WHY NOT EVERYDAY?

TGIM!  THANK GOD IT’S MONDAY.

A few nuggets were uncovered over the last few days, that I wanted to share with you all.

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Why not every day?  Why can’t we treat our family like we do on Christmas?   Why can’t we treat our veterans like we do on veterans day?  Our moms and dads on their day?  Why can’t we love our nation like we do on July 4th?   Why can’t we be thankful like we are on Thanksgiving?   Why can’t we love our Lord like we do on Easter?   It’s a choice.  We CHOOSE to do these things on “special” days.  Make every day special!

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This is really amazing.  The best coaches in the world, and Pat Summit was certainly one of them, seem to figure it out along the way.  It’s about sports but so much more.  Coach Summit recently past away; she was the Tennessee Volunteer basketball coach for decades.  Her player Sheila Collins saved a letter the coach wrote to her just prior to her first game in 1982 for the Vols.  Sheila shared it with Sally Jenkins and that letter was posted in the Washington Post recently. 

Shelia, This is your first game. I hope you win for your sake, not mine. Because winning’s nice. It’s a good feeling. Like the whole world is yours. But it passes, this feeling. And what lasts is what you’ve learned. And what you’ve learned about is — life. That’s what sport is all about — life!

The whole thing is played out in an afternoon. The happiness of life, the miseries, the joys, the heartbreaks. There’s no telling what will turn up. There’s no telling how you’ll do. You might be a hero. Or you might be absolutely nothing.

There’s just no telling. Too much depends on chance, on how the ball bounces.

I’m not talking about the game. I’m talking about life. But it’s life that the game is all about. Just as I said, every game is life, and life is a game. A serious one. Dead serious. But here’s what you do with serious things. You do your best. You take what comes.

You take what comes and you run with it.

Winning is fun . . . Sure.

But winning is not the point.

Wanting to win is the point.

Not giving up is the point.

Never letting up is the point.

Never being satisfied with what you’ve done is the point.

The game is never over. No matter what the scoreboard reads, or what the referee says, it doesn’t end when you come off the court.

The secret of the game is in doing your best. To persist and endure, “to strive, to seek, to find, and not to yield.”

I’m proud to be your Coach,

Pat Head Summitt

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A Jon Gordonism to focus on this week:

Positive leaders:

-Are optimistic about the future

-Believe in their team

-Embrace challenges

-Grow from failure

-Keep moving forward

– Joel Fleischman.  Joel is Head Coach of the solution providers for Drexel Building Supply.  (drexelteam).   You can follow him on twitter:  @JoelmFleischman.   Our mission is to be a supplier of others happiness.  I hope this little post did just that.

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ONE

TGIM!

 

Team,

You get ONE life, not two.

***

And that life just got smaller.

Just got smaller again.

I want to, or I will?

I should of, or I did?

Someone should, or will you?

Fear makes you not start, and often not finish.

Faith makes you start, and helps you finish.

You will never live again.

Ever.

 

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One quick story.

A coach told him you can do anything if you believe in yourself.

She then said to the player doubting himself.

“Go, move that rock.”

It was a huge boulder.

He tried and tried and couldn’t move it.

He gave up.  He said it was impossible.

She went over and helped him.

She said, “Son, you didn’t try your best, you didn’t ask someone for help.  Often you see you can’t do it yourself, but you can encourage your team to help.  Nothing is impossible.”

TEAM.

 

*******

Don’t wait for your life to start.  Get on the ride.  Hit the gas and go for it.

No one was ever created to be normal.  Use your skills that you uniquely have.

– Joel Fleischman.  Joel is Head Coach of the solution providers for Drexel Building Supply.  (drexelteam).   You can follow him on twitter:  @JoelmFleischman.   Our mission is to be a supplier of others happiness.  I hope this little post did just that.

 

 

I NEVER SAID SHE STOLE MY MONEY

TGIM!

E-mail, quick, easy, and it’s the way we communicate…

BUT BE EVER SO CAREFUL.

E-MAIL CAN BE YOUR WORST ENEMY.

Here’s the example.

I Never Said She Stole My Money: 7 Different Meanings

“I never said she stole my money” has 7 different meanings depending on the stressed word.

I didn’t say she stole my money – someone else said it.

I didn’t say she stole my money – I didn’t say it.

I didn’t say she stole my money – I only implied it.

I didn’t say she stole my money – I said someone did, not necessarily her.

I didn’t say she stole my money – I considered it borrowed, even though she didn’t ask.

I didn’t say she stole my money – only that she stole money.

I didn’t say she stole my money – she stole stuff which cost me money to replace.

Seven simple words that have 7 meanings.

 

Now think about sending a long e-mail to an upset customer, a proposal to a future client you have never met, a “process and procedure/accountability” e-mail to a team member saying they screwed up and need to get better (but you still love them).
Imagine how many UNINTENTIONAL MEANINGS THAT COULD HAVE!!!???!!!
If it’s personal, emotional, sensitive, sales potential related… don’t e-mail.  Meet face to face, or at least pick up the phone.  Avoid at all costs e-mails back and forth.
That way the MEANING IS CLEAR.
– Joel Fleischman.  Joel is Head Coach of the solution providers for Drexel Building Supply.  (drexelteam).   You can follow him on twitter:  @JoelmFleischman.   Our mission is to be a supplier of others happiness.  I hope this little post did just that.

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HOMEPLATE IS 17″

TGIM!

It’s baseball season, and I know a lot of you play, cheer, or coach.

It’s also our selling season, so we let “a lot” slide because our teammates are “too busy to do it right.”

This blog addresses both of these things!

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In Nashville, Tennessee, during the first week of January, 1996, more than 4,000 baseball coaches descended upon the Opryland Hotel for the 52nd annual ABCA convention.

While I waited in line to register with the hotel staff, I heard other more veteran coaches rumbling about the lineup of speakers scheduled to present during the weekend. One name, in particular, kept resurfacing, always with the same sentiment — “John Scolinos is here? Oh man, worth every penny of my airfare.”

Who the heck is John Scolinos, I wondered. Well, in 1996 Coach Scolinos was 78 years old and five years retired from a college coaching career that began in 1948. No matter, I was just happy to be there.

He shuffled to the stage to an impressive standing ovation, wearing dark polyester pants, a light blue shirt, and a string around his neck from which home plate hung — a full-sized, stark-white home plate. Pointed side down.

Seriously, I wondered, who in the hell is this guy?

After speaking for twenty-five minutes, not once mentioning the prop hanging around his neck, Coach Scolinos appeared to notice the snickering among some of the coaches. Even those who knew Coach Scolinos had to wonder exactly where he was going with this, or if he had simply forgotten about home plate since he’d gotten on stage.

Then, finally …

“You’re probably all wondering why I’m wearing home plate around my neck. Or maybe you think I escaped from Camarillo State Hospital,” he said, his voice growing irascible. I laughed along with the others, acknowledging the possibility.

“No,” he continued, “I may be old, but I’m not crazy. The reason I stand before you today is to share with you baseball people what I’ve learned in my life, what I’ve learned about home plate in my 78 years.”

Several hands went up when Scolinos asked how many Little League coaches were in the room. “Do you know how wide home plate is in Little League?” After a pause, someone offered, “Seventeen inches,” more question than answer.

“That’s right,” he said. “How about in Babe Ruth? Any Babe Ruth coaches in the house?”

Another long pause.

“Seventeen inches?”came a guess from another reluctant coach.

“That’s right,” said Scolinos. “Now, how many high school coaches do we have in the room?” Hundreds of hands shot up, as the pattern began to appear. “How wide is home plate in high school baseball?”

“Seventeen inches,” they said, sounding more confident.

“You’re right!” Scolinos barked. “And you college coaches, how wide is home plate in college?”

“Seventeen inches!” we said, in unison.

“Any Minor League coaches here? How wide is home plate in pro ball?”

“Seventeen inches!”

“RIGHT! And in the Major Leagues, how wide home plate is in the Major Leagues?”

“Seventeen inches!”

“SEV-EN-TEEN INCHES!” he confirmed, his voice bellowing off the walls.

“And what do they do with a a Big League pitcher who can’t throw the ball over these seventeen inches?” Pause. “They send him to Pocatello!” he hollered, drawing raucous laughter.

“What they don’t do is this: they don’t say, ‘Ah, that’s okay, Bobby. You can’t hit a seventeen-inch target? We’ll make it eighteen inches, or nineteen inches. We’ll make it twenty inches so you have a better chance of throwing the ball over it. If you can’t hit that, let us know so we can make it wider still, say twenty-five inches.’”

Pause.

“Coaches …”

Pause.

” … what do we do when our best player shows up late to practice? What do we do if he violates curfew? What if he uses drugs? Do we hold him accountable? Or do we change the rules to fit him? Do we widen home plate?

“…what do we do when a team member comes into work late, doesnt’ fill out the correct paperwork, takes shortcuts, or doesn’t meet deadlines?  Do we widen the plate?”

The chuckles gradually faded as four thousand coaches grew quiet, the fog lifting as the old coach’s message began to unfold.

Then he turned the plate toward himself and, using a Sharpie, began to draw something. When he turned it toward the crowd, point up, a house was revealed, complete with a freshly drawn door and two windows. “This is the problem in our homes today. With our marriages, with the way we parent our kids.  Our work life.  With our discipline. We don’t teach accountability to our kids, or teammates, and there is no consequence for failing to meet standards. We widen the plate!”

Pause. Then, to the point at the top of the house he added a small American flag.

“This is the problem in our schools today. The quality of our education is going downhill fast and teachers have been stripped of the tools they need to be successful….to educate and discipline our young people. We are allowing others to widen home plate! Where is that getting us?”

“And this is the problem in the Church, where powerful people in positions of authority have taken advantage of young children, only to have such an atrocity swept under the rug for years. Our church leaders are widening home plate!”

“And this is the problem with work life.  We enable people by doing the work for them.  Or allow them to “bully us” and have them not do best practices.  We don’t want to “ruffle feathers” and have those tough conversations so we “work around the real issues”.

I was amazed. At a baseball convention where I expected to learn something about curveballs and bunting and how to run better practices, I had learned something far more valuable. From an old man with home plate strung around his neck, I had learned something about life, about myself, about my own weaknesses and about my responsibilities as a leader. I had to hold myself and others accountable to that which I knew to be right, lest our families, our faith, and our society continue down an undesirable path.

“If I am lucky,” Coach Scolinos concluded, “you will remember one thing from this old coach today. It is this: if we fail to hold ourselves to a higher standard, a standard of what we know to be right; if we fail to hold our spouses and our children and co-workers to the same standards, if we are unwilling or unable to provide a consequence when they do not meet the standard; and if our schools and churches and our government and businesses fail to hold themselves accountable to those they serve, there is but one thing to look forward to …”

With that, he held home plate in front of his chest, turned it around, and revealed its dark black backside.

“… dark days ahead.”

Coach Scolinos died in 2009 at the age of 91, but not before touching the lives of hundreds of players and coaches, including mine. Meeting him at my first ABCA convention kept me returning year after year, looking for similar wisdom and inspiration from other coaches. He is the best clinic speaker the ABCA has ever known because he was so much more than a baseball coach.

His message was clear: “Coaches, keep your players — no matter how good they are — your own children, and most of all, keep yourself at seventeen inches.

(Copied post) from Elijah Steiner’s Facebook Page

Shared By: Melanie A. Peters

DON’T OVERTHINK IT

Guest Blogger…thank you Andy Rettler!

TGIM!

Just read this morning….from the CEO of Dropbox who did commencement speech at MIT.

 

He said that if he had a cheat sheet that he could hand to his 22 year old self it would have three things on it:

 

  1. A tennis ball
  2. A Circle
  3. The number 30,000

 

A tennis ball because the most successful people are passionate/obsessed about solving problems.  When he brings out a tennis ball for his dog, he sees how crazy/obsessed his dog is with the tennis ball, and this reminds him of that.

 

A circle because people are typically an average of the 5 closest people that they surround themselves with.  Surround yourself with passionate and successful people in a successful environment to bring the best out of yourself.

 

30,000 because, on average, people live about 30,000 days.  Make each day count.

 

I am incredibly guilty of over-complicating my life due to challenges, schedules, problems…etc.  Simplified models like this make me realize how simple things CAN be, and a reminder like this always helps.

 

A ball, a shape, and a number…can’t get much more simple than that.  Be passionate about what you do, care each day.   We’ve all already put ourselves in  at Drexel to be in a successful environment, so all we have left is a ball and number.   Don’t overthink it.

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TGIM- TUESDAY- NOW

TGIM!

HERE WE GO!

WHY DOES DREXEL GROW, WHY DO WE FOCUS ON GROWTH?

We truly believe a tree that is not growing is dying.

