I Spent Decades Believing Exhaustion Was Part of Success—Gen Z May Prove Me Wrong


After 7 decades of life, I accepted something as normal that younger generations are now questioning.

The higher you climb in business, especially in offsite construction, the more of your personal life you’re expected to surrender.

A full-time employee in America usually works around 40 hours a week. Part-time workers might put in 24 to 32 hours. Upper management? That number quickly jumps to 50 or 60 hours, especially when projects start slipping behind schedule. And once someone reaches the C-suite level, 60 to 80 hours a week often becomes the expectation, not the exception.

In offsite construction, those hours don’t just happen inside an office.

They happen during airport layovers, convention weekends, factory visits, client dinners, long road trips, training classes, and endless phone calls that somehow always seem to arrive after dinner. I’ve watched executives spend years practically living inside their businesses. Some wore it like a badge of honor.

But I’m starting to wonder if Gen Z is about to change all of that.

A Different View of Success

Many Gen Z workers grew up watching older generations sacrifice nearly everything for their careers. They saw parents miss vacations, family events, and sometimes their health, all in pursuit of stability and success that didn’t always work out as they'd hoped.

Now they’re entering the workforce with a completely different mindset. They still want success, but many of them don’t believe success should automatically require exhaustion.

To older generations in construction, that can sound lazy. But I’m not sure that’s what it really is.

I think many younger workers are simply questioning whether endless hours are actually proof of commitment or proof that the systems themselves are broken.

The Offsite Industry Has Always Rewarded Firefighters

One thing I’ve noticed over the years is that offsite construction often rewards people who solve crises instead of preventing them.

Factories become dependent on a few exhausted people who know how to “save the day.” Production schedules get rearranged at the last minute. Service problems repeat themselves. Communication breakdowns between departments become routine. Managers stay late because they have to, not because they want to.

For decades, much of the industry accepted this chaos as simply part of the business.

I’m not convinced Gen Z will accept it quite so easily. I think they’re far more likely to ask uncomfortable questions like:

“Why are we still doing it this way?”

That single question could either frustrate older leadership or completely transform the industry.

Technology May Become Their Weapon Against Burnout

What I find interesting is that Gen Z doesn’t necessarily avoid hard work. What they seem to dislike is unnecessary work. That difference matters.

I believe younger leaders will aggressively push technology not because they love gadgets, but because they hate wasted time. AI scheduling systems, automation, predictive maintenance, robotics, real-time project tracking, cloud collaboration, and digital management systems may become non-negotiable under younger leadership.

Many current executives still see those things as optional upgrades. Gen Z may see them as survival tools.

And honestly, the offsite industry probably needs that push.

But There’s a Risk Too

At the same time, I don’t think offsite construction can become completely detached from personal relationships and hands-on leadership.

This industry still depends heavily on trust, responsiveness, and people being willing to step up when projects go sideways. Builders, developers, and factory teams want to know someone is there when problems happen.

A modular factory isn’t a software company. When a crane doesn’t show up, a module gets damaged, or a project suddenly changes scope, somebody still has to deal with it immediately.

If future leadership becomes too distant, too remote, or too rigid about work-life boundaries, that could create a completely different set of problems.

Sweden Might Be Teaching Us Something

I often hear people talk about Sweden, where executives generally work fewer hours, take longer vacations, and place far more value on personal balance than many American executives do.

Yet Sweden also has one of the most advanced offsite construction industries in the world.

That tells me something important. Maybe success doesn’t have to come from sheer exhaustion. Maybe the real secret is building systems so efficient that companies no longer depend on a handful of burned-out people holding everything together.

That’s a lesson America’s offsite industry may eventually need to learn.

Modcoach Observation

I’ve known factory owners and executives who devoted almost every waking hour of their lives to this industry. Some built incredible companies. Some built incredible stress. Most built both.

I don’t think Gen Z is trying to destroy hard work. I think they’re trying to redefine what intelligent work looks like.

And if they can combine strong leadership, modern technology, and healthier expectations without losing the urgency and accountability this industry still requires, they may actually improve offsite construction in ways older generations never expected.

I’ve Always Wondered What Investors Really See in Offsite Construction Startups

 

Every year, I see a steady stream of Millennials and Gen Z entrepreneurs entering the offsite construction industry with new ideas they believe can change the business forever. A few are trying to launch factories, but most are building support companies around the industry. Software platforms, AI applications, robotics, automation systems, transportation innovations, scheduling apps, new building materials, and logistics tools seem to appear almost daily.

Some of these ideas are genuinely impressive.

Others sound exciting until you start asking questions about how construction actually works in the real world.

The more I read about venture capital investing, the more I started wondering how investors decide which startups even deserve a meeting. Reports say that thousands of pitch decks are created worldwide every single day, while venture capital firms may review anywhere from hundreds to thousands of opportunities annually. Yet most investors fund less than 1% of the companies that approach them.

That made me start asking myself a few questions.

What benchmarks do investors in the offsite construction industry actually use before agreeing to a presentation? How many conversations happen after the presentation before they decide yes or no? How often do investors agree to the startup founder’s original terms? And maybe the biggest question of all: what are the odds that these companies even survive long enough to make it past year two?

Investors Usually Bet on People Before Products

Over the years, I’ve come to believe that most investors in offsite construction are not really investing in ideas first. They’re investing in the people presenting them.


A founder may walk into a meeting with an AI-powered scheduling platform or a robotic framing system that looks revolutionary on paper. But investors are usually looking past the technology almost immediately. They want to know whether the founder understands the realities of construction.

Have they ever worked inside a factory?
Have they managed production problems?
Do they understand transportation delays, code compliance, labor shortages, and cash flow pressure?

Construction is not software development. A mistake in a software startup may frustrate customers. A mistake in offsite construction can stop a project, delay funding draws, create lawsuits, or damage an entire factory’s reputation.

I think investors know that.

That’s why I suspect many of them would rather back an experienced operator with an average idea than an inexperienced visionary with a brilliant one.

The Days of “Just a Great Idea” Seem to Be Fading

A few years ago, it felt like investors were willing to gamble on concepts and promises. Today, especially after the economic tightening we’ve seen over the past couple of years, investors appear to want something much more concrete.

Traction.

That word keeps coming up everywhere.

They want pilot customers, letters of intent, recurring revenue, partnerships, working prototypes, and proof that somebody is already willing to pay for the solution. A founder may believe their product is revolutionary, but investors increasingly seem to ask one simple question:

“Who’s already using it?”

I’ve noticed this shift in the offsite industry too. Excitement alone doesn’t appear to carry as much weight anymore. Investors want evidence that the startup understands both innovation and execution.

That’s a much tougher standard.

One Meeting Rarely Decides Everything

I used to assume that most investment decisions happened immediately after a big presentation. The more I’ve learned about venture investing, the more I realize the first meeting may simply be a screening process.

If investors see potential, there can be follow-up meetings, technical reviews, financial evaluations, customer interviews, factory tours, and long discussions about scalability and risk.


And sometimes, after several promising conversations, the investors simply disappear.

That silence may actually be one of the most common forms of rejection in venture capital.

I imagine that has to be emotionally exhausting for founders who may spend months trying to secure funding while hearing the same phrase over and over again:

“We really like what you’re doing.”

Investors Rarely Accept the Founder’s Original Terms

I’ve also wondered how often investors actually agree to the terms presented by startup founders.

From what I’ve seen and read, probably not very often.

Construction-related startups are expensive to scale. Factories, robotics systems, transportation networks, inventory, equipment, labor, insurance, and facilities all require serious capital. Investors know how quickly money can disappear when production problems begin piling up.

Because of that, investors often negotiate hard.

Board seats, preferred shares, control provisions, performance milestones, dilution clauses, and the ability to replace leadership are not unusual demands. Some founders accept those conditions because they feel they have no choice. Others eventually realize they are slowly giving away control of the very company they created.

That has to be a difficult moment for any entrepreneur.

The Second Year Is Where Reality Usually Arrives

I’ve always believed the second year is where many startups encounter their first real collision with reality.

The first year is often fueled by enthusiasm, investment money, attention, and momentum. But by year two, operational problems begin surfacing.

Production delays start showing up.
Customers become demanding.
Margins tighten.
Transportation costs increase.
Cash flow gets unpredictable.
Hiring becomes difficult.
Sales cycles stretch longer than expected.

That’s when founders discover whether they built a sustainable company or simply created an exciting concept.

In offsite construction, I suspect the danger is even greater because factories and manufacturing operations carry enormous fixed overhead. A startup can look successful on the surface while quietly burning through cash behind the scenes.

When Investors Step In

One thing I’ve learned is that investors usually do not want to run factories themselves. Most venture capital firms are not interested in managing production schedules or solving delivery problems.

But they are interested in protecting their investment.

When a company begins struggling, investors may first offer guidance and oversight. Then they may recommend new executives, consultants, or financial controls. In more serious situations, they may replace leadership entirely or take operational control through the board.

I think many young founders underestimate how common that can become once outside investors own part of the company.

Sometimes the founder who created the vision ends up watching someone else run it.

Why Offsite Construction Is a Different Kind of Investment

I’ve often thought the offsite construction industry creates a unique challenge for investors because every mistake has physical consequences.

Software companies can pivot quickly.
Factories usually cannot.

When a modular company miscalculates, it affects production lines, deliveries, inspections, builders, developers, homeowners, and lenders all at the same time. That level of complexity makes investors much more cautious than people outside the industry may realize.

And honestly, I understand why.

The Modcoach Observation

The longer I stay in this industry, the more convinced I become that investors are rarely chasing ideas alone. They are trying to determine whether the people behind the ideas can survive pressure, uncertainty, delays, and mistakes without losing control of the business.

