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.


Backyard Revolution: Are ADUs and Tiny Homes About to Change Affordable Housing?


Another state has stepped up and done something the federal government and, frankly, much of the housing industry has struggled to do—make it easier for everyday people to create affordable housing.

This time, it’s Virginia.

And while it may not sound like a headline-grabbing moment, it just might be one of the most important shifts in housing policy we’ve seen in years.

A Simple Idea That Took Too Long

Starting in 2027, homeowners across Virginia will be able to build accessory dwelling units—ADUs—on their property “by right,” meaning they won’t need to beg, plead, or wait months for local approvals.

That alone is a major shift.


Local governments will now be required to allow these units in single-family zones and cap permitting fees at $500, removing two of the biggest barriers that have quietly killed thousands of potential housing units over the years.

For decades, homeowners have had the land, the need, and often the financial incentive—but not the permission.

What This Really Means on the Ground

An ADU can be a tiny house in the backyard, a converted garage, a small apartment over a detached structure, or an in-law suite.


In other words, it’s not a new invention.

It’s just been buried under zoning rules, neighborhood resistance, and local politics that made it easier to talk about affordable housing than actually build it.

Now, that barrier is starting to crack.

Why States Are Moving Faster Than Washington

Across the country, states are beginning to realize something the federal government hasn’t quite figured out—housing affordability isn’t going to be solved by one big program.

It’s going to be solved by thousands of small ones.

Virginia joins a growing list of states pushing bipartisan legislation to:

  • Reduce zoning restrictions
  • Allow ADUs
  • Expand manufactured and modular housing

In fact, over 100 pro-housing bills have been passed nationwide in recent years, many focused on exactly these types of incremental changes.

It’s not flashy.

But it’s happening.

Tiny Homes Move From Trend to Tool

For years, tiny homes have lived on the edge of the housing conversation—part lifestyle choice, part curiosity, part social media darling.



Now, they’re becoming something else entirely.

A tool.

A backyard ADU can:

  • Provide rental income for a homeowner
  • Offer housing for aging parents
  • Give young adults a place to live affordably
  • Create naturally affordable rental units without subsidies

That last point is where things start to get interesting.

Could This Become a Rental Housing Engine?

Let’s think about this for a moment.

If even a small percentage of homeowners in America added an ADU:

  • Millions of new rental units could be created
  • They would be spread across existing neighborhoods
  • Infrastructure already exists
  • No massive land development required

This isn’t theory—it’s math.

And it’s math that doesn’t require billions in federal spending or decades of planning.

The Industry Should Be Paying Attention

This is where the offsite and modular industry should be leaning forward.


Because ADUs and tiny homes are tailor-made for:

  • Modular factories
  • Panelized systems
  • Precut packages
  • LGS and CLT innovations

Small footprint. Repeatable design. Scalable production.

If factories are looking for volume opportunities that don’t rely on large developers or complex financing structures, this might be one of the cleanest paths forward.

The Reality Check Nobody Talks About

This isn’t a silver bullet.

Local resistance will still exist. HOAs will push back. Financing for ADUs is still inconsistent. Utility connections, inspections, and site prep can quickly eat into affordability.


And just because something is allowed doesn’t mean it will be widely adopted overnight.

But compared to where we’ve been, this is real progress.

Modcoach Observation


The housing industry has spent years waiting for a big solution to affordability, while quietly ignoring the small ones sitting in plain sight.

ADUs and tiny homes won’t solve the housing crisis by themselves—but they don’t have to.

If states keep removing barriers and homeowners start building, these “backyard solutions” could become one of the largest sources of naturally affordable rental housing in the country.

Not because the system fixed housing…

…but because millions of individuals finally got permission to help fix it themselves.

Maine’s Modular Wake-Up Call


There’s a story coming out of Maine right now that should make every modular factory owner, developer, and builder stop what they’re doing and take a hard look at their pipeline. What happened there didn’t start with bad intentions, poor workmanship, or even a failed project—it started with a misunderstanding that had been quietly building for years.