A tree doesn’t ever grow too fast that it dies.  It will slow the growth when there are struggles.  Growth is managed based on many factors, light, rain, ground conditions, disease and the competition in the forest.  Same for Drexel.  Same for you.  Some days all we can do is hold our roots and let the storm pass.  That’s enough sometimes.  Sometimes large growth is made.  We will not grow beyond our roots.   When the conditions are right, we take advantage and grow to our capacity.  If you feel your roots are lifting up out of the ground… please reach out to someone, if you don’t know where to start, reach out to me.


A LOAD OF PACKAGES

Today, this very day, you will run into someone with a load of packages.   You will run into someone that has a full burden.  They have too many groceries.  Those groceries will be emotional, or task driven.  What will you do?   Will you offer support?   A ear to listen, a shoulder to cry on?   Will you offer to help in any one way you uniquely can.  Perhaps you can offer to write up an order.  Make a delivery.  Take a walk in the yard with them.   Make a phone call.  Something well beyond your “job duties”.    Will you notice that person and will you offer to help?

BE A FRIEND

If you treat a vendor like a friend, pretty soon they will treat you like a friend.   Same for a co-worker.   A spouse.  A customer.  Treat them like a friend, and soon enough they will treat you like friends.  And then you will be surrounded by friends.  Weird how simple that is and how that works.   Be the change you want to see in the world.

 

SPOTLIGHT:  SALESMAN

We have 260 full time people that call Drexel their home away from home, almost 300 with our part timers.  We have 52 people that call themselves sales people- flooring, cabinetry, commercial, and account managers.   That is less then 20%— or 2 out of 10 people are out everyday keeping the orders coming in for us to keep our careers going.

12 FACTS ABOUT THESE 20%ERS.

1. They bring in ALL the new business AND have the BEST relationships out there.

2. Without them there is no “us”.  Think of them as our “internal customers.”

3. They live on commission and will starve to death without business.

4. No salesperson has EVER been successful BEHIND A COMPUTER, ok maybe if you sell on ebay or something…  SAME FOR STORE LEADERS.  SAME FOR ME.  SAME FOR THOSE THAT WORK AT THE ZOO.  LET’S HELP THEM GET OUT OF THEIR DESKS.   GET THEM MOBILE.  COMPANIES and CERTAINLY SALESPEOPLE GO BROKE STARING AT COMPUTERS.  COMPANIES AND SALESPEOPLE THRIVE WHEN THEY GO AND SELL THE VISION OF THE COMPANY.  I know personally I have to shift my focus.  I ALWAYS have something to do on the computer… like write this blog…but Joel stop it.  Get out there.  Get in front of customers.  Weenie wagon and the WOWbulance** are starting soon… I will be at them.  Perfect!

5. #4 means we need to make their life easier- not enabling them to encourage bad habits- but supporting them by making sure their orders, their relationships solidify with our help.

6.  They take the phone calls when things go bad.  They meet the customer when she is jacked up and ready to kill us.  That’s breaking their promise they made with her- we will make you happier!  Breaking promises is never fun.

7.  Every day they fight for US.   We must FIGHT FOR THEM.  Fight your vendors, fight your team- DON’T SETTLE AND DON’T MAKE EXCUSES.  Not to be dramatic, but to HELP THEM.

8.  Everyone one of them faces a TON OF REJECTION.  Even on an each individual project.  How often do we sell EVERYTHING?   Foam, to locksets, to shingles, to siding, to windows, to doors, to lumber, to nails.  To counters, to cabinets, to cabinetry hardware.  To tile, carpet, and hardwood.  And all places in between?  Not often.  Meaning on every job, they almost always LOSE.  That’s tough.

9.   How often do jobs go perfect? Oh boy.  No problems, only solutions.  It’s why we need to help them stay totally optimistic.  The sun will come out tomorrow!

10.  It’s MUCH easier to sell on price, have the cheapest carpet install, the cheapest lumber package… but that isn’t selling, that’s prime order taking, and at LOW MARGINS TOO!   Anyone can be the cheapest, but those sales people, those companies don’t last long…someone is ALWAYS CHEAPER.  So they need to be out and about and share our vision.  You see when people buy a 2×4 from us, or a window, or a deck, they are buying our mission of sharing happiness, with them, with us, with the community.  Menards ain’t sharing no happiness!  For our salesman to do that they have to be out of the office, they can’t be putting out internal  fires.

