Innovation Isn’t Cheap Just Because the Salesman Says It Is


For decades, the offsite construction industry has been fascinated with innovation. Every year brings another wave of software platforms, robotics, automated saws, AI-powered scheduling systems, wall panel equipment, material tracking systems, or production management programs all promising to revolutionize the way factories operate.

Some actually do.

Some quietly disappear after draining hundreds of thousands of dollars from a company that was already struggling to keep margins healthy.

And some become very expensive monuments sitting in the corner of a factory collecting dust while everyone pretends not to notice them anymore.

The truth is that hearing about an innovation and buying it are two entirely different things. Unfortunately, many factory owners and upper management teams still confuse enthusiasm with strategy.

That confusion can become very expensive.

The Seduction of “The Latest and Greatest”

Innovation companies are often very good at presentations. The demonstrations are polished. The charts are impressive. The videos show perfectly organized factories with smiling workers and flawless production flow.

What they rarely show is what happens six months later after the installation crew leaves.

That is when reality begins.

Many innovations entering the offsite industry today are designed by people who have never worked inside a modular or panelized factory during a production crisis. They understand technology very well but sometimes underestimate the chaos of real-world manufacturing.

Factories are not laboratories. They are living systems filled with personalities, old habits, scheduling pressures, changing crews, builder demands, weather delays, supply shortages, and management styles that vary dramatically from company to company.

A new software platform or production system does not enter a clean environment. It enters an ecosystem already filled with procedures, politics, and existing systems.

That matters more than most people realize.

The Real Cost Begins After the Purchase

One of the biggest mistakes factories make is focusing almost entirely on acquisition cost.

That is usually the smallest part of the long-term expense.

The actual financial impact begins after the contract is signed. Installation costs often exceed expectations. Existing systems may need modification or complete replacement. Infrastructure upgrades may suddenly become necessary. Internet capacity, electrical service, networking equipment, production layout changes, and integration with existing software can quickly push the budget over the limit.

Then comes training.

Factory owners routinely underestimate the number of man-hours required to properly train employees on new systems. Productivity often slows dramatically during implementation. Some experienced employees resist learning the new system entirely. Others quietly continue using the old methods behind management’s back because they know those methods work.

Software companies love using the phrase “user-friendly.” That phrase means very little in an environment where production supervisors are already overwhelmed managing deadlines, shortages, service issues, transportation schedules, and labor turnover.

If the new system slows production even temporarily, frustration spreads quickly throughout the factory.

The Hidden Danger of Eliminating the Old System Too Quickly

One of the riskiest decisions a factory can make is to remove the old process before the new one has proven itself under real production conditions.

This happens constantly.

Management becomes excited about the new technology and decides to fully commit immediately. The old equipment is removed. The old software is disconnected. Procedures that employees understood for years suddenly disappear overnight.

Then the problems begin.

The new system may not communicate correctly with existing platforms. Production bottlenecks may appear in unexpected places. Employees may misunderstand programming procedures. Reporting systems may produce inaccurate data. Technical support may not respond quickly enough during critical production periods.

Now the factory is trapped.

The old system is gone, the new system is unstable, and production deadlines are still approaching every day.

This is where panic starts to creep into management meetings.

Every Innovation Needs A Trial Period

The smartest factory owners are rarely the first to buy something new.

They are usually the first to study it carefully.

Before introducing major innovations into production, there should be a structured evaluation process. Not a sales presentation. Not a trade show demonstration. A real-world evaluation.

That process should include visits to existing users who have been operating the system for at least a year. Not six weeks. Not during the honeymoon period.

Factory leadership should speak privately with production managers who actually use the system every day. They should ask uncomfortable questions. What problems appeared after installation? What slowed production? What surprised them? What additional costs surfaced later? Would they buy it again?

Those answers are often far more valuable than the original sales presentation.

A phased rollout is usually far safer than a complete replacement strategy. Running the new system alongside the old one for a period of time allows management to identify weaknesses before risking the entire production flow.

Unfortunately, patience is not always common when excitement about innovation takes over.

The Human Side of Innovation

Technology companies often underestimate one important fact.

Factories are still driven by people.

The success or failure of most innovation projects depends less on the technology itself than on whether employees believe management understands what they are being asked to do.

If workers feel a new system is simply being forced upon them because executives want to appear innovative, resistance grows quickly.

Experienced employees, in particular, become skeptical when management ignores their concerns during implementation. Many of those employees have survived previous “game-changing” technologies that quietly disappeared a year later.

Their skepticism is often earned honestly.

The best innovation rollouts usually involve production supervisors, floor leaders, and long-term employees early in the evaluation process. When employees feel included instead of replaced, implementation becomes far smoother.

Ignoring the human side of innovation is often where expensive mistakes begin.

Innovation Fatigue Is Becoming Real

There is another issue quietly growing inside the offsite industry.

Innovation fatigue.

Many factories have experienced years of nonstop promises about automation, AI, robotics, digital twins, advanced ERP systems, scheduling software, production tracking, and machine learning. Some of these tools are excellent. Others are still evolving.

But constant disruption creates exhaustion.

Employees begin tuning out management announcements because they assume another major change is coming next quarter anyway.

Meanwhile, upper management sometimes becomes addicted to the appearance of innovation itself. Buying something new can temporarily create excitement, attract investor attention, generate press coverage, and make leadership feel progressive.

