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Thought Leaders
February 1, 2002
Professional Builder
After you have the right people in place, understand your market’s desires and deliver the highest-quality product, you’re left with only one missing element — killer ideas. These ideas aren’t unique to the high- tech world; they exist in our industry, and they have become the one bankable currency amid today’s nervous economy.
In this special report we showcase the Thought Leaders who challenge concepts many accept as law and in doing so demonstrate the rich rewards that come from breaking through barriers and refusing to settle for the ordinary.
Thought Leaders |
John Knott: Holistic Development
Third-generation builder/developer John Knott is used to being told that what he wants to do can’t be done. It’s the mantra skeptics always attach to projects that challenge conventional development guidelines, and those are the only kind Knott builds. Leslie Dashew: Succession Strategies
Michael Pyatok: Neighborhood Building
Claes Fornell: Customer Science
William McDonough: Eco-Effectiveness
Randy Jackson: Grayfield Villages
Tom & Caroline Hoyt: Exit Strategies
Paul Smith: Place-Making
Joe Lstiburek & Betsy Pettit: Better BuildingCalling himself a forensic engineer, Joe Lstiburek has done more work than he’d like finding problems and fixing failed buildings. Ideally, he and architect Betsy Pettit say, houses would get built correctly from the beginning. “Right now, I’m a building pathologist,” Lstiburek says. “I want to be an obstetrician. I’m tired of doing autopsies. I want to deliver healthy, bouncing baby homes.”
Verne Harnish: Growth Formulas
Paco Underhill: Shopping Behavior
David Weekley: Human Accounting
Andres Duany & Elizabeth Plater-Zyberk: Home/Work
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© 2008, Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All Rights Reserved.


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