Talk Back
Post a CommentRelated Articles
- T.W. Lewis Earns Gold National Housing Quality Award for 2009
- NHQ 2009: K. Hovnanian’s Virginia division has cultivated trades who love them
- NHQ 2009: K. Hovnanian – Northern California is all about Employee Satisfaction
- Florida Home Builder Nabs Second NHQ Silver Award
- Mungo Homes: More Than a Family Business
[View All]
|
|||||||
HousingZone Most Popular Stories
- Home Mortgage Rates Set to Move Higher Next Spring
- Tax Credit Extension to Give Housing Recovery a Boost
- Design Challenge Winners Tackle the Multigenerational Household
- The Energetic Discipline Behind Professional Builder's Builder of the Year
- What remodelers need to know about the new lead paint rules
- Remodelers Tighten Up Labor Costs to Stay Afloat
- Use abandoned phone numbers to boost remodeling business
- What Today's First-Time Buyers Want in a New Home
- 100 Best New Products 2009
- Remodeling market down, but remodelers expect recovery
Quality Leadership
Rod Sutton, Editor in Chief
March 1, 2001
Professional Remodeler
![]() |
| Rod Sutton, CGRA, Editor In Chief |
Reporting about these companies is simple. Do basic research, make a few telephone calls, and take great notes. But, in order to truly understand how a quality-driven remodeler functions, first-hand observation has no equal.
Last year, Oakland, Calif.-based Winans Construction won the Gold Award. The company looks good on paper, and certainly the owners—Paul and Nina, CRs—have an excellent reputation in the industry and in their local market. They’re involved at all levels, and their peers speak highly of them.
But the company’s greatness exists at the project and home office levels. It’s where the work happens, where the customer interaction takes place, where the projects are built. What happens at the company’s headquarters exemplifies true quality management: a team of professionals, fully committed to common goals, working and living in a caring, productive environment.
Winans didn’t reach Gold that way.
The Winans have discovered that their employees will support what the owners believe in, but only if employees have ownership in the process. If it’s the Winans’ vision from above, the employees won’t buy it. This is the subtle missing link in many companies’ drive for quality success, and for such an entreprenuerial-type industry as remodeling, it can be a foreign concept.
As we spent time within the Winans organization, messages that couldn’t be captured via telephone or on paper became evident. Employees understood and were committed to the processes that led to success for the company. It wasn’t just recitation of catch phrases or buzzwords; in today’s venacular: They got it.
Quality leadership is like that. It’s not passed down, layer by layer, until the folks that do the work "understand." Quality leadership rises to the top. Common values become company values, and company values become a culture that nurtures success.
Also See:
© 2009, Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All Rights Reserved.










Digg This