The Industry Thought It Was Playing by the Rules

For a long time, modular housing projects in Maine moved forward the same way they do in many parts of the country. Factories built modules, third-party inspectors signed off in the plant, and local inspectors handled the foundation, set, and finish work. It wasn’t perfect, but it was predictable, and in construction, predictability is everything.

Projects were approved, delivered, and occupied without much resistance. Then one day, someone took a closer look.

A Line in the Code Nobody Paid Attention To

A local official in Portland began reviewing how multifamily modular projects were being handled, and what they found wasn’t fraud or corner-cutting. It was a disconnect between how the industry operates and how the code was written.

In Maine, smaller modular projects followed one regulatory path, while larger multifamily projects were supposed to follow another—one that treated them much more like site-built construction. That distinction had been overlooked, misunderstood, or simply ignored, depending on who you ask.

Licensed Trades… Inside the Factory?

Once the code was interpreted as written, the implications became clear. Electrical and plumbing work for these larger projects had to be performed by Maine-licensed professionals, not just reviewed or supervised.

That’s a fundamental shift in how most modular factories operate. For in-state manufacturers, it creates logistical headaches and higher labor costs. For out-of-state factories, it can effectively shut the door, since they’re not going to hire Maine-licensed trades just to serve a single market.

Hundreds of Units, Suddenly in Limbo

The impact was immediate and very real for developers. Hundreds of planned housing units were suddenly caught in a regulatory gray area that no longer felt gray at all.

Projects that once looked straightforward now faced redesigns, delays, and cost increases. Developers who had chosen modular for speed and efficiency found themselves dealing with uncertainty and risk instead.

The “Fix” That Didn’t Happen

A legislative effort was introduced to bring Maine’s approach closer to how most modular-friendly states operate. The proposal would have allowed factory workers to perform the work, provided it was overseen by licensed professionals, which is a model the industry understands and can work within.

The bill made sense to many in the industry, but it failed to pass. Without that fix, the existing interpretation of the code remains in place, leaving developers and factories to figure out how—or whether—to move forward.

A Temporary Bandage on a Structural Problem

In response, the state allocated temporary funding to help a handful of projects continue by bringing licensed trades into factories. This may help some developments get across the finish line, but it’s not a scalable solution.

You can’t build a long-term housing strategy on temporary workarounds. At some point, the industry needs clarity, consistency, and a set of rules that align with how modular construction actually works.

When the Advantages Start to Disappear

Modular construction has always sold itself on speed, cost control, and efficiency. When additional labor requirements, scheduling complications, and regulatory uncertainty enter the picture, those advantages begin to erode.

Developers are quick to notice when the math changes. If modular is no longer faster or more predictable, many will quietly return to the methods they already understand, even if those methods are less efficient on paper.

This Isn’t Just a Maine Problem

What happened in Maine is not unique, it’s just more visible than usual. Similar gray areas exist in codes and regulations across the country, often sitting unnoticed until a project or inspector forces a closer review.

When that happens, the shift can be sudden and disruptive, catching developers and factories off guard. It’s a reminder that regulatory risk is always present, even when everything appears to be running smoothly.

Modcoach Observation

Modular construction doesn’t struggle because factories can’t build quality homes—it struggles when the rules governing those homes don’t reflect how they’re actually built. Maine didn’t set out to slow down modular housing, but by enforcing its code as written, it exposed a gap that had been hiding in plain sight.

For an industry that prides itself on innovation and efficiency, this is a wake-up call. If we don’t align our processes with the regulations that control them, we’re not building a better system—we’re building one that can be stopped at any time.

Trapped on the List: When Affordable Housing Takes Years

 


There’s a quiet crisis in this country that doesn’t get headlines, ribbon cuttings, or press conferences. It happens behind closed doors, in small apartments, spare bedrooms, and sometimes cars parked overnight in safe places. It’s the waiting game for affordable housing, and for millions of Americans—especially seniors—it’s a game with no predictable ending.

We like to think of housing assistance as a safety net. The reality is, it’s more like a waiting list for a safety net that may or may not arrive in time.

The Illusion of Help

On paper, the system works. Programs like Section 8 and public housing exist to support those who can’t afford market rents. Funding is allocated, agencies are staffed, and applications are processed.

But here’s the part that doesn’t make the brochure. The typical wait for subsidized housing in the United States is about two to two-and-a-half years. That’s the average for people who actually receive assistance. It doesn’t include the thousands who apply and never make it to the front of the line.

In many areas, the wait stretches to three, five, even ten years. Some lists are so overwhelmed they simply close, locking out new applicants for months or years at a time. Imagine needing help today and being told you can’t even ask for it.

Time Isn’t Neutral

When you’re financially secure, waiting is an inconvenience. When you’re living in poverty, waiting is a risk.

For retirees on fixed incomes, every month matters. Rents don’t stand still. Utility bills don’t pause. Medications don’t get cheaper. The longer the wait, the more likely it is that people begin cutting corners—skipping prescriptions, eating less, or moving into situations that compromise their safety and dignity.

Time, in this system, is not neutral. It quietly erodes stability.

The “Typical” Wait

Across the country, the average wait is roughly:

  • About 2 to 2½ years (18–30 months)

That’s the national average for people who actually receive assistance. In other words, that’s how long successful applicants typically waited before getting help.

What It’s Really Like in Practice

That average hides a much harsher reality depending on where you live:

  • Many areas: 2–5 years
  • High-demand cities: 5–10+ years
  • Some extreme cases: decade-long waits or more

And in large housing authorities, waits can reach up to 8 years on average

There are even documented ranges from 6 months to 25 years, depending on the specific property or program 

The Senior Reality

Seniors often receive priority on housing lists, and that’s a good thing. But priority doesn’t mean immediate.

Even with preference points, many elderly applicants still wait years for assistance. And while they wait, they are among the least equipped to adapt. Moving in with family isn’t always an option. Taking on additional work may not be physically possible. Downsizing only works if there’s something smaller—and affordable—available.

We’ve created a system where the people who need stability the most are asked to be the most patient.

A System Under Strain

The fundamental problem isn’t complicated. There simply isn’t enough supply.

Only a fraction of eligible households ever receive housing assistance. The rest remain on waiting lists or fall through the cracks entirely. Meanwhile, construction of new affordable units continues at a pace that lags far behind demand.

This isn’t just a funding issue. It’s a coordination issue, a regulatory issue, and in many cases, a willpower issue. We talk about housing as a priority, but we don’t always act like it when it comes to zoning, approvals, and community acceptance.

What Can Be Done—Right Now

It’s easy to throw up our hands and say the system is broken. That may be true, but it doesn’t mean we’re out of options.

For individuals, the first step is simple but critical: apply everywhere you can. Don’t rely on a single waiting list. Different housing authorities, senior housing developments, and nonprofit organizations often maintain separate lists with different timelines.

Second, keep your application active. Many people lose their place simply because they miss a letter, fail to update their information, or don’t respond in time. The system doesn’t always give second chances.

Third, explore local senior-specific housing. These properties sometimes move faster than general public housing lists and may offer supportive services that improve quality of life while you wait.

What the Industry Needs to Hear

This is where I’ll step out of the role of observer and speak directly to the offsite and modular construction industry.

We spend a lot of time talking about how to solve the housing crisis. Faster builds. Better efficiencies. Lower costs. All important. All necessary.

But here’s the question we don’t ask often enough. Are we actually building for the people who are waiting the longest?

The demand for affordable senior housing is not a future problem. It’s current and growing. If offsite construction can deