Work in the Office
Builders often assume that the function of the office
is to answer and route telephone calls, relay messages, and perform filing
and bookkeeping duties. These are necessary, of course, because they are
part of the communication and record-keeping functions usually centralized
there. But they are only part of the office process.
The primary purpose of a construction office is to
provide the builder with a central organizational point for all field
activities, project development and control, and coordination of all
phases of the business.
The office accumulates and stores data on jobs,
sales, and all other operational areas for retrieval and reference. From
these files all important documents are created. Chapter 5 discusses data
storage and retrieval at length. The office also processes the receipt of
money and payment of bills, as discussed in Chapter 18. The records that
result from these and other office activities are the basis for growth,
planning and financial controls - both first-line organizational
functions.
Cost control includes many functions
undertaken by the builder and his staff to ensure that costs and expenses
remain in line with the budget or plan. This is an ongoing activity and
occurs not only during each job but for the life of the business. These
plans and budgets are developed from current data sent to and collected in
the office.
Costly duplication of effort and missed deadlines can
be avoided by office coordination. This function also helps prevent
cost overruns, labor force inefficiency, and delivery and distribution
problems. This too takes place in the office, based on information
compiled there, as shown in Chapter 10.
Staffing the Office
Offices must be expanded at some point in the
company's growth, and the staff must also grow. Some builders hire
employees simply to “put out fires”. This may start when the builder
himself can no longer run his one-man operation without someone to answer
calls or estimate new business or do the bookkeeping. But the need for
office expansion should be foreseen long before it is needed. As shown in
Chapters 6, 7, and 8, office growth should be coordinated with overall
company growth.
The rest of this chapter examines briefly the three
basic functions someone in every building business must perform:
secretarial work, bookkeeping, and job cost estimating.
Secretarial work is an essential part of every
building business: someone must handle filing and correspondence,
telephone messages, and mail processing while the builder and his
construction staff tend to their own duties. The secretary is an internal
organizer, helping the builder locate essential records and process
written and verbal communications.
A bookkeeper handles all functions related to
financial reporting: bank reconciliations, check writing, income
recording, billings, and financial statements. The bookkeeper may also be
called upon to establish or maintain some of the company's control
systems: analysis of job costs or general expenses in comparison with
budgets, trend analysis, and labor summaries.
An estimator is necessary when the builder's
time and duties do not allow him to research and carefully compile the
detailed data good estimating requires. This can be especially true when
there is enough building volume to keep an estimator busy full time.
Few builders start out with a full-time employee. It
is difficult to keep a full-time employee when building volume is low and
cash must be put back into field operations or used to pay off loans.
For this reason, builders in small or one-man
operations often forego needed assistance and try to do all administrative
tasks on their own. When they can no longer handle office work and field
work too, they usually look for an all-around employee. This may be a
spouse who knows about construction indirectly, or someone hired as a
"trainee" or "apprentice" with hope of higher pay and position when the
company expands. This individual is expected to be a
secretary/bookkeeper/accountant/assistant to the builder, filling many
shoes at once.
This approach can work inexpensively, especially when
the builder's demands for time and efficiency are not great. But he will
have a higher chance of success if he is willing to provide specialized
training and a well-documented set of procedures, anticipating company
growth and the hiring of office specialists.
Short of full specialization, a builder can combine
tasks and responsibilities and still maintain a high degree of efficiency.
In growing low-volume and one-man shops, combining jobs may be a way of
justifying a dedicated full-time employee who becomes knowledgeable in
more than one set of office duties.
The common dual capacity employee is the
secretary-bookkeeper. A competent secretary can be trained to take care of
many bookkeeping functions and may provide an excellent alternative to a
part-time bookkeeper.
An estimator can be a valuable executive assistant to
the builder. With his knowledge of the field, the estimator may double as
a superintendent of overall jobs, responsible for overseeing other
superintendents and relieving the builder of many time-consuming and
repetitive control tasks. This person must be viewed as a valuable
employee; much of the builder's responsibility is shifted to his
shoulders.
The use of part-time or temporary help is seldom the
best solution in the long term. Temporary employees can be referred by
agencies, to which the builder must pay a premium above the going market
rate for such help.
Recognize that most part-time arrangements are not
long-lasting. The person seeking a part-time position is usually motivated
by career goals that are different from your own and from those of most of
your full-time employees. Their position with the company is usually only
a means of support until something better comes along; very few people
seek permanent part-time work.
Thus, part-time employees seldom grow with the
company; no great efficiency, commitment, or sense of involvement from
them can usually be expected. Because of this, and because of high
part-time turnover, a builder's overall office efficiency may be much
lower than for permanent full-time help-and his field operations may even
be affected by office personnel problems.
The Office as a Control Function
The builder must be able to manage all aspects of
company activity from a central location. Not only must he stay within
budget, but time and effort must be planned in advance. In the field, this
means maximizing the use of labor, cutting down on idle time and excessive
travel between sites, and assigning the most qualified people to each
task.
Of the many functions a well-planned office handles,
that of direct labor control is probably most valuable. The builder whose
job schedules are planned days and occasionally even weeks ahead of time
can maximize his productivity, cut back on idle time, and match the right
employee with the right job. Scheduling is thus one of the most important
office functions. The builder may want to be involved directly in
scheduling, or he may delegate this responsibility to a knowledgeable
employee.
The person who does the office and field scheduling
should allow for contingencies as a matter of policy. When a job is
held up because materials are not delivered on time or because
subcontractors fall behind schedule, the scheduler must have some
alternate plan for utilizing his labor force. Contingency plans should be
worked out between the scheduler and the builder himself, because idle
time erodes potential profits.
Clear labor allocation policies, and daily
consultations between scheduler and builder, can allow the company to
capitalize on unforeseen setbacks. On any given day, be able to shift the
labor force from one site to another if deliveries are stalled or
materials are dropped on site ahead of time.
The Office and the Company Goal
The builder-manager in a small company must do
everything that is required of the chief executive in a large corporation
and more. Because he has fewer specialized employees, he must excel in
several areas to do as well. He cannot afford the luxury of making
mistakes, as he does not have the margin for error enjoyed by large
corporations, which can absorb losses by spreading the burden of any loss.
Every businessman plans and organizes to some extent. Planning is nothing
more than assuming certain things about the future based on current
knowledge. For example, the builder who sees an administrative workload
piling up knows he will have to hire a secretary. He also knows the
limitations of his budget. By bringing these two factors together, he may
plan how to accumulate or set aside funds to hire the necessary help.
Successful Control and the Office
There are seven key elements of successful control-
all of them take place primarily in the builder's office.
Organization is the first element. The builder
must have an organized office in which the basic company functions and
routines are assigned and controlled. The right people must handle their
work within a predetermined budget and labor structure. The builder must
be able to identify and define problems-and devise solutions-in a fast,
organized manner. The second element is planning. The builder is
the company's planner. To reach his goals, he must plan not only the basic
staffing of his company but the financing of his projects and short-term
and long-term growth.
Forms and procedures are the third key element
in executive control. Too much valuable time is often spent training
personnel; too much responsibility rests on individuals rather than on
effective systems; and too many methods of operations are nothing more
than thought processes. Office procedures should be committed to paper to
document vital functions and create a logical basis for procedures
updating. A good set of office forms helps increase internal efficiency
and control.
Office systems are the fourth key element.
With the right procedures work proceeds in an orderly fashion. Systems
must be integrated to avoid duplication of effort among employees
and to allow for ease of conversion from one system to another. Whether
manual or automated, office systems are the first of a builder's ability
to control overhead and maximize personnel efficiency.
Internal controls are the fifth vital element
in successful corporate control. These include many of the bookkeeping,
personnel, scheduling, routing, and secretarial functions that keep the
company on a daily course. Internal controls also include those exercised
and overseen as part of the each department's standard procedures. The
builder should be able to delegate some of this authority, and the
close-contact control function may be handled on a supervisory level. This
is the most efficient use of control-the builder stays in close touch yet
internal controls maintenance stays in the hands of his supervisors.
