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.






