11.  The better they are trained, educated, able to handle stress, stay positive, are energetic, and organized… the better DREXEL IS.  Simple.

12.  Thank you sales people!  May you live long and prosper– and always be selling!  To me, it’s my life… I love selling.

NO SUCH THING AS SELLING A MARKET

Quit selling “markets.”  “We need to sell to more remodelers.  We to target Waupaca.  We need to sell to more shinglers.  We need to sell to more designers.”  STOP IT!

No one in the building supply industry sells to a “market.”

They sell to people.  One person, one business, fulfill their needs.  Rifle approach.  Find a person, share our vision.  See if we can supply happiness to them, and if we can, let’s do that.  And go to the next person and help them.  And then the next and the next.

I’ve never seen ANYONE sell a market.  So let’s stop thinking and talking that way.

** What’s a WOWbulance?  This is a WOWbulance.

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– Joel Fleischman.  Joel is Head Coach of the solution providers for Drexel Building Supply.  (drexelteam).   You can follow him on twitter:  @JoelmFleischman.   Our mission is to be a supplier of others happiness.  I hope this little post did just that.

 

 

50 THINGS MONEY CAN’T BUY

TGIM!

To succeed your positive energy must be greater than all the negativity of others.

Your faith must be greater than all the doubt!

 

– Joel Fleischman.  Joel is Head Coach of the solution providers for Drexel Building Supply.  (drexelteam).   You can follow him on twitter:  @JoelmFleischman.   Our mission is to be a supplier of others happiness.  I hope this little post did just that.

IF YOU CAN’T BE THE SUN, BE A STAR

TGIM!

Thank God it’s Monday.

 

There is a thing called “The Madonna of the Future” about an artist who devotes her life to a single painting.   When she died her friends and family couldn’t wait to see the painting… When they entered her art room where she spent her whole life,  it is discovered that her canvas is still blank.  She never finished because she never started…  In the act of making it perfect… she NEVER STARTED.

This blog today isn’t perfect.  But it is done.  It is posted.  It does exist.

READY.  FIRE.  AIM.

HERE. WE.  GO.

These are one line quotes from a book I recently read “Wild Goose Chase” by Mark Batterson.  I hope you personally connect with one or several of these and use as motivation this week and your life is changed because of it.  Yep.  I have high goals.  Change.  The.  World.

Quit living as if the purpose of life is to arrive safely at death.

 

Don’t let fear dictate your decisions. 

Fear is often disguised as laziness.  They are not laziness, they are just scared to start.

Don’t take the easy way out.

God didn’t make you to point out life’s problems.

Stop pointing out problems and become part of the solution.

Stop repeating the past; create the future.

Create margins- balance- take time for just you.

Find every excuse you can to celebrate everything you can.

(Yes Beth, I thought of you!)

 

Don’t try to be who you are not.  Be yourself.

If nothing else, Drexel believes in you.  We hired you and we only hire rock stars.

Don’t make a living.  Make a reputation.  Make a life.

 

Quit making excuses.

Here’s the example and real life story.  I hope this person reads this.  When you see it in writing it’s almost comical.   It’s really sad and tragic though.  I hope they read this, realize I am talking to them and change!

I heard last week a salesman wants and needs:

Although that sales person had record sales and margins… they needed or they just wouldn’t be happy or successful (did I mention they already had record sales and margin going for them.)

  1. I need someone to help sell new accounts.  (Ideally Joel or Doug, because they are the best.)
  2. I need someone to do my administrative work.
  3. I need someone to train the team I work with.  They are busy and or not experienced enough.
  4. I need someone to do my estimates.
  5. I need someone to help at the job site on my larger jobs.
  6. I need someone to take on smaller jobs so I could focus on the larger ones.   These small jobs bog me down.
  7. I need Joel to fix this.  I told Joel all the problems and he has done nothing to fix it.

I PROMISE YOU THIS PERSON SAID ALL THIS AND WAS 100% SINCERE!   I also promise you this person is not the first one in the parking lot and is also not the last one to leave.  This person knows deep down what has to be done, yet will they do it…?  It really is one of the most frustrating and tough parts of my job, I have no idea how to help them.  I want to help.  All I could think of is writing this down and hoping they will say, it’s about me, I have to change after they seeing it in writing.     Team, when you come to me with these type of requests, I am not going to do anything.    I can’t fix you!  You have to fix you!

Quit playing defense.