The working environment is the sixth key
control element in any construction office. Without enough space, basic
equipment, and employee amenities, it is impossible to keep employees on
the job. The builder will be hampered by the cost of turnover and
training, distractions and low morale, and a general lack of enthusiasm
for the builder's goals.
Seventh, the builder must maintain effective
communications systems between himself, his staff, and his employees.
Without effective communications systems the builder has little chance of
coordinating field and office operations to reach his goals. Such
communications systems may include interoffice mail, multiple phone lines
and intercoms, daily reports, secretarial or switchboard procedures, and
even portable site phones and radio communications units.
Employee Involvement
Any builder who invites and encourages employee
involvement in the operation of his business will discover several things.
First, employees who are asked to share in the decision-making process are
more motivated and take more interest in their work. Second, their ideas
can save you money and help you find better ways to get the work done.
Many contractors don't permit much give and take in
the office, afraid that they will lose control. But there is a difference
between authority and involvement. It's true that allowing a free rein can
lead to confusion in the minds of employees - whether you have one or one
hundred people on your staff. But good managers know that many employees
take real interest in their tasks. They know better than anyone where
improvements are possible. Employee ideas can be asked for in a
number of ways. The traditional suggestion box is probably the least
desirable. It tends to become a forum for complaints instead of
constructive solutions. Instead of a suggestion box, make it known that
you're interested in hearing about suggestions for improvements,
person-to-person, on an informal basis, and at just about any time.
Many builders use a regular five-minute weekly staff
meeting. This idea works both in the office and with crews on the job,
although the issues are probably much different. On the job, safety and
scheduling are big issues. In the office, you can invite employees to make
suggestions for improvement, point out problems, or ask questions.
Anything that's said during this meeting should be "off the record" as far
as you're concerned. Ask for constructive criticism if that's appropriate.
Your response is the key to the success of this idea.
You must be able to follow up on good ideas and take criticism well
if the weekly meeting idea is to work out.
Participation programs can be either informal
(such as through casual conversations or weekly five-minute meetings) or
highly formalized. In manufacturing companies these programs use
participation teams, quality circles, task groups, or committees to
analyze problems and prepare recommendations. Many companies have been
very successful with these programs, although they tend to decline in
effectiveness if not fully supported by top management.
You can put the same idea into action in your own
company, even if you have only two or three employees. It makes no sense
to appoint a committee in a very small company, but you can respond to
every suggestion by making the employee offering the suggestion
responsible for studying it and recommending a solution. This teaches
employees to think in terms of solutions instead of problems. Too often,
employees complain or point out what's wrong, but don't offer constructive
ideas to correct the problems. When that happens, give the employee who
raises the issue the task of coming up with a sound solution. Give him or
her the assignment and a deadline. Ask the employee to check back with you
periodically and report on the progress being made.
Many issues will be dropped when you use this
technique. But others will result in money-saving ideas.
Individual work goals can be set for
employees. If you take it upon yourself to suggest goals for your own
people, you can often inspire them to start thinking in terms of a target.
For many of us, working toward a goal isn't a natural
process; it's one that has to be learned. But once you get used to the
idea, it becomes instinctive.
For example, assume you hire an employee to organize
your office. Give that employee goals: Come up with an efficient method
for keeping job cost postings up to date, design reports that summarize
the status of every job by Friday of each week, complete the gathering and
recording of information so there's no month-end backlog.
Make a short or long term goal part of every
assignment. These can be both company goals and personal (career) goals.
Help your employees develop job skills, define where they want to go in
their careers, and show them how to meet both company and personal goals.
Improved morale is one of the benefits of an
employee participation program. Improvements in efficiency or profits are
just two of the benefits. Better morale is an inevitable by-product.
Your efforts to control work in the office will be
made easier when employees are involved and have a sense of ownership in
their area of responsibility. Your staff will be more secure and confident
with a better definition of their jobs and their importance in the
organization. Control is easier if each employee has a sense of
involvement. Once you've developed company goals and included your
employees in those goals, their individual participation will benefit
them, and you as well. Rather than having to handle a staff of resisting
and unwilling employees, you'll be recognized as the person best qualified
to help everyone in the company meet their personal goals