of The Principals Academy earn 12 PDH / 12 CEUs. Zweig Group seminars are eligible for Professional Development Hours credits and Continuing Education Units. All attendees receive a certicate of completion indicating the number of hours earned during each seminar. • Financial Management • Project Management • Leadership • Mergers & Acquisitions • Ownership Transition Planning • Recruitment and Retention environmental consulting rms, and is presented in tutorial and case study workshop sessions. • Business Planning • Marketing/Business Development • Accounting The Principals Academy is Zweig Group’s agship training program encompassing all aspects of managing a professional AEC service rm. It’s the most impactful two days you can spend learning about principal leadership, nancial management, recruiting, marketing, business development, and project management. The two-day agenda covers several critical areas of business management from the unique perspective of architecture, engineering, and
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THE ZWEIG LETTER March 12, 2018, ISSUE 1239
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F r a
P R O F I L E
Conference call: Christine Franklin Comprehensive Environmental, Inc. (Best Firm #1 Geotechnical, #3 Environmental, and #13 Civil for 2017), a Miami Lakes, FL, based 80-person engineering and contracting firm.
By LIISA ANDREASSEN Correspondent
“I ’ve never termed any event in my life as a fail- ure, but as an opportunity to learn what not to do the next time,” Franklin says. “My biggest per- sonal lesson is that I cannot succeed if I try to do everything myself. People are put in your life to help you achieve your goals and you are here to help them achieve theirs.” A CONVERSATION WITH CHRISTINE FRANKLIN. The Zweig Letter: While M&A is always an op- tion, there’s something to be said about organic growth. What are your thoughts on why and how to grow a firm? Christine Franklin: Organic growth is cleaner and makes it easier to maintain the pure culture of the firm. However, it’s more difficult to achieve
the growth targets without merging with synergis- tic firms to provide a more robust product or ser- vice. It depends on what you want to accomplish. It takes time and patience to grow organically. It takes a broader vision and the ability to compro- mise for the M&A but, if successful, your growth is more rapid. TZL: While plenty of firms have an ownership transition plan in place, many do not. What’s your advice for firms that have not taken steps to identify and empower the next generation of owners? CF: I think it’s a big mistake not to have a plan in place – formal or informal. Time flies when you’re having fun so you don’t want to be caught without
Christine Franklin, President, Comprehen- sive Environ- mental, Inc.
THE ZWEIG LETTER Mar
7
a n k l i n
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TZL: Diversifying the portfolio is never a bad thing. What are the most recent steps you’ve taken to broaden your revenue streams? CF: If it makes sense, diversifying a portfolio is never a bad thing. If it’s directly connected with strategic direction of the firm, we would consider it. Recently, we added a capa- bility that was directly related to our airport-related work. TZL: The list of responsibilities for project managers is seemingly endless. How do you keep your PMs from burning out? And if they crash, how do you get them back out on the road, so to speak? CF: It’s a never ending struggle to keep your project manag- ers refreshed and renewed as project management respon- sibilities can be endless and overwhelming. We always try to keep the projects adequately staffed and provide the senior level support needed to resolve complex issues quickly and effectively. When a PM crashes it’s usually as a result of a combination of work-life issues, so we try to provide additional support and be flexible with schedules and assignments so that he/ she can work out any conflicts and take the time needed to recover. TZL: What is the role of entrepreneurship in your firm? CF: We encourage our employees to have an entrepreneur- ial spirit by rewarding behavior where employees take own- ership of assigned tasks. We believe our employee stock op- tion plan also motivates our employees to think and behave like entrepreneurs. “Start identifying your replacement at least five to seven years ahead of your planned exit date and begin the mentoring and guidance necessary to help that person develop the confidence to step into the role. This should be done for all key firm positions.” TZL: In the next couple of years, what A/E segments will heat up, and which ones will cool down? CF: Infrastructure improvements seem to be heating up. Regulatory activities will cool down under this administra- tion. TZL: With overhead rates declining over the last five years and utilization rates slowly climbing back up to pre-recession levels, how do you deal with time manage- ment policies for your project teams? Is it different for different clients? See CONFERENCE CALL, page 8
a good plan in p ace. Start identifying your replacement at least five to seven years ahead of your planned exit date and begin the mentoring and guidance necessary to help that person develop the confidence to step into the role. This should be done for all key firm positions. “Organic growth is cleaner and makes it easier to maintain the pure culture of the firm. However, it’s more difficult to achieve the growth targets without merging with synergistic firms to provide a more robust product or service.” TZL: Monthly happy hours and dog friendly offices. What do today’s CEOs need to know about today’s workforce? CF: Today’s workforce is comprised of many generations of people working together. And they each need to be un- derstood and dealt with according to what resonates with them. Stability, flexibility, work-life balance, upward mobili- ty – these all mean different things to different generations. TZL: Zweig Group research shows there has been a shift in business development strategies. More and more, technical staff, not marketing staff, are responsible for BD. What’s the BD formula in your firm? CF: Our technical staff is responsible for major business de- velopment as these are the people closest to our clients and potential clients and have first-hand knowledge of oppor- tunities. Our marketing staff supports our technical staff and also identifies long-term opportunities that our techni- cal staff can align the firm to pursue. TZL: The talent war in the A/E industry is here. What steps do you take to create the leadership pipeline need- ed to retain your top people and not lose them to other firms? CF: We continually work on attracting and retaining the great people needed to maintain our leadership position. We have a formal leadership development program that we’re still honing and trying to get right. In the interim, we continue to offer our top people challenging and reward- ing assignments that push them into developing the criti- cal thinking and decision-making abilities way beyond their industry peers. We’ve also established a stock option plan for key employees and continue to benchmark our salaries, benefits, and other perks and keep them in line with the Best Firms to Work For. TZL: As you look for talent, what position do you most need to fill in the coming year and why? CF: Project managers are the key to a project’s successful ex- ecution. The difference in the outcome of a well-trained PM and a good one is big.
© Copyright 2018. Zweig Group. All rights reserved.
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ON THE MOVE ARUP NAMES SHEBA HAFIZ WEST COAST WATER LEADER: ENGINEER BRINGS NEARLYTWO DECADES WORTH OF EXPERIENCE IN WATER PROCESSING TO FIRM Arup , the design and consulting firm for the built environment, announces that Sheba Hafiz, PE, has joined the firm as West Coast water leader, focused on client support for the firm’s growing portfolio of water projects west of the Rockies. She is also a member of Arup’s leadership team in the San Francisco office. Hafiz has 20 years of experience providing planning, program and project management, design, construction management and facility operations advice to clients in the water sector. John Eddy, Arup principal and San Francisco infrastructure leader, said, “Our water challenges in the West are as numerous as the solutions and as the jurisdictions involved. Sheba’s experience in water, wastewater and recycled water significantly grows our West Coast sector water skills, which already include water conveyance and green infrastructure.” “I’m honored to join the Arup team here on the West Coast,” Hafiz said. “Water is an integral part of a healthy and sustainable built and natural environment. I’m looking
forward to bringing my skills and experience in this field to Arup’s diverse range of clients.” Hafiz boasts both public and private water utilities as her clients. Her project work spans the Western United States, from California to Arizona and Hawaii to Washington. Clients have utilized her expertise to advance their business imperatives from early planning stages to design, construction, training, asset management and optimization of operations. She is also experienced in alternative project delivery methods including design- build and construction management at Risk. Hafiz received a B.S. in civil engineering from Jamia Millia Islamia in New Delhi and a M.S. in environmental engineering from Arizona State University. Arup’s recent water work in the Western United States includes the Polhemus (Crystal Springs Bypass) Tunnel for the San Francisco Public Utilities Commission, the Lake Mead Intake No. 3 tunnel in Las Vegas, and the Silicon Valley Clean Water Gravity Pipeline project in San Francisco. Other Arup water work in the West includes advanced surface water hydraulic modeling
for numerous clients in California and Oregon, featuring large infrastructure projects like the High Speed Rail, sea-level rise and extreme weather adaptation planning for the Bay Area Rapid Transport in San Francisco and the Kapalama Canal Catalytic Project in Honolulu, Hawaii. Arup has planned and implemented green-infrastructure on numerous projects including Bay Meadows Phase II. Arup is also providing transaction advisory and technical due diligence services to Rialto Water Services on their capital projects delivered under public private partnership. Arup provides planning, engineering, design, and consulting services for the most prominent projects and sites in the built environment. Since its founding in 1946, the firm has consistently delivered technical excellence, innovation, and value to its clients, while maintaining its core mission of shaping a better world. Arup opened its first US office more than 30 years ago and now employs 1,400 people in the Americas. The firm’s employee-ownership structure promotes ongoing investment in joint research to yield better outcomes that benefit its clients and partners.
industry will cool down and the severity will depend on what plans are put in place in 2018 to stimulate the contin- ued health of the A/E industry. TZL: They say failure is a great teacher. What’s the big- gest lesson you’ve had to learn the hard way? CF: I’ve never termed any event in my life as a failure, but as an opportunity to learn what not to do the next time. My biggest personal lesson is that I cannot succeed if I try to do everything myself. People are put in your life to help you achieve your goals and you are here to help them achieve theirs. “What goes up must come down. There will be a downturn, as business is cyclical. Within the next five years the industry will cool down and the severity will depend on what plans are put in place in 2018 to stimulate the continued health of the A/E industry.”
CONFERENCE CALL, from page 7
CF: Our time-management policies are the same for all cli- ents. We strive to complete our projects as efficiently as pos- sible. TZL: Measuring the effectiveness of marketing is diffi- cult to do using hard metrics for ROI. How do you evalu- ate the success/failure of your firm’s marketing efforts when results could take months, or even years, to mate- rialize? Do you track any metrics to guide your market- ing plan? CF: We establish goals, objectives, and tactics and evaluate them on a regularly scheduled basis. The metrics we use to guide our marketing plan include number of new proposals and presentations; number and value of wins; and hit rate. “When a PM crashes it’s usually as a result of a combination of work-life issues, so we try to provide additional support and be flexible with schedules and assignments so that he/she can work out any conflicts and take the time needed to recover.” TZL: The last few years have been good for the A/E indus- try. Is there a downturn in the forecast, and if so, when and to what severity? CF: What goes up must come down. There will be a down- turn, as business is cyclical. Within the next five years the
TZL: What’s your prediction for 2018?
CF: Overall, it should be a good year. We’ll experience a la- bor shortage and a shortage of managerial talent. If we do manage to get an infrastructure improvement bill passed, that labor shortage will be hard on the industry.
© Copyright 2018. Zweig Group. All rights reserved.
THE ZWEIG LETTER March 12, 2018, ISSUE 1239
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O P I N I O N
Shared infrastructure
T he emphasis on water and energy conservation and enhanced security is changing how developers, investors, municipalities, and tenants are looking at new development. Shared infrastructure is the prudent way to go for all, including the planet. To save scarce resources, provide enhanced services, and reduce costs, the trend is to look at multiples of buildings as a district with common utilities.
Ed Friedrichs
For many years, unless those in our industries controlled a large, multi-building parcel (and even sometimes then), each building was designed with stand-alone utilities. Today, to save scarce resources, provide enhanced services, and reduce costs, the trend is to look at multiples of buildings as a district, where shared infrastructure supports the entire area. This approach is not new. Typically, shared infrastructure is part of college, medical, and large industrial campuses and, occasionally, for multiple-building office parks. I started down this path of shared infrastructure in Orange County, California, in the mid-‘80s on a handful of multi-building office complexes. The execution then was simple, but the objectives are the same as today. On one project, we put the chillers, boilers, and cooling towers along the parking structure to achieve efficiency in
operation and allow better access for servicing the equipment. More than one building could utilize the ground-level heating and cooling equipment rather than depending on individual rooftop equipment and the attendant servicing costs. On a more advanced project, we installed sun shades around four buildings to reduce heat gain and had one set of chillers and boilers in a “Today, to save scarce resources, provide enhanced services and reduce costs, the trend is to look at multiples of buildings as a district, where shared infrastructure supports the entire area.”
See ED FRIEDRICHS, page 10
THE ZWEIG LETTER March 12, 2018, ISSUE 1239
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BUSINESS NEWS BOTANICAL-INSPIRED WEST HOTEL SYDNEY OPENS NEAR UP-AND-COMING PRECINCT Located in Sydney’s central business district and next to the new waterfront leisure and commercial Barangaroo precinct, West Hotel Sydney, Curio Collection by Hilton resides in the ideal location for travellers. This property marks the first Curio Collection by Hilton hotel in Australia. The 182-room new build hotel will be managed by Hilton, under a management agreement with M&L Hospitality. Designed by Australian architecture firm Fitzpatrick and Partners , with interiors by Woods Bagot , the hotel has a modern classic design theme, featuring deep tones with marble and brass accents. A strong botanical theme runs throughout the hotel, most evident in the beautiful open-air garden atrium and white waratah motif in the lobby.
“Opening the first Curio Collection hotel in Australia is a very exciting milestone for us,” said Mark Nogal, global head, Curio Collection by Hilton. “Being such a culturally rich city and the capital of New South Wales, Sydney is the perfect location to add to our growing global collection, which now boasts nearly 50 hotels. West Hotel will offer curious travellers seeking an authentic, memorable travel experience the ideal base to discover Sydney.” The property features 182 stylish guest rooms, including four spacious suites. Each room is equipped with Bluetooth-enabled audio visual technology and an open work area, with suites offering a separate sleek living area. The hotel also features a fully equipped gym and a private meeting/dining room. Contributing to the lively Sydney dining scene
is the on-property restaurant Solander Dining and Bar. Named after the first fleet botanist who arrived in Australia from England and helped discover several plant types, Daniel Solander, the restaurant and bar offer a modern Australian all-day dining experience with a focus on seasonal and botanical produce. Leading the Solander team is executive chef David Vandenabeele who joins the hotel after working as the head chef at a leading hotel in New York. Jane Lyons, general manager, West Hotel Sydney said, “Our motivated and engaged team members very much look forward to welcoming guests to West Hotel, providing them with exceptional experiences that exude the distinctive spirit of Sydney, and offering them all the hallmarks of Hilton hospitality as part of the Curio Collection.”
ED FRIEDRICHS, from page 9
Today, we’ve designed the shared infrastructure approach into plans for the West 2 nd District in Reno, Nevada. We’ll have a central plant for 30 buildings. There will be no equipment on the rooftops, so there will be a dramatic decrease in maintenance cost and a projected savings of 36 percent in energy use. Plus, we can use the rooftops for something much more attractive than mechanical equipment. “We’ve designed the shared infrastructure approach into plans for the West 2 nd District in Reno, Nevada. We’ll have a central plant for 30 buildings. There will be no equipment on the rooftops, so there will be a dramatic decrease in maintenance cost and a projected savings of 36 percent in energy use.” In addition, a waste water treatment plant for the entire district will reduce the district’s water use by approximately 50 percent. That’s critical in Reno because of its high-desert climate. We’ll be able to recycle our water for irrigation, cooling towers, and toilet flushing. As global warming continues and water becomes increasingly scarce, this approach will become increasingly important. We will produce more recycled water than we’ll use, so, as autonomous vehicles begin to decrease parking demand, we’ll be able to grow our own fruits and vegetables in hydroponic gardens in what had formerly been parking floors. Many more centralized functions are planned, including security systems for the entire project connected directly to first responders – fire, police, emergency, and medical services. This will make our district much more secure. I’ll continue to elaborate on these systems, and the results we obtain, as the project moves forward. ED FRIEDRICHS, FAIA, FIIDA, is the former CEO and president of Gensler. Contact him at efriedrichs@zweiggroup.com.
central plant. Those shared resources could be staged into operation to accommodate demand, without having to run all of them all of the time. This was done at the time the local utility company had dramatically increased peak hour rates. We installed large tanks under the central plant filled with slurry that allowed us to chill the medium in the tanks at night when rates were low, and then use that in the chillers during the day when rates were high. In addition, we used a raised floor in the office spaces which allowed air to be delivered from under the floor at a higher temperature and at lower fan speeds than if the air was delivered through ceiling diffusers, which often caused drafts on office workers. If you’ve ever been in an office and noticed a piece of cardboard taped over a diffuser, or a space heater under a desk to keep someone’s feet warm, you’ll appreciate the advantage of this approach. Additional benefits included no discoloration around the diffusers, since air was delivered from under the floor without recirculating with room air that had dust particles and germs mixed in. It also gave us the opportunity to reconfigure wiring without drilling holes in the slab. With most of the ductwork eliminated, the floor-to-floor height was the same as a normal office where space for duct work, sprinkler pipes, and light fixtures have to be planned above the acoustic tile ceiling. Finally, since this client reconfigured their offices frequently, and the floor and ceiling were laser-level, we were able to use demountable partitions. When offices had to be reconfigured, sheet-rockers, taping, and sanding were not necessary, providing a much cleaner and more pleasant work environment. Since it was such an unusual approach at the time, we monitored the project over the next 10 years. During that time, there were no air quality complaints and absenteeism due to colds and flu was reduced. The approach proved to yield a much healthier environment, and the project was awarded the energy company’s Sustainable Building of the Year award.
© Copyright 2018. Zweig Group. All rights reserved.
THE ZWEIG LETTER March 12, 2018, ISSUE 1239
11
O P I N I O N
Better is better
So many firms want to be at the top of the list for growth, but to get there, you have to be good, not necessarily fast.
T here is much hullabaloo made in our industry about growth and size. And it seems these are believed to be the largest measures of success for companies. The temptation to focus on growth is great as the topic comes up in nearly every conversation when peers meet.
Gerry Salontai GUEST SPEAKER
There is a constant barrage of published lists in various industry trade magazines and local business publications. Then there are the conference panel discussions that quiz leaders on their “growth strategies,” with the larger companies getting marquis attention, of course, and thus the feeling that size matters. It’s no wonder companies aspire to not simply appear on a list, but to be on top of the list. At times, it appears everyone is in a “race” to the summit. One must ask oneself if the measure of success is that you are bigger than a competitor? It certainly can’t be the sole measure. In fact, I take a different viewpoint on growth and size. It starts with the understanding that when people talk about “growth strategies” we need to be reminded that growth is not a strategy. Growth, rather, is the
result of executing good strategy. Growth is the result of doing a lot of things well. An analogy would be success in team sports, where it takes a combination of strategy, good coaching, a variety of skills, capabilities among the players, and the ability to execute. Like team sports, a successful company should include enduring client relationships, produce quality work, perform well financially, have a great workplace environment, advance people’s careers, be sustainable from one generation to another, and achieve good growth to name just a few characteristics. With all the above in mind, we can now begin to think of how to build a well-rounded company that achieves success in all aspects of the business.