 

And quit putting 8 foot ceilings on what God can do.

 

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You want or need more?:

Here’s a 15 minute video on GRIT by Jon Gordon.

https://vimeo.com/145898953

 

– Joel Fleischman.  Joel is Head Coach of the solution providers for Drexel Building Supply.  (drexelteam).   You can follow him on twitter:  @JoelmFleischman.   Our mission is to be a supplier of others happiness.  I hope this little post did just that.

 

HOW A SOCCER COACH CAN HELP US

TGIM!

A GREAT STORY FROM CRAIG WEBB AT PRO SALES.  I ADDED A FEW LINES THAT ARE IN ITALICS.

How This Soccer Legend Relates to the ProSales 100 … and You

Keep Johan Cruyff’s advice in mind when you scan this year’s list, ProSales’ editor suggests

The fact that this month’s issue of ProSales is devoted to LBM’s giants–the soon-to-be-released 2016 version of ProSales 100–strikes me as an especially good time to enlist as a guest analyst Johan Cruyff, universally acknowledged as one of the five greatest soccer players of all time.

Unlike others atop that legends list, the recently departed Cruyff also was one of soccer’s best coaches. And he was one of the most quotable; this was a man whose head was as talented as his feet, and whose advice is asworthwhile in LBM as it was in soccer.

For instance, Cruyff believed that mastering soccer’s basic motor skills does little good unless you think about how to use those skills to maximum effect. “Technique is not being able to juggle a ball 1,000 times,” he said. “Anyone can do that by practicing. Then you can work in a circus. Technique is passing the ball with one touch, with the right speed, at the right foot of your teammate.”

That quote blends well with another that The New York Times liked so much it included it in Cruyff’s obituary in March: “Quality without results is pointless. Results without quality is boring.”   I LOVE THIS LINE.  QUALITY IS HOW WE TREAT OURSELVES AND OUR CUSTOMERS…AND RESULTS IS NET INCOME.  WE MUST HAVE BOTH. 

Keep those words in mind when you look through the 2016 edition of the ProSales 100 list. It shows that all the mega-mergers from last year—most notably Builders FirstSource with ProBuild, BMC with Stock, and Beacon Roofing with the Roofing Supply Group—mean the top 10 firms now account for 69.1% of the entire ProSales 100’s revenues (up from 61.3% in 2015) and 65% of all the facilities (up from 56%). Revenues for the top 10 rose 11.3% last year. For the other 90, it was 8%.

To the top 10, I say congratulations. You’re generating results, certainly on the top line and sometimes on the bottom line as well. But keep striving for quality, too. You have it within you to take LBM to the next level.

To those outside the top 10, be concerned but don’t despair. Big revenues are no guarantee of big profits, nor do they assure that the giant will win every time. As Cruyff put it: “Why shouldn’t you beat a richer club? I’ve never seen a bag of money score a goal.” The World Series champion Kansas City Royals can tell you what’s true in soccer applies to baseball. And in construction supply, I’ve seen a slew of companies with operations that don’t match big dealers in size but far exceed them in terms of generating results that profit their stores and their communities.

At the same time, I’m not going to subscribe to the small-is-beautiful mindset when I also see so many dealers struggle to generate even a 3% net profit. DREXEL IS JUST A HAIR ABOVE 3%… WE HAVE TO REMEMBER THAT NET INCOME IS KEY… BEING EFFICIENT (PAYROLL IS BY FAR OUR LARGEST COST, AND PRICE INTEGRITY IS OUR BEST OPPORTUNITY TO ENSURE A WORLD CLASS NET INCOME.  WHEN WE SELL SPECIALTY PRODUCTS IT TAKES A LARGE TEAM, WHICH MEANS WE NEED TO HAVE MARGIN.)  They might feel good about the quality they deliver, but Cruyff is right: Claiming you’re a high-quality operation might make you feel good when you see a big rival’s truck drive by, but without also producing results, you’re not really in the game.

Craig Webb is editor-in-chief of REMODELING and PROSALES. Follow him on Twitter at @craiglwebb or @RemodelingMag. cwebb@hanleywood.com
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THE TRAIN WRECK

TGIM!

The Eden Train Wreck- A story of who and what Drexel was and is.

A  few weeks before July 4th, 1992 was a very busy time in our companies history.   Sales were booming and our team was growing and running on all cylinders… (sound familiar?)