Actually making it work long-term is much harder.

That is why some factories today are filled with partially implemented systems that never fully replaced the old processes they were supposed to eliminate.

Sometimes Doing Nothing Is The Smartest Decision

This may sound strange coming from someone who regularly writes about innovation, but not every innovation should be purchased.

Sometimes the smartest decision is waiting.

A factory operating profitably with reliable quality, strong scheduling, experienced employees, and stable builder relationships should not risk destroying that stability simply because a new technology looks impressive at a trade show.

Innovation should solve an existing problem.

If management cannot clearly define the exact operational problem being solved, the company may simply be buying expensive excitement.

That rarely ends well.

Modcoach Observation


The offsite construction industry absolutely needs innovation. Without it, the industry will never solve labor shortages, production inefficiencies, scheduling problems, or housing affordability challenges.

But there is a major difference between strategic innovation and emotional purchasing.

The factories that survive long-term will not necessarily be the ones buying the most technology. They will be the ones carefully evaluating what truly improves production, profitability, quality, and long-term stability before making the investment.

Because once the excitement of the sales presentation disappears, the factory still has to live with the decision every single day afterward.

And removing a bad innovation is often far more expensive than buying it in the first place.

The Final Days Before an Offsite Manufacturing Company Closes Its Doors


Most manufacturing companies do not collapse in one dramatic moment. There is rarely a loud announcement in the middle of the production floor or a single meeting where everyone suddenly learns the truth at the same time. In many cases, the final weeks feel strangely normal to outsiders. Trucks still arrive, machines still run, and employees still punch the clock. But inside the offices of ownership and upper management, something changes.

If you have spent enough years around manufacturing, especially in industries like offsite construction, you eventually learn to recognize the signs. They are subtle at first, but once you have seen them happen a few times, you never forget them. One of the earliest changes is communication. Management meetings become shorter and quieter. Conversations that once included department heads suddenly happen behind closed doors. Questions about the future are answered with phrases like “We’re working on it” or “We should know more next week.” The optimism executives once projected so naturally begins to sound forced.

The Weight Ownership Carries

For many owners, especially founders, a factory is not just a place that makes products. It becomes their identity. They remember the first machine they bought, the first major order they landed, the employees who stayed loyal for decades, and the years when everything seemed possible. Walking away from that is emotionally brutal, especially for owners who poured decades of their lives into the business.

In the final days, owners often change noticeably. Some become short-tempered over small problems because the pressure is crushing them from every direction. Others become strangely calm and detached, almost as if they have already accepted the ending internally, while everyone else is still hoping for a miracle. I have seen owners who once walked the production floor every morning suddenly stop coming out of their office. The door stays shut longer, phone calls get avoided, and eye contact with employees becomes difficult because they already know what may be coming. Deep down, many of them feel like they failed people they genuinely cared about.

When Cash Flow Becomes the Entire Conversation

At some point near the end, almost every management conversation revolves around one thing: surviving another week. Discussions are no longer about expansion, innovation, efficiency improvements, or next year’s projections. Instead, every conversation turns into a cash flow exercise. Can payroll be made on Friday? Which vendor can wait another week for payment? Will the bank extend a little more breathing room? Can another deposit come in quickly enough to keep operations moving?

This is where upper management teams often begin living hour to hour emotionally. Even managers who once thought strategically start operating entirely in crisis mode. The pressure changes people. It becomes difficult to think clearly when every decision feels tied directly to survival. Owners who once confidently approved investments now hesitate even over minor expenses because every dollar leaving the building feels risky.

Decision-Making Begins to Freeze

One of the strangest things about a company nearing the end is how difficult even simple decisions become. Equipment repairs get delayed, hiring freezes quietly appear, maintenance gets postponed, and marketing efforts disappear almost overnight. Projects sit unfinished because nobody wants to commit cash to anything that is not absolutely necessary.

Everyone understands decisions still need to be made, but every option seems risky. In healthy companies, management spends most of its time talking about the future. In struggling companies, leadership becomes consumed with avoiding mistakes today. That fear spreads throughout the organization faster than many executives realize. Employees begin sensing hesitation in every direction, and uncertainty slowly replaces confidence.

Employees Usually Know Before Management Admits It

Workers are far more observant than many executives think. They notice when vendors stop smiling, when materials arrive more slowly, and when managers suddenly begin whispering in corners. They notice when executives stop talking casually in the lunchroom and when department heads seem distracted during meetings. Most importantly, they notice changes in energy.

Experienced manufacturing employees can often sense when leadership has stopped believing. The atmosphere becomes heavier, conversations become cautious, and even production lines seem quieter somehow. Ironically, some companies become overly optimistic right before the end. Management starts talking about possible investors, huge opportunities, or major deals that could save everything. Sometimes those opportunities are real; other times, they are emotional lifelines because accepting failure after years or decades of fighting feels impossible.

Preparing for Life After the Shutdown

Another painful reality is that upper management often splits into two groups near the end. One group keeps fighting emotionally until the very last moment because they truly believe the company can still be saved. The other group quietly begins preparing for what comes afterward. Resumes get updated, recruiters get called back, and personal relationships with customers and suppliers suddenly become very important.

Very little of this gets discussed openly, but everyone involved carries enormous stress while pretending everything is still under control. In many cases, the people making the toughest decisions are getting only a few hours of sleep a night while trying to shield employees from the reality unfolding behind the scenes.

The Human Side of a Shutdown

I sometimes think the loneliest place in manufacturing is the office of an owner who knows the doors may soon close forever. Especially in industries like modular and offsite construction, factories often become extensions of family. Employees watched each other’s children grow up, built careers there, and entire communities depended on those paychecks.

Closing a factory is not just a financial event. It is emotional, personal, and deeply human. The sad part is that many employees on the production floor never fully understand how much pressure ownership was carrying during those final weeks. At the same time, ownership often fails to fully understand how frightened employees became as the company slowly unraveled around them. Both sides are hurting; they are simply hurting differently.

Modcoach Observation


After watching companies struggle over the years, I have learned something important. Businesses rarely die the day the doors close. Most begin fading long before that moment arrives. Sometimes it starts with cash flow problems, leadership exhaustion, repeated poor decisions, or simply losing the energy and belief that once made the company special.

In almost every case, the warning signs were there long before the shutdown announcement. The hardest part is that when people are living inside the crisis every day, those warning signs slowly begin to feel normal.

modcoach@gmail.com

Offsite Consultants Who Never Survived a Storm Are Now Teaching Others How to Sail

They say that industries that forget their history are often forced to relive it. 

In offsite construction, that warning should make every startup factory owner and every factory less than ten years old stop and think very carefully about who they are taking advice from.

The Downfall of Housing

The Housing Crash of 2008 didn’t simply slow modular construction down. It devastated it. 

Unlike many site builders who could pivot into remodeling, additions, insurance repairs, or smaller custom projects, modular factories carried an entirely different burden. Massive permanent facilities, overhead cranes, production equipment, transportation fleets, engineering departments, and payrolls still had to be paid whether homes were moving out the door or not.

Here are just some of the many modular factories that hit tough times back then and are gone forever.




Some factories survived through brutal cost-cutting, painful restructuring, loyal dealer networks, cautious expansion, and management teams that understood exactly how quickly momentum can disappear in this industry. Many others locked their doors forever. Entire production lines went silent. Skilled crews disappeared. Investors vanished. Communities lost employers that many thought were untouchable only a few years earlier.





What concerns me today is not that another 2008-style collapse is around the corner. It’s something different. I’m watching a growing number of consultants and advisors entering the offsite industry who never lived through that period, never managed through it, and in some cases don’t even know which factories disappeared or why they failed.



That should concern every startup owner sitting across the table from someone promising rapid growth, national expansion, automation strategies, AI integration, dealer acceleration, or “guaranteed scaling systems.” Advice sounds impressive when the market is healthy. Experience becomes priceless only when things stop going according to plan.




If a consultant advising your factory today cannot speak intelligently about the modular factories listed in this article that closed after 2008, what caused those failures, and what allowed other modular companies to survive, you should ask yourself a difficult question. Are you receiving guidance based on real industry scars and experience, or are you listening to theories built during good times?




Because in this industry, history doesn’t always repeat itself exactly. But it has a nasty habit of rhyming.





Modcoach Observation


There’s nothing wrong with new ideas, fresh technology, or younger consultants entering the offsite industry. Every generation brings something valuable to the table. But when a startup factory owner is betting millions of dollars, employees’ livelihoods, and investors’ trust on outside advice, they should make sure at least someone in the room has lived through the hard years and not just studied the success stories afterward. In offsite construction, experience isn’t simply knowledge. Sometimes it’s the difference between surviving the next downturn or becoming another empty factory everyone quietly forgets about.

modcoach@gmail.com









The Most Dangerous Company in Offsite Construction May Never Build a Single Module

 


A Modcoach Warning About Agentic AI

For years, modular factory owners worried about the same things every morning when they walked into the plant. Material costs. Labor shortages. Transportation delays. Backlogs. Interest rates. Finding enough set crews. Trying to keep quality up while speeding production up at the same time.

Those problems are still here and probably always will be. But something new is beginning to quietly move into the offsite industry that I don’t think enough people, especially older management, fully understand yet.

It’s called Agentic AI.

Now, before anyone stops reading because they think this is another article about ChatGPT writing marketing posts or AI creating goofy LinkedIn graphics, that’s not what I’m talking about. Those are toys compared to what’s coming next.

What I’m talking about are AI systems that can observe operations, learn from experience, make decisions, coordinate activities, predict outcomes, and slowly improve themselves over time with very little human guidance.

And if that sounds harmless, keep reading.

It Starts Out Looking Helpful

Like most things in construction, the first version usually arrives wearing a friendly face.

An AI company approaches a factory owner and says they can help reduce waste, improve production flow, tighten scheduling, predict maintenance issues before equipment breaks down, coordinate deliveries, improve estimating accuracy, and maybe even reduce warranty claims.

Most owners would gladly listen to that conversation today. Some would sign the contract before lunch.

Especially now, when margins are tight, and everyone is trying to figure out how to produce more housing with fewer people.

At first, the AI simply watches and learns. It studies how the factory operates. It monitors production schedules, labor efficiency, purchasing habits, delivery timing, downtime, engineering changes, supplier issues, and customer complaints. Over time, it begins to recognize patterns that no human being could ever track manually.

That’s where things begin to change.

The Real Product Isn’t the Software

Many older managers still think software is the product.