That’s probably why some incredible ideas never receive funding, while other companies with fairly ordinary concepts somehow raise millions.

The real test for most startups doesn’t happen during the pitch presentation.

It happens six months after the investment money arrives, when the excitement fades, the pressure builds, and the founders finally discover whether they built a company capable of surviving the realities of offsite construction.

When a Modular Factory Hits Capacity, Why Don’t They Expand?


There’s a strange pattern in the modular construction industry that I’ve watched repeat itself for decades. A factory gets busy, really busy. The production line fills up six months out, salespeople are smiling again, builders are begging for production slots, and management starts talking about “carefully controlling growth.”

Then something interesting begins to happen.

Instead of aggressively expanding capacity, many factories quietly begin slowing the pursuit of new business just enough to stabilize the overload. Nobody officially announces they’re easing off the gas pedal, but you can see the signs. Sales calls aren’t returned as quickly, advertising budgets flatten out, reps are told to “be selective,” and delivery schedules begin stretching further into the future.

Before long, the momentum that may have taken years to build begins cooling off.

The question is why. In almost every other manufacturing industry, hitting capacity is usually viewed as a signal to expand. Automotive companies add shifts or open another facility. Cabinet manufacturers invest in automation and more floor space. Distribution companies build additional warehouses when demand grows.

But modular construction often reacts very differently.

The Fear Behind Expansion

The first answer is fairly simple. Most modular factory owners have lived through at least one devastating downturn, and those memories never completely disappear. Many remember the housing crash, interest rate spikes, disappearing builders, canceled projects, and production lines that suddenly went silent after years of growth.

Some factories survived by inches. Others disappeared entirely.

When owners have experienced that kind of pain, expansion starts looking less like an opportunity and more like a dangerous gamble. Adding another production line sounds exciting until the real numbers start to appear on paper. Equipment costs, labor, supervisors, transportation logistics, engineering staff, insurance, utilities, and inventory all begin piling up quickly. Then comes the bigger question haunting the back of every owner’s mind: what happens if the market softens six months after the expansion is completed?

At that point, staying “comfortably full” starts feeling safer than aggressively growing.

When Large Projects Begin Controlling Production

Another issue develops when factories become heavily dependent on large project sales. On the surface, landing a 200-module apartment project sounds like a dream scenario. The production line stays busy, forecasting becomes easier, and cash flow appears more predictable.

But large projects can quietly change the entire personality of a factory.

Independent builders who may have purchased homes steadily for years suddenly find themselves pushed aside by a single massive developer contract. Delivery schedules that once took weeks stretch into months, and long-time customers begin hearing phrases like “maybe next quarter.”

That creates a dangerous shift in balance.

While project work generates volume, it often reduces flexibility. The factory slowly becomes dependent on fewer customers, each representing a much larger percentage of revenue. If one project stalls due to financing issues, permitting delays, lawsuits, or ownership changes, the factory can suddenly find itself staring at a massive production gap, with very little backup business waiting in line.

Meanwhile, many of the smaller loyal builders have already moved on to another supplier.

I’ve seen this happen more than once over the years.

Expansion Sounds Logical, But Scaling Isn’t Easy

On paper, the next step seems obvious. Add another production line, purchase an existing factory, or open a second location. Yet very few modular companies actually move aggressively in that direction.

Part of the problem is that modular factories are extremely difficult businesses to scale properly. Expanding a modular operation is nothing like opening another retail location or adding another warehouse. You need experienced labor, transportation infrastructure, engineering consistency, production supervisors who truly understand modular construction, and management systems capable of handling far more complexity.

Most importantly, you need enough long-term business to feed two factories without weakening the original operation.

That’s where many companies begin running into trouble. A surprising number of modular factories still operate with management structures developed decades ago when production was smaller, products were simpler, and customers were far more patient.

Scaling a factory exposes every weakness hiding beneath the surface.

Success Often Creates Its Own Problems

Ironically, some factories become less efficient when they become too successful too quickly. Production slots get oversold, engineering departments fall behind, change orders multiply, shipping schedules become chaotic, and service departments start drowning in unresolved issues. Employee burnout increases while management spends more time putting out fires than planning for long-term growth.

Instead of expanding carefully and strategically, leadership often slips into survival mode.

At that point, the goal quietly changes from “grow the business” to “control the chaos.” That’s usually when sales momentum begins slowing intentionally, even if nobody inside the company openly admits it.

A Defensive Industry Mindset

There’s also a deeper cultural issue within modular construction. Many factory owners still think defensively rather than strategically because the industry has spent decades learning to survive rather than to scale.

That survival mentality influences almost every major decision being made today. Instead of asking, “How large could this company become?” the question often becomes, “How do we avoid getting hurt again?”

That mindset can protect companies during downturns, but it can also prevent the industry from reaching its full potential during strong markets. It may also help explain why modular construction still accounts for only a relatively small share of total housing production in the United States despite decades of promises of growth.