See GERRY SALONTAI, page 12
THE ZWEIG LETTER March 12, 2018, ISSUE 1239
12
ON THE MOVE JQ ANNOUNCES ASSOCIATE PROMOTIONS IN FIRM’S DALLAS OFFICE JQ has announced the promotion of Josh Bronstad, PE, ENV SP and Jennifer Ridd, PE to associates with the firm in its Dallas office, according to JQ partner John J. Hoenig, PE, LEED AP. Says Hoenig, “We are very pleased to recognize these talented individuals and look forward to their continued contributions to our firm’s pursuit of excellence in serving our clients and the community. They are valued members of the JQ team and embody our firm’s culture and values.” Bronstad is an eight-year veteran with JQ and serves as a senior project manager in the Infrastructure group. Bronstad has expertise in structural engineering for water and wastewater facilities and extensive experience in the analysis and design of deep hydraulic
retaining structures, ranging from pump stations over 60-foot deep to cantilevered buttressed retaining walls over 40-foot tall. Bronstad holds a Master of Engineering in Structural Engineering and a Bachelor of Science in Civil Engineering with a Structural Emphasis from Texas A&M University. Ridd joined JQ in 2014 and serves as a senior project manager in the Buildings group. With more than 14 years of experience, Ridd has considerable experience in providing structural engineering design, analysis, project management and feasibility studies for concrete, structural steel and masonry structures. Ridd has experience in serving clients spanning diverse markets from higher education academic buildings and athletic stadiums to commercial office buildings to healthcare facilities. Ridd holds a Masters of
Science in Architectural Engineering from the University of Texas at Austin and a Bachelor of Science in Civil Engineering from Purdue University. Ridd has held various positions on the DFW Chapter Board of ACE Mentoring and remains actively involved with the organization. Founded in 1984, JQ provides structural and civil engineering, geospatial and facility performance services throughout the United States. The firm is considered a leader in engineering design innovation and technology to support its complex, multi-state and multi-market projects. Nationally, JQ has been recognized as a Best Place to Work and as a Hot Firm by Zweig Group. Based in Texas, JQ has offices in Austin, Dallas, Fort Worth, Houston, Lubbock, and San Antonio.
and overall management. Ensure you are making the right decisions for the right reasons that focus on financial success in all categories. Don’t fall prey to a “lifestyle” approach that benefits only a few. Accept above median performance only as a the “low bar” in bad years and strive for “upper quartile” profitability. And use prudent cash and balance sheet management that does not put undue risk, financial leverage or debt on the company. Live the reality that we are in a people business and that it’s crucial to recognize that company success is directly tied to people success. Take the time to hire the right people who will occupy the right seat on the bus. For those who don’t quite fit or perform, either put them in a new seat or get them off the bus. Empower the right people to excel and reward them. Move their careers along. Lastly, invest in your future. Spend profits in the right places. Investing in new markets, equipment, and tools, and training and leadership development are key to that future. Vigilantly retain some of that precious profit in the company to build a strong balance sheet to strengthen the company today and to ensure a smooth transition in the future. Hopefully the above will help you in your endeavor to achieve success in your company without falling prey to the race to be at the top of a list. And most importantly, remember that bigger is not better. Better is better. And if you focus on better, you will get bigger. GERRY SALONTAI is the founder of Salontai Consulting Group, LLC. Contact him at gerry@salontai.com. “Invest in your future. Spend profits in the right places. Investing in new markets, equipment and tools, and training and leadership development are key to that future.”
GERRY SALONTAI, from page 11
This starts with developing a strong vision and purpose for the company. A vision that is bold enough to look beyond the day-to-day to ultimately take the company over the horizon and seize new opportunities. This, combined with a meaningful purpose that defines why the company exists, inspires commitment and engagement from employees, centered around why they believe their work is significant while ultimately contributing to people’s lives. In combination, these create a rallying cry that drives companies to unstoppable success. Next, establish just a handful of clear and very focused strategies to reach the vision and live out the purpose. They can create a new paradigm of performance or strengthen the company from where it is today. “Live the reality that we are in a people business and that it’s crucial to recognize that company success is directly tied to people success. Take the time to hire the right people who will occupy the right seat on the bus. For those who don’t quite fit or perform, either put them in a new seat or get them off the bus.” Organizationally, it’s then crucial to keep the company client-centered. This can include the way you are structurally organized, but more importantly it’s about empowering your people to deliver what they do best rather than encumbering or bogging them down with needless complexity and process that frustrates both them and your clients. Those who work with clients should be at the top and should be the focal point of your organizational chart. Operationally, it’s important to run your business like a business. Be disciplined and consistent in your approach
© Copyright 2018. Zweig Group. All rights reserved.
THE ZWEIG LETTER March 12, 2018, ISSUE 1239
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