It isn’t.

The real product is the information the software collects.

Imagine one AI company connected to dozens of modular factories around the country. Add in builders, suppliers, transportation companies, crane services, developers, and installation crews. Every production problem, every delay, every warranty issue, every scheduling mistake, every labor shortage, and every successful solution eventually flows into the same intelligence system.

At some point, that software company may understand the offsite industry better than the people actually running it.

And that’s the part nobody seems eager to talk about yet.

Your Factory Could Become Someone Else’s Teacher

Let’s say two factories use the same AI platform.

The first factory spends years feeding the system data on estimating, labor performance, production sequencing, scheduling, supplier issues, and warranty issues. The AI studies it all and learns what works and what doesn't.

Now another factory signs on.

Without directly sharing confidential files, the AI supplier already knows which production approaches are more profitable, which workflows create bottlenecks, which scheduling systems break down under pressure, and which management habits lead to operational problems.

One factory unknowingly became the training ground that helped improve another factory.

That may not sound unfair at first, but what happens when the AI supplier begins investing financially in selected factories?

The Day the Software Company Wants Ownership

That day is coming.

Maybe not tomorrow, but eventually.

A startup modular factory struggling with capital gets approached by a sophisticated AI company offering operational systems, robotics integration, automated scheduling, estimating support, purchasing intelligence, and production optimization. The startup can’t afford the full implementation cost.

Then comes the offer.

Instead of charging millions upfront, the AI supplier takes partial ownership in exchange for the technology.

Many startups would jump at that opportunity immediately.

But now the software company may have access to operational data from dozens of competing factories while also having financial interests tied to one of them. Even if nobody intentionally manipulates anything, the temptation to steer the best insights, improvements, and innovations toward preferred partners could become enormous.

That’s no longer just a software relationship. That becomes an influence over the direction of the industry itself.

Older Management May Underestimate This

I still run into factory owners who barely trust cloud software, use weak passwords, or hand over operational information without thinking twice about where it ends up. Some still believe technology companies are simply “vendors.”

The younger technology world doesn’t think that way anymore.

To many AI companies, data itself is the business. The software is simply the tool used to gather it.

That difference in thinking could eventually become dangerous for offsite construction because this industry has always been fragmented, undercapitalized, and hungry for operational improvement. That makes it extremely attractive to technology companies looking to dominate a niche industry before the industry fully understands what’s happening.

And once a factory becomes deeply dependent on one AI ecosystem for estimating, scheduling, purchasing, engineering coordination, and production management, walking away from that system may become almost impossible.

The Scary Part is That AI Could Actually Work

This is what makes the situation so complicated.

Agentic AI could genuinely help solve some of the offsite industry’s biggest problems. It could improve quality control, reduce waste, predict maintenance failures, tighten production schedules, coordinate trucking more effectively, and help factories operate with fewer costly mistakes.

Some factories may become dramatically more profitable because of it.

Others may finally achieve the consistency the industry has struggled with for decades.

That’s why owners will adopt it. Not because they’re foolish, but because the operational advantages could become impossible to ignore.

And that’s exactly why factory owners need to start asking harder questions right now instead of five years from now.

Who owns the operational data? How is it being used? Can the AI supplier aggregate lessons learned across multiple factories? What happens if the supplier also owns part of competing operations? Can factories ever fully disconnect from the system after years of integration?

Most current software contracts aren’t even remotely prepared for those conversations yet.

This Industry Has Seen Versions of This Before

Years ago, factory owners worried about competitors driving by the plant, counting modules sitting in the yard to estimate backlog. Today, some companies are preparing to voluntarily hand over nearly every operational detail of their businesses to cloud-based intelligence systems that run 24 hours a day.

The buildings may still belong to the factory owners. The equipment may still sit on their production floors. The employees may still wear company shirts with the factory logo on the back.

But someday, the real power in offsite construction may belong to the companies quietly collecting the intelligence flowing through them all.

Modcoach Observation


The offsite industry has always loved innovation. New machinery, new software, new robotics, new materials, and new systems always attract attention because everyone wants to believe the next breakthrough will finally solve construction’s biggest headaches.

But every once in a while, an innovation arrives that doesn’t just improve the industry. It changes who controls it.

Agentic AI may become one of those moments.

And by the time many older managers fully understand what they signed up for, the contracts may already be signed, the systems may already be embedded into their operations, and the companies collecting all that intelligence may have become more powerful than the factories themselves.

modcoach@gmail.com

For Lack of a Nail, the Factory Was Lost


Years ago, I heard the old saying, “For lack of a nail, the shoe was lost. For lack of a shoe, the horse was lost,” and on and on until eventually the entire battle was lost. Back then, I thought it was just another clever proverb adults used to sound wise.

After spending decades in construction, manufacturing, sales, and now writing about the offsite industry, I’ve come to realize that little saying may explain more business failures than any MBA course ever could.

Most businesses don’t die because of one gigantic disaster. They usually die from dozens of little nails that nobody thought were important enough to hammer in properly.

The Phone Call That Never Happened

I’ve seen modular factories lose major builders because someone forgot to return two phone calls. Not ten calls. Not months of neglect. Just two unanswered calls at the wrong time. The builder quietly moved on to another supplier, and the factory owner never fully understood why the relationship cooled off.

That’s a nail.

In the offsite industry, relationships are everything. Builders, developers, suppliers, transporters, and set crews all remember who made their lives easier and who made them harder. A small communication failure can quietly undo years of trust.

“We’ll Fix It in the Field”

I’ve watched production departments keep saying, “We’ll fix it in the field,” until warranty crews were spending more time on the road than in the factory. At first, it seemed manageable. Then one day the owner realized profits were disappearing into callbacks, service trucks, hotels, overtime, and angry customers.

Another nail.

The problem with field fixes is they rarely stay small. One repair turns into five. One frustrated builder tells three others. Before long, the company develops a reputation problem that no advertising campaign can fix.

Estimating Yourself Into Trouble

Sometimes the nail is sitting in the estimating department. A material list doesn’t get updated. Freight costs change. Labor productivity slips but nobody adjusts the formulas. The company keeps winning projects and everybody celebrates the sales volume while quietly losing money on every building leaving the plant.

Those are the kinds of nails that don’t squeak loudly enough to get attention until the floor collapses underneath them.

I’ve known factories that were so proud of being “busy” they never stopped to ask whether they were actually making money on what they were building.

Assumptions Can Be Expensive

Communication is another one that gets businesses in trouble more often than owners want to admit. One person assumes the builder understands FOB pricing. Another assumes the crane costs were explained. Someone else assumes the set crew is handling weather protection. By the time everybody discovers the misunderstanding, the project is already bleeding money and relationships are damaged.

The scary part is that every person involved usually thinks somebody else handled it.

Most disasters in construction don’t begin with bad intentions. They begin with assumptions.

When Employees Stop Caring

I’ve also learned that culture can be a nail.

One good employee watches management ignore a recurring problem long enough and stops speaking up. Then another employee does the same thing. Before long, the entire atmosphere changes from pride to survival mode. Nobody announces it during a meeting. There’s no official memo. It just slowly settles over the company like dust.

Then one day management wonders why nobody seems to care anymore.

Good employees don’t usually quit all at once. First, they stop offering ideas. Then they stop trying to improve things. Finally, they stop believing management wants to hear the truth.

Cash Flow Doesn’t Care About Paper Profits

Cash flow can become one of the deadliest nails of all because businesses can look healthy right up until the moment they aren’t. A company may show paper profits while struggling to make payroll because draws are delayed, receivables aren’t collected, or suppliers suddenly tighten credit terms.

That’s when owners stop sleeping well at night.

I’ve seen companies spend tens of thousands of dollars on expensive software systems, robotics, consultants, and marketing campaigns while ignoring basic housekeeping issues that were quietly draining profits every single day. It’s amazing how many businesses chase giant solutions while stepping over small problems that are killing them.

Ego Is Sometimes the Biggest Nail

Maybe the biggest nail of all is ego.

Some owners and managers become so afraid of looking uninformed that they stop asking questions. Instead of learning, they pretend. Instead of listening, they defend. Five minutes of humility could save them years of expensive mistakes, but pride has a way of convincing people they already know enough.

That’s a dangerous nail in any industry.

The older I get, the more I realize successful businesses aren’t usually built on grand speeches, flashy technology, or motivational slogans hanging in break rooms. Most successful companies simply become very good at paying attention to the little things before those little things become expensive things.

That sounds simple.

It isn’t.

Modcoach Observation


In business, the “nails” almost never look dangerous when they first appear. They look small, annoying, temporary, and easy to deal with tomorrow. Unfortunately, tomorrow is where many companies quietly begin losing the battle they thought they were winning.

Before Your Factory Buys Into AI, It Needs to Buy Into Reality


Over the past year, I’ve had more conversations about Artificial Intelligence than I’ve had in the previous ten years combined. Every modular and offsite construction conference I attend seems to feature at least one software company promising to revolutionize production, eliminate waste, solve labor shortages, improve scheduling, and somehow make every factory dramatically more profitable almost overnight. The excitement is real, but so is the confusion surrounding what AI can realistically accomplish inside an offsite factory.

Some factory owners are convinced AI is the next industrial revolution, while others quietly believe it is simply another expensive shiny object that will disappear after a few years, joining the long list of software systems and production technologies that were once marketed as industry-changing breakthroughs. Personally, I believe AI will absolutely become part of the future of offsite construction, but I also believe many factories are approaching it the wrong way by focusing on the technology before understanding the operational problems they are trying to solve.

The Wrong First Question

The first question should never be, “How do we bring AI into our factory?” 

The first question should be, “Where are we currently losing money, time, quality, efficiency, or communication?”

That shift in thinking changes the entire conversation. Every factory already knows where many of its weak spots exist. Rework, scheduling confusion, missing materials, engineering bottlenecks, delayed approvals, inconsistent quality control, inventory problems, equipment downtime, and communication gaps between departments are all common issues throughout the industry. AI should not be viewed as magic capable of curing every problem overnight. It should be viewed as another tool designed to help solve specific operational problems that already exist.

Unfortunately, many factory owners are already being approached by software companies selling “AI-powered solutions” before the factory has even clearly identified what needs fixing. That approach often leads companies into expensive systems that create more confusion than improvement.

AI Will Magnify Good Systems… and Bad Ones

One thing decades in construction and manufacturing have taught me is that technology rarely fixes dysfunction on its own. In many cases, technology simply exposes dysfunction faster and on a larger scale.