Modcoach Observation

The factories that may eventually dominate the next generation of modular construction probably won’t be the ones that simply survive the next housing cycle. They’ll be the companies that finally learn to scale intelligently without destroying quality, delivery schedules, customer trust, or company culture.

Because eventually somebody is going to solve this problem.

And when they do, the rest of the industry may suddenly realize that hitting capacity was never supposed to be the warning sign to slow down. It was supposed to be the signal to build something bigger.

If the Modular Industry Doesn’t Explain Itself, Who Will?


For decades, the modular home industry has fought the same battle over and over again. A beautifully built modular home is delivered, set on a permanent foundation, finished to local IRC building codes, and appraised alongside site-built homes — only to have someone drive past it and say, “Oh, that’s a mobile home.”

That perception problem has haunted the industry for generations, and the uncomfortable truth is this:

The modular industry has never collectively done enough to correct it.

Meanwhile, the manufactured housing industry, builders of HUD Code homes, has done a far better job defining its identity. People may still incorrectly use outdated terms like “mobile home,” but at least most consumers understand manufactured housing is its own category.

Modular housing still sits in a strange gray area where millions of Americans genuinely do not understand the difference between modular, manufactured, panelized, prefab, tiny homes, ADUs, and shipping container homes.

And if consumers are confused, can we really blame them?

Silence Creates Its Own Narrative

For years, the modular industry focused almost entirely on B2B relationships. Factories sold to builders and developers. Builders handled consumers. Factories worried about production, transportation, set crews, and inspections, not public education campaigns.

The result is that the public narrative about modular homes was often left to television stereotypes, outdated assumptions, local gossip, or badly informed media coverage.

That vacuum created enormous confusion.

A modular home arrives in sections on carriers, gets craned onto a foundation, and many neighbors immediately assume it must be a “trailer.” Never mind that the home may meet the exact same local building code as the $800,000 site-built house next door.

The industry has spent decades expecting the product to speak for itself.

It doesn’t.


Pictures Matter More Than Explanations

That is why something as simple as posting real modular homes with the caption “This is a Modular Home” may actually be more important than many people realize.

Consumers rarely read lengthy technical explanations about IRC codes versus HUD codes. Most people do not care about engineering certifications, state modular programs, or transportation systems.

But they do understand visuals.

That is exactly why I started posting pictures of true modular homes on LinkedIn with the simple caption: “This is a Modular Home.” Not renderings. Not futuristic concepts. Real modular homes people would recognize as beautiful, traditional housing.

When someone sees a ranch home, Cape Cod, farmhouse, contemporary home, or luxury custom house carrying that caption, it quietly challenges assumptions that may have existed for years.

That kind of repeated visual messaging works because it is simple, direct, and difficult to argue with.

It forces people to reconsider what they thought they knew.

So, Why Isn’t the Industry Doing More?

That may be one of the biggest unanswered questions in offsite construction.

Why hasn’t the modular industry launched a long-term national consumer education effort explaining what modular housing really is?

Part of the answer may be fragmentation. Unlike some industries with centralized marketing organizations, modular construction consists of hundreds of factories, builders, suppliers, and associations, all with different priorities and budgets.

Another issue is that many factories still operate almost entirely business-to-business. They rely on builders, developers, and retailers for sales, so consumer branding often becomes secondary.

Then there is the fear factor.

Some companies may worry that directly comparing modular homes to manufactured housing could be interpreted as criticizing another segment of offsite construction. Others may believe the perception problem has improved enough that large public campaigns are unnecessary.

But has it really improved?

Ask the average consumer if they know the difference between modular and manufactured housing, and many still cannot explain it clearly.

The Industry Cannot Assume Younger Buyers Understand

Ironically, younger homebuyers may be even more confused than previous generations because the housing conversation has become flooded with terms like prefab, tiny homes, ADUs, 3D printed homes, foldable homes, container homes, kit homes, and microhousing.

To many consumers, everything built partially offsite now gets lumped into one giant category.

That creates both danger and opportunity for modular construction.

Danger because modular loses its identity.

Opportunity because the industry still has time to define itself properly if it chooses to do so.

But that only happens if factories, builders, associations, salespeople, and industry influencers consistently educate the public instead of assuming consumers already understand the product.

LinkedIn May Be Doing More Than People Think

What is interesting about the “This is a Modular Home” picture series I’ve been posting on LinkedIn is that it is not really an advertising campaign.

It is repetition.

And repetition changes perception.

Every time someone scrolls past one of those images, it chips away a little more at decades of misunderstanding. Some people may stop for three seconds. Others may keep scrolling. But eventually the message begins settling into people’s minds:

“That’s modular?”

That reaction matters because perception often changes slowly, one image at a time, one conversation at a time, and one challenged assumption at a time.

Imagine if dozens of factories, builders, associations, and suppliers began doing the same thing consistently. Imagine LinkedIn, Facebook, Instagram, and industry websites all reinforcing the same visual message every single day.

The public perception of modular housing could begin changing far faster than most people think.

Modcoach Observation

The modular industry sometimes acts as though consumers should already understand what modular housing is. But why would they? Most people will only buy one or two homes in their entire lifetime, and unless they actively researched offsite construction, they have probably never been taught the difference.

That means the responsibility falls back on the industry itself.

Not just associations. Not just factories. Everyone.

Builders, salespeople, transporters, suppliers, developers, bloggers, magazines, and LinkedIn voices all have a role in helping explain what modular housing actually is.

Because if the modular industry refuses to define itself clearly, the public will continue defining it instead.

What If We Had a VP of Failure Prediction?


Maybe the smartest hire is the one who sees trouble coming.


The Job Nobody’s Posting

Factories are hiring for production managers, quality control leads, schedulers, and software specialists. Everyone is focused on doing things faster, cheaper, and with fewer mistakes.

But almost nobody is hiring the one person whose job is to ask, “What happens when this doesn’t go as planned?”

Not after the fact.
Before the decision is made.

From Post-Mortems to Pre-Mortems

The offsite industry has become very good at explaining failure—after it happens.

We hold meetings, review timelines, and talk through what went wrong with production, delivery, or installation. The lessons are documented, shared, and then slowly fade as the next project ramps up.

What we don’t do nearly enough is stop before a decision and run the same exercise in reverse.

What could go wrong with this new process?
Where does this schedule break down?
How does this pricing model fail under pressure?

A VP of Failure Prediction would live in that space.

The Most Expensive Sentence in the Factory

“We didn’t think that would happen.”

That sentence has cost more factories more money than almost anything else in the business. It shows up in missed delivery dates, blown budgets, warranty callbacks, and strained relationships with builders and developers.

And it’s almost never said because people weren’t smart enough.

It’s said because nobody was assigned the responsibility to think that way.

A Role Built to Challenge Assumptions

The VP of Failure Prediction wouldn’t be there to slow things down for the sake of it. The role would exist to challenge assumptions just enough to expose the hidden risks.

When a new software system is introduced, they’re not impressed by the demo—they’re asking what happens when it crashes on a Friday afternoon. When a production shortcut is proposed, they’re not focused on the time savings—they’re looking at what it might cost six months later in the field.

They’re not negative.

They’re early.

Why Nobody Wants This Job

Because it’s uncomfortable.

It requires questioning decisions that others are excited about. It means sitting in meetings where momentum is building and asking the one question that brings everything to a pause. It also means occasionally telling leadership that the plan they’re confident in has holes in it.

That’s not a role most organizations reward.

At least not until something goes wrong.

The Hidden ROI

Factories spend a lot of time trying to squeeze out another point of margin through pricing, purchasing, or production efficiency.

But one poorly thought-out decision—a rushed contract, a flawed process change, a system that doesn’t integrate—can quietly erase all of those gains.

Preventing just one of those mistakes can pay for this role for years.

The problem is, you only see the value after the mistake doesn’t happen.

The Person You Already Have

Most factories already have someone who naturally thinks this way.

They’re the one who asks too many questions, points out the downside, and isn’t easily impressed by new ideas. They’re often seen as cautious, sometimes even difficult, because they don’t move at the same speed as everyone else.

And they’re rarely the first person invited into the room when big decisions are made.

A Slight Shift in Thinking

Maybe the industry doesn’t need another title or another executive.

But it might need to take the role seriously enough to give it a seat at the table. To make failure prediction part of the decision-making process instead of something discussed after the damage is done.

Because in a business where margins are tight and schedules are tighter, the cost of being wrong shows up quickly.

Modcoach Observation

modcoach@gmail.com

Factories don’t usually fail because of one big, obvious mistake.

They fail because nobody slowed things down long enough to see the small ones coming.

Why Should Walmart's New Store Manager Salary Program Worry Offsite Factory Owners?

 


There’s a question quietly bouncing around boardrooms, startup modular factories, and even long-established plants: What should we really be paying our General Managers and senior leaders? It’s no longer a theoretical discussion—it just got very real, thanks to Walmart.

The $400,000 Wake-Up Call

Walmart didn’t just tweak salaries; they reset expectations. Their redesigned leadership pipeline allows store managers to earn up to $400,000 annually, with top performers pushing total compensation even higher when bonuses and stock are included. The base salary is only part of the story. The real impact comes from aggressive bonuses and long-term incentives designed to retain top performers.

This wasn’t done out of generosity. Walmart had a leadership retention problem and decided to solve it in the most direct way possible—by making the role financially compelling enough that people would stay and build careers.

Why Retail Suddenly Looks Like a Career Destination

Think about that for a moment. A retail store manager can now earn compensation comparable to that of senior executives in many construction companies. Walmart recognized that turnover at the management level was costing them consistency, performance, and long-term growth, so they built a system that rewards stability and success over time.

They didn’t just raise pay. They created a structure where high performers can see a future that’s worth staying for, not just a job that pays well for a year or two.

Now Look at Offsite Construction

Now bring that comparison into offsite construction. A factory GM is responsible for running a multi-million-dollar operation, managing labor shortages, maintaining quality control, coordinating logistics, and protecting margins that can disappear with one bad project. In many cases, they’re overseeing a business every bit as complex as a high-volume retail operation.

Yet compensation in offsite manufacturing rarely reflects that level of responsibility. Some factories pay well, but many still rely on capped salaries, modest bonuses, and loosely defined growth opportunities. That gap is becoming harder to justify.

The Real Problem Isn’t Salary—It’s Structure

Most factory owners focus on base salary, but that’s not where the battle is won. Walmart didn’t transform its leadership pipeline by simply increasing pay; it redesigned the entire compensation structure. Base salary is just the foundation, while performance bonuses, stock incentives, and clear advancement paths create the real motivation.

Offsite factories often offer a competitive salary and occasional bonuses, but without a structured path to growth and meaningful upside, those offers fall short. A paycheck alone doesn’t create loyalty. A well-designed system does.

The Talent You Want Is Already Watching

The best operations leaders aren’t tied to modular construction—they’re tied to opportunity. If other industries offer clearer career paths, better incentives, and stronger long-term rewards, that’s where top talent will go.

Even when offsite factories attract strong candidates, retaining them becomes the next challenge. Without a compelling financial and professional future, those leaders will eventually move on to industries that more clearly recognize their value.

Startups Have It Even Harder

For new factories coming online, the challenge is even greater. You’re not just competing with other modular plants—you’re competing with industries that already understand how to value leadership. That means your compensation strategy must go beyond matching salaries.

You need to offer a reason to join, a reason to stay, and a clear reward for success. Without that, you’re not building a leadership team—you’re building turnover into your business plan.

A Different Way to Think About GM Compensation

Instead of asking what a GM should be paid, a better question is what a great GM is worth. The difference between average and exceptional leadership shows up quickly in profitability, production efficiency, scheduling reliability, and company culture.

That difference can easily be worth millions annually. Yet many factories hesitate to invest what it takes to secure the right leader, focusing on cost instead of value.

The Industry Is Quietly Reaching a Tipping Point

For years, offsite construction has struggled to attract and retain top-tier leadership. Now, with companies like Walmart redefining compensation expectations, the gap is becoming impossible to ignore.

The question is no longer whether modular factories should pay more. It’s whether they can afford not to.

Modcoach Observation


Walmart didn’t just raise salaries—they redefined how leadership is valued. Offsite construction has spent decades innovating products and processes, but the next breakthrough may come from something far more fundamental: paying the people who run the factory like they truly matter.

It's Usually One Person's Decision to Blame When a Business Fails


There’s a familiar script that plays out after a business fails. It’s almost comforting in how predictable it is. The economy shifted. Regulations tightened. Material costs spiked. The banks got stingy. Marketing didn’t work. The market wasn’t ready. Somewhere in that long list of reasons, the one explanation you rarely hear is the one that matters most.

“I made the wrong decisions.”

That sentence is almost extinct in modern business culture.

The Blame Game Is Good for the Ego—And Bad for Everything Else

We’ve created an environment where failure must always have an external villain. It protects reputations, softens embarrassment, and makes for better storytelling over dinner or on LinkedIn. Nobody wants to say they steered the ship into the rocks when they can point to a storm instead.

The problem is that storms don’t sink good captains. Poor decisions do.

Yes, regulations can slow you down. Yes, material costs can eat into margins. Yes, financing can be hard to secure. But those are known variables, not surprise attacks. Every industry has them. Every competitor faces them. Some survive. Some don’t.

The difference usually comes down to how one person responded to those realities.

Leadership Isn’t a Committee—It’s a Responsibility

Businesses don’t fail because ten people made ten equal mistakes. They fail because one person had the authority to make decisions and either made the wrong ones—or avoided making them at all.

That person is usually the owner, the CEO, or the founder.

It’s the person who approved the budget that was too optimistic. The one who delayed raising prices because they were afraid to lose customers. The one who hired the wrong leadership team and kept them too long. The one who believed the projections instead of questioning them.

Blaming “the market” is convenient. Owning a series of bad calls is not.

The Most Expensive Mistake: Ignoring Reality

In almost every failed business, there’s a moment—sometimes dozens of them—where the warning signs were clear.

Cash flow tightening. Projects running late. Quality slipping. Customers hesitating. Employees disengaging.

Those aren’t hidden signals. They’re flashing red lights.

The real failure isn’t that those problems existed. It’s that someone chose to ignore them, downplay them, or assume they would fix themselves. Hope is not a strategy, but it’s often treated like one until it’s too late.

And that choice—to look away instead of act—is personal.

Excuses Are Easier Than Accountability

Saying “the bank wouldn’t loan us money” sounds reasonable. What’s left unsaid is why the bank didn’t trust the numbers. Saying “we couldn’t find good people” avoids the harder question of why good people didn’t want to stay. Saying “marketing didn’t work” skips over whether there was ever a clear strategy in the first place.

Excuses tend to be technically true and completely irrelevant.

They explain circumstances, not outcomes.

The uncomfortable truth is that strong leaders adapt to those same circumstances. They pivot, cut costs earlier, change direction faster, or walk away from bad deals before they become fatal.

Weak leaders explain. Strong leaders adjust.


Failure Is Personal—And That’s Actually a Good Thing

This might sound harsh, but placing responsibility where it belongs is the only way to improve. If failure is always someone else’s fault, there’s nothing to learn. No behavior to change. No decision-making to refine.

But if failure comes down to one person’s judgment, then success can, too.

That’s empowering, not discouraging.

It means better decisions, sharper awareness, and faster action can change the outcome next time. It means you’re not at the mercy of regulations, banks, or material costs—you’re navigating them.

And navigation is a skill.

The Culture We Actually Need

Imagine a business culture where owners openly said, “I waited too long to fix that,” or “I trusted the wrong numbers,” or “I didn’t listen when I should have.” Not as an admission of defeat, but as a statement of growth.

That kind of honesty would do more to improve industries than any new regulation or economic policy.

Because the real competitive advantage isn’t capital or connections. It’s clarity. The ability to see what’s actually happening and act on it without ego getting in the way.

A Modcoach Observation


After decades in construction and offsite, I’ve seen factories blame lumber prices, labor shortages, transportation costs, and even the weather for their problems. Meanwhile, the factory down the road—facing the same conditions—keeps shipping homes and turning a profit.

Same storm. Different captain.

Business failure doesn’t start with the economy. It starts with a decision. And more often than not, it’s one person who made it, delayed it, or avoided it altogether. 

150 Years Later… and We Still Put the Kitchen Next to the Dining Room

 


The Rise of the AI-Generated Consultant


Over the past three years, something has been quietly shifting in the offsite construction industry, and not for the better. It’s not about materials, automation, or even labor shortages this time. It’s about who is giving advice—and how they’re doing it.

When AI Becomes the Consultant Instead of the Tool

A new wave of consultants has entered the space, many of whom have little or no hands-on experience in a modular factory, on a jobsite, in executive management, or even in industry sales. That alone isn’t the issue. Every industry benefits from fresh perspectives. The problem is how these individuals are positioning themselves as experts.

They are using artificial intelligence to generate reports on specific companies, market segments, and operational challenges. Those reports, often polished and convincing on the surface, are then used as the foundation for outreach campaigns. Owners, GMs, investors, and board members are being approached with highly tailored insights that appear thoughtful and informed. In reality, much of it is produced in seconds by AI tools with no real understanding of the nuances behind the data.

Once hired, the pattern continues. AI is used to produce SOPs, business plans, marketing strategies, and production optimization models. Webinars and full-day workshops are created the same way. The consultant becomes more of a middleman between the client and the software, often without the experience needed to question, validate, or adapt what the AI produces.

A Lesson from the Classroom

This situation reminds me of something from my own past. Back in high school, I was selected for a new accelerated math program. It sounded exciting until we realized the teacher assigned to lead us was only about a chapter ahead of the class.

A few of us decided to read ahead. Before long, it became obvious that we were teaching ourselves more effectively than the instructor could teach us. Eight of us completed a full year’s curriculum in half the time, not because we were geniuses, but because we recognized the limitations of someone who didn’t truly understand the material they were presenting.

That was decades ago, long before AI entered the picture. Today, the dynamic feels uncomfortably similar. The difference is that now the “teacher” has a powerful tool that can generate answers instantly, making it harder to spot the lack of real expertise behind the curtain.

The Risk of Unchecked Output

Every credible AI platform includes a warning: verify the output, because it may not be accurate. That warning is there for a reason. AI does not understand context the way experienced professionals do. It does not walk factory floors, deal with production bottlenecks, negotiate with transport companies, or manage crews in the field. It processes patterns and generates responses based on probability, not lived experience.

When a consultant without industry knowledge accepts AI-generated content as fact, the risk multiplies. Recommendations may sound logical but fail in execution. Plans may look complete but ignore critical variables. Strategies may appear innovative but collapse under real-world conditions.

In an industry where margins are tight and mistakes are expensive, that’s not a small problem.

LinkedIn’s New “Experts”

Spend a little time on LinkedIn and you’ll see the trend playing out in real time. New consultants are appearing almost daily, many of whom have no visible track record in offsite construction. Yet they speak with confidence about fixing factories, improving production, and transforming business models.

For someone new to the industry, or for an owner under pressure to improve performance, these voices can sound compelling. The language is polished. The insights seem specific. The solutions look comprehensive.

But scratch the surface, and too often there’s little substance behind it.

Experience Still Matters

Offsite construction is not a theoretical exercise. It’s a complex, interconnected process that spans design, engineering, manufacturing, logistics, and field execution. It requires an understanding of how decisions made in one part of the process ripple through the entire system.

That kind of understanding doesn’t come from prompts and generated reports. It comes from years of experience, from making mistakes, from solving problems in real time, and from seeing what actually works when the modules leave the factory and hit the jobsite.

AI can be a valuable tool in the hands of someone who knows what they’re doing. It can speed up analysis, improve communication, and support better decision-making. But it cannot replace experience, and it certainly shouldn’t be used to fake it.

Modcoach Observations

Article content

If you’re an owner, GM, or investor, ask one simple question before hiring any consultant: “Tell me about the last time you personally solved this problem in a factory or on a jobsite.” Not what a report says. Not what a model suggests. What they did.

AI can write a great plan in ten seconds. It takes years to know whether that plan will actually work.

In this industry, you don’t need someone who knows how to ask better questions to a computer. You need someone who already knows the answers—and understands when the computer is wrong.

NIMBY, HOAs, and ADUs: Clearing the Air Before We Miss Another Housing Opportunity


Misunderstandings—not malice—may be the biggest roadblock to progress

Spend a few minutes reading any of my articles about adding ADUs and Tiny Houses to developed housing lots, and a pattern quickly emerges. The support is there, but so is the resistance—steady, thoughtful, and often rooted in concern rather than hostility.

One thing stands out. Most opposition isn’t about stopping housing—it’s about not trusting how it will be done.

That’s a very different problem.

Misunderstanding #1: “ADUs Will Destroy Property Values”

This is one of the most common fears, and it’s easy to see why. For decades, homeowners have been conditioned to believe that any increase in density threatens their investment and their lifestyle.


In reality, well-designed ADUs often increase property value by adding usable space and income potential. They can also make homes more attractive to multi-generational families, which is becoming more common across the country.

The real issue isn’t ADUs themselves. It’s the fear of poorly designed, poorly regulated additions that don’t fit the neighborhood.

Misunderstanding #2: “This Turns Homeowners Into Developers”

This concern showed up clearly in your comments, and it’s not unreasonable. Most homeowners don’t want to deal with permits, financing, construction management, and inspections.

And they shouldn’t have to.


When municipalities and the offsite industry work together, the process can be simplified with pre-approved designs, streamlined permitting, and factory-built solutions that reduce time and uncertainty. Adding an ADU should feel manageable, not overwhelming.

If it feels like a development project, most homeowners will simply walk away.

Misunderstanding #3: “Infrastructure Can’t Handle It”

This is where skepticism becomes resistance, and in many cases, it’s justified. Concerns about parking, water, sewer, and traffic are not complaints—they’re practical questions that deserve real answers.


Communities that succeed with ADUs don’t ignore these concerns. They address them with clear utility requirements, realistic impact fees, and zoning that reflects actual neighborhood conditions.

When infrastructure is part of the plan from the beginning, opposition tends to soften.

Misunderstanding #4: “This Is Just About Creating More Rentals”

There’s a growing frustration that “affordable housing” often translates into more rental units, not more opportunities for ownership. That concern is showing up more frequently in conversations like the one you sparked.


ADUs can certainly increase rental inventory, but that’s only part of the story. They can also house aging parents, provide space for adult children, or serve as temporary housing during life transitions.

When positioned only as rentals, they lose broader acceptance.

Misunderstanding #5: “Investors Will Take Over Neighborhoods”

This is the concern that often goes unspoken but drives much of the resistance. Homeowners worry that once ADUs are allowed, investors will begin buying properties and turning neighborhoods into rental clusters.

Whether that happens or not, the perception alone is enough to create pushback.

Policies that include owner-occupancy requirements, limits on short-term rentals, and reasonable caps on additional units can help address this fear without shutting down opportunity.

Where NIMBY and HOAs Can Add Value

NIMBY groups and HOAs are often viewed as obstacles, but they can be something else entirely. They understand the character of their neighborhoods, the limits of local infrastructure, and residents' concerns better than anyone else.


When they are brought into the conversation early, something shifts. The discussion moves from outright opposition to conditional acceptance—if it’s done right.

That’s not resistance. That’s engagement.

The Path Forward

If the goal is to increase housing without creating unnecessary conflict, the approach has to evolve. Policies need to give homeowners control, set clear expectations, and address infrastructure concerns upfront.


They also need to reassure communities that change won’t happen without boundaries.

And most importantly, they need to include the voices currently pushing back rather than working around them.

Modcoach Observation


The offsite industry and housing sector have a habit of pushing solutions forward and expecting communities to catch up later. That rarely works, and it’s one of the reasons we keep running into the same resistance.

ADUs and tiny homes aren’t being rejected because they’re bad ideas. They’re being resisted because people don’t trust how they’ll be implemented.

If we take the time to address those concerns while still moving forward, we may not get full agreement.

But we might finally get acceptance—and that’s usually enough to get something meaningful built.