Then the great train wreck of Eden, Wisconsin happened on June 24, 1992.

See this link to view some great pictures of this historic event.

It hit national news and was certainly the talk of the area.  Many “family field trips” were assembled to go see the pile of ruined steel.

My dad had a few decisions to make.  As you can see in the pictures on the link there were a few cars of lumber on this train.

This lumber was not destined for us.  We did receive lumber by rail car on this very line, but this lumber was meant for someone else.   We had enough lumber already.

Our team at that time was less then 10 people.  Yet my dad saw that lumber and wondered if somehow there could be an opportunity.

As you can see it really made no sense, and at the minimal this deal would require some guts, some luck, a ton of communication and some all balls out work!

So… of course my dad passed on this opportunity, didn’t he…I mean a pile of steel with a few cars of lumber in between… who wants that headache?  But of course, there is no story if he passed up on this.

It was a few weeks before July 4th, contractors needed orders placed, there were loads to pull, and we needed a float for the parade.  Dad had no one to lean on to make this all come together.  Surely he passed.

Or not.

One phone call couldn’t hurt… So he called the railroad station, not once but several times.  He was persistent and finally got the right person on the phone.  This had to happen fast, like now, the rail had to get re-opened.  Turns out the lumber was 2×4, and not only that, it was top quality, in fact a few grades higher then what we sell.  These 2x4s were destined for a truss plant.

It wasn’t easy, but this lumber had to go and there were limited buyers.  Dad stuck to his low offer.  He still had no plan in place on how he would actually move the product.  We had no boom truck, no moffet, no semis.  And “almost” no workers.  We were already working 10 to 12 hours a day just helping the customers we already had.

Yet he continued and pursued.

In under 48 hours after he purchased the lumber, we had to have the material GONE.  Semis were rented, forklifts were moved, labor was found; we all agreed to work until dark after our 12 hour days and my dad’s childhood friend and a loyal contractor Steve Schrauth agreed to help.

My mom helped out and bought us burgers from Tuckers in Fond du lac every night.   These were some of the best burgers I’ve ever had.

We were “rockstars” in this little town (5 miles north of Campbellsport) as we pulled and prodded each 2×4 onto any truck we could find.  People came from miles to see the wreck and my dad worked the crowd as he new many of the people.  He was P.T. Barnum in his own little circus.  Many of the units had to be picked apart by hand.  The work was grueling.  It was hot and we only had one forklift, so often each board was hand loaded onto a truck.  One board at a time.  It was great exposure for our little lumberyard.  Scott Rosenthal, Ron Neitzel, Craig Johnson and myself all helped.  I believe we each got a cash bonus on top of our overtime pay.  It was hard work, and we worked until dark, but also very enjoyable.

On the sales side, we made very good money off of the train wreck 2x4s, and since they were truss grade, to this day the best framing lumber we have ever had.  I know we were proud and some of our customers too (surely Steve Schrauth) when some of this very lumber went into homes around the area that summer.

I do hope and pray that no matter how big we are, or how big we get, we could still pull this off.  At that time we didn’t have core values, but it did take a great deal of:

  1. winning attitude
  2. team work
  3. have fun
  4. communication

And of course the things we promote here… don’t be afraid to fail, work your ass off… and one of my favorites, READY, FIRE, AIM.  If my dad sat down with us and built a team to decide and just slowed it down and didn’t react quickly and took a big risk… surely this opportunity and part of our legacy would of passed.  It was an experience of a lifetime,  it just made sense for us, it’s who we are!

I hope we can all learn a lot from the train wreck of Eden in 1992*.

joel 1 joel 2 joel 3 joel 4 joel 5 joel 6 joel 7 joel 8 joel 9 joel 10 joel 11 joel 12 joel 13 joel 14 joel 15 Joel 16 Joel 17 Joel 18 Joel 19 Joel 20 Joel 21 Joel 22 trainjoel

Yep, that dude with hair? That’s me!

– Joel Fleischman.  Joel is Head Coach of the solution providers for Drexel Building Supply.  (drexelteam).   You can follow him on twitter:  @JoelmFleischman.   Our mission is to be a supplier of others happiness.  I hope this little post did just that.

*** The For River Valley train rail from Eden to West Bend did close in 2000, and was named the Eisenbahn walking trail.  Who named the trail?  Rumor has it, it was one of the guys hauling those 2x4s out of the Eden train wreck.