If a factory struggles with weak communication, inconsistent estimating, poor scheduling discipline, unclear procedures, or management indecision, AI will not suddenly repair those weaknesses. In fact, it may accelerate the chaos by pushing out faster information based on poor inputs. The old phrase “garbage in, garbage out” still applies, no matter how advanced the software sounds in a sales presentation.

Before investing heavily in AI, every factory should take the time to carefully map out how work currently moves through the organization. How do drawings move from sales into engineering? How are production schedules created and updated? How are defects documented and tracked? How are change orders approved? Where do projects routinely slow down or break apart?

Many factories will discover that some of their biggest problems have very little to do with AI at all. Instead, they are process, communication, accountability, or management discipline problems. Identifying those weaknesses early can save a company tens of thousands of dollars before they ever purchase a new software package.

Start Small and Boring

One of the smartest approaches I’ve seen discussed by manufacturing experts is to start with small, low-risk AI applications rather than attempting to automate the entire factory at once. That means resisting the temptation to immediately buy robots or install massive systems that disrupt production while employees struggle to understand them.

Instead, factories should begin with practical pilot programs that solve one specific issue at a time. AI-assisted estimating reviews, predictive equipment maintenance, production scheduling alerts, inventory tracking, quality-control photo analysis, and searchable AI databases for SOPs, codes, and project documentation are all useful starting points.

None of those applications sound particularly glamorous, but they solve real operational problems that affect profitability every day. The factories that ultimately succeed with AI will probably not be the ones making the biggest announcements online. They will more likely be the factories quietly improving one process after another while their competitors are still chasing buzzwords.

The Production Floor Must Be Included

One of the biggest mistakes management can make is treating AI as an office-only initiative. If the production floor believes AI is simply another management tool designed to monitor workers or eventually replace jobs, resistance will begin immediately and quietly spread throughout the factory.

That is why respected production employees need to be involved from the very beginning. The people framing walls, installing MEP systems, moving modules, handling materials, and solving problems on the line every day often understand operational issues that office staff may never fully see.

I’ve watched too many expensive software systems fail because nobody bothered to ask the people actually using them whether they made practical sense in real-world production. AI cannot become another management experiment disconnected from the daily realities of manufacturing.

Data Is the Hidden Challenge

Every serious AI discussion eventually runs into the same obstacle: data. AI systems depend entirely on accurate and organized information in order to provide meaningful recommendations.

That includes production times, labor hours, material usage, purchasing records, defect reports, maintenance logs, warranty claims, schedules, drawings, inspection notes, and project photos. The challenge is that many factories still have critical information scattered across spreadsheets, handwritten notes, whiteboards, emails, ERP systems, and individual employees’ memories.

Before AI can provide meaningful insight, many factories may first need to improve how they gather, organize, and manage information. That work is not exciting and will certainly not generate flashy LinkedIn posts, but it is often the most important part of preparing for AI integration.

Keep Human Judgment in Charge

This may be the single most important lesson of all. AI should assist decisions, not replace experienced judgment.

Offsite construction remains a complicated business involving engineering, transportation, weather, labor availability, inspections, production limitations, customer expectations, and constantly changing building codes. An AI recommendation may sound perfectly logical on paper yet completely impractical in an active production environment.

That is why experienced managers, engineers, supervisors, and production leaders must retain control over final decisions. The best factories will eventually use AI the same way skilled craftsmen use power tools. The tool increases efficiency, but the knowledge, judgment, and responsibility still belong to the person operating it.

The Factories That Will Benefit Most

I suspect the factories that ultimately gain the most from AI will not necessarily be the largest or the wealthiest. They will likely be the disciplined factories willing to measure performance honestly, admit weaknesses, improve gradually, and focus on solving real operational problems rather than chasing hype.

Those factories will understand that AI is not a replacement for leadership, accountability, communication, culture, or experience. Instead, it becomes another valuable tool that helps good organizations operate more effectively and make better decisions faster.

Over time, those small improvements can become major competitive advantages.

Modcoach Observation


Right now, AI in offsite construction reminds me of the early days of factory software systems decades ago. Some owners rushed into technology blindly because they feared missing out, while others ignored it entirely because they feared change. The factories that usually succeeded landed somewhere in the middle. They stayed curious, moved carefully, tested small ideas first, and focused on solving real operational problems instead of chasing industry buzzwords. I suspect AI will follow that exact same path for the offsite industry.

The Offsite Factory May Have Closed… But an Opportunity Just Opened


Every few months, I hear about another modular factory shutting down, and almost immediately, the rumors start flying. “The industry is collapsing.” “Modular doesn’t work.” “Another investor lost everything.”

But after spending decades around factories, production lines, developers, and startup entrepreneurs, I’ve learned something that many people outside the industry don’t understand. A closed modular factory is not always a failure story. Sometimes, it’s the beginning of someone else’s success story.

That may sound strange at first. Most people look at a shuttered factory and see risk. I often look at it and see infrastructure, opportunity, and a shortcut that could save years of time and millions of dollars.

A Factory Already Built for Manufacturing

Starting a modular factory from scratch is brutally expensive. Before the first wall panel is ever built, money disappears into land acquisition, engineering, permits, utilities, production design, cranes, equipment installation, office space, and endless modifications that nobody anticipated during the original planning meetings.

A recently closed factory has already solved most of those problems.

The production flow may already exist. The electrical systems are usually designed for manufacturing loads. There may already be overhead cranes, material-handling systems, break rooms, loading areas, spray booths, and specialized workstations in place. Even if upgrades are needed, the foundation is there.

That alone can shave years off a startup timeline.

I’ve walked through more than a few empty modular facilities over the years and thought the same thing every time: somebody already spent the painful money here.

Location Matters More Than People Think

Most successful modular factories weren’t built randomly. They were usually placed near major transportation corridors, regional suppliers, rail access, interstate highways, or labor markets with manufacturing experience.

Those advantages don’t disappear when the doors close.

If the facility is within a day’s drive of major housing markets, lumber suppliers, steel providers, component manufacturers, or trucking routes, those logistical benefits will still exist for the next owner. In many cases, the location itself may be worth more than the building.

A new buyer inherits that strategic positioning without having to spend years figuring out where they should have built in the first place.

The Equipment Bargain Nobody Talks About

One of the hidden advantages of buying a closed modular factory is the equipment itself.

New production machinery can cost a fortune today, especially automated saw systems, conveyors, framing tables, robotics, and material-handling equipment. When a factory closes, however, lenders and liquidators are often more interested in recovering something rather than holding out for full replacement value.

That creates opportunities.

I’ve seen excellent equipment sell for pennies on the dollar simply because the previous ownership ran out of cash, lost financing, or expanded too quickly. The machinery itself was never the problem.

For the right buyer with patience and mechanical knowledge, these facilities can become turnkey operations at a fraction of the cost of building new.

The Workforce May Still Be There

This is one of the most overlooked advantages of all.

When a factory closes, the workforce usually doesn’t vanish overnight. Many of those employees remain in the area, hoping that another opportunity will appear. Some move into other construction trades. Others take temporary jobs while waiting to see if the plant reopens under new ownership.

That means a buyer may inherit something incredibly valuable: experienced labor.

These workers already understand production schedules, framing systems, quality control procedures, module sequencing, transportation preparation, and factory culture. Rebuilding that kind of institutional knowledge from scratch can take years.

In some communities, reopening a closed modular factory can actually create excitement because local workers want those jobs back.

Why Factories Really Close

This is the part many outsiders misunderstand.

A factory closure does not automatically mean modular construction failed.

Sometimes the problem was poor management. Sometimes investors underestimate cash flow requirements. Other times, the ownership group chased growth too quickly, priced homes incorrectly, hired the wrong leadership team, or tried to enter markets they didn’t fully understand.

I’ve seen factories with beautiful facilities and strong production capabilities collapse simply because nobody was watching overhead expenses or controlling change orders. I’ve also seen startups burn through millions before realizing that running a modular factory and starting one require completely different skill sets.

The building itself may still be perfectly viable.

A smart buyer studies why the company failed instead of automatically assuming the facility itself was the problem.

Existing Relationships Still Have Value

Another advantage rarely discussed is the possibility of reconnecting old supplier and customer relationships.

Former builders, developers, transportation companies, set crews, and suppliers may still be looking for a dependable factory partner in that region. In some cases, the market gap created by the closure actually creates pent-up demand waiting for a competent operator to step in.

That can provide a much faster path to revenue than launching an entirely unknown operation from scratch.

Even the reputation of the old company can sometimes help. If the factory had quality products but weak management, a new owner has the chance to position themselves as the group that fixed what went wrong.

That can become a powerful story.

Due Diligence Is Everything

None of this means buying a closed modular factory is easy money.

A buyer still needs to inspect the equipment carefully, understand environmental liabilities, evaluate local labor conditions, review transportation logistics, study market demand, and determine exactly why the previous operation failed.

Some factories are truly damaged beyond financial or operational recovery. Others were simply victims of poor timing, weak leadership, or unrealistic expectations.

The difference between a smart acquisition and a disaster usually comes down to one thing: due diligence.

Too many people fall in love with the dream before understanding the numbers.

The Opportunity Hidden Behind Locked Doors

The offsite industry has always had cycles. Factories open. Factories close. Some expand too fast. Others never expand at all. But every once in a while, a closed facility appears, offering the right entrepreneur an incredible head start.

The walls are already standing. The infrastructure is already there. The market may still exist. The workforce may still be nearby. The equipment may still have years of life remaining.

Sometimes the previous owner simply ran out of time, money, or expertise before the vision had a chance to mature.

For the right buyer, that locked factory door may not represent failure at all. It may represent the cheapest and fastest way into the modular industry anyone will ever find.

Modcoach Observation


I’ve noticed that many startup entrepreneurs dream about building a brand-new modular factory with shiny robotics, perfect production lines, and enormous buildings. What they often don’t realize is that somebody else may have already spent tens of millions of dollars learning what works and what doesn’t.

A closed modular factory should never automatically be viewed as a warning sign. Sometimes it’s simply a second chance waiting for someone smart enough to recognize the difference between a failed business plan and a valuable manufacturing asset.

When Offsite Construction Attracts the Wrong Experts


I received a phone call from a modular factory owner last week asking me to warn other factory owners and startups about a couple of consultants and advisors he had paid tens of thousands of dollars to help with his marketing efforts and improve his production line.

By the third month, the marketing consisted mostly of AI-generated graphic messages posted on LinkedIn and an email campaign simply stating that the factory was ready to take orders for housing projects. The production line “improvement” strategy was to order matching T-shirts for all the production labor crews because the advisors believed improved morale would naturally increase efficiency. When the contract ended after three months, the advisors showed up carrying a mountain of statistics proving how successful their efforts had supposedly been.

The owner told me he personally asked every serious inquiry where they had heard about the company, and not one came from the consultants’ work. Production efficiency never improved, waste never decreased, and output never increased. Nothing meaningful changed except the amount of money that left the company's checking account.

He told me that, given my LinkedIn presence and industry visibility, he thought I should warn other factory owners and startups. I explained that I would never use anyone’s name publicly, but I would absolutely write about what’s beginning to happen in this industry.

The Point Where Industries Become Targets

Every growing industry eventually reaches a point where it starts attracting outsiders looking for opportunity. In the beginning, an industry is usually too risky, too unstable, or too difficult for most people to pay attention to. The pioneers quietly struggle through years of mistakes, thin profits, skeptical lenders, workforce shortages, transportation issues, and customers who barely understand the product.

That was offsite construction for a very long time.

But eventually something changes. Affordable housing becomes a national conversation. Venture capital begins flowing into the industry. Politicians begin discussing industrialized housing solutions. AI, robotics, automation, and factory-built construction become conference buzzwords. Once national attention and money begin to arrive, another wave follows close behind.

That’s when the advisors and consultants start appearing.

Not all of them are bad. Some bring legitimate expertise from manufacturing, operations, logistics, finance, software, or marketing. The good ones usually spend more time asking questions than delivering speeches because they understand that every industry has hidden systems and unwritten rules that can only be learned through experience.

Unfortunately, another type arrives as well. These are the people who suddenly become “industry experts” a few months after discovering the industry exists.

Offsite Construction Looks Easier Than It Is

One of the biggest problems in offsite construction is that it appears deceptively simple to outsiders. People see a finished modular home, a robotic production line, a wall panel system, or a software dashboard and assume they understand the business.

They don’t.

What they don’t see are the invisible systems holding everything together. They don’t see production bottlenecks, delayed inspections, transportation permits, scheduling failures, utility coordination issues, weather delays, warranty claims, set crew problems, or the constant balancing act between production speed and field performance. They’ve never stood on a factory floor at six o’clock in the morning knowing that every mistake today creates problems for dozens of people downstream tomorrow.

That knowledge only comes from years of experience, and experience cannot be downloaded from AI, copied from LinkedIn posts, or learned from attending a few conferences.

The Rise of “Statistics-Based Success”

One thing I’ve noticed over the years is that weak consultants often become experts at creating statistics that sound impressive while producing very little measurable value. When real results fail to appear, they begin focusing on “engagement metrics,” “visibility numbers,” “workflow alignment,” “morale indicators,” or “brand awareness.”

They arrive with colorful charts, dashboards, percentages, and reports explaining how successful everything has been.

Meanwhile, the factory owner is asking much simpler questions. Did sales increase? Did production improve? Did waste go down? Did scheduling get better? Did profits improve? Did employee turnover decrease? Did anything actually improve inside the company?

Those are the numbers that matter.

Many startups become vulnerable to this because they desperately want guidance and reassurance. Investors expect progress reports. Owners feel pressure to show momentum. Employees want confidence from leadership. So when someone walks into the room speaking confidently and using polished business language, it becomes easy to mistake confidence for competence.

The Most Dangerous Advisors

Ironically, the most dangerous advisors are not always outright scammers. Many are intelligent people who genuinely believe that success in one industry automatically qualifies them to advise another.

A software executive suddenly becomes a modular factory strategist. A branding consultant becomes a production advisor. A motivational speaker suddenly understands operations management. A social media marketer positions themselves as an authority in the housing industry.

The problem is that offsite construction is not simply manufacturing, construction, logistics, or technology on its own. It is all of them operating together at the same time. Changing one part of the process often creates problems somewhere else. Improving production speed means little if transportation can’t keep up. Increasing sales becomes dangerous if scheduling systems collapse under new demand. Marketing campaigns become worthless if operations can’t consistently deliver a quality product.

The experienced people in this industry understand how interconnected everything really is because they’ve lived through the difficult years. The inexperienced advisors usually don’t even realize that those invisible connections exist.

Why This Will Become More Common

As offsite construction continues growing, this problem will become more common. More money will enter the industry. More startups will appear. More conferences will emerge. More technology companies will chase construction dollars. And more consultants will begin presenting themselves as experts in modular and offsite construction.

That’s the natural progression of every industry that begins attracting national attention and investment.

The responsibility now falls on factory owners, developers, and startups to ask harder questions before signing contracts and writing checks. What direct experience does this advisor actually have? What measurable results have they personally produced? Have they managed operations themselves? Have they survived difficult years in this industry? Can they explain failures as clearly as successes?

Most importantly, do they truly understand the realities of this industry, or are they simply drawn to its excitement?

Modcoach Observation


The best advisors I’ve ever met in this industry rarely arrive promising miracles. Most of them arrive carrying scars from difficult projects, production failures, delayed jobs, angry customers, cash-flow crises, and sleepless nights. They speak carefully because they understand how difficult success really is in offsite construction.

The dangerous ones usually arrive carrying slide decks instead of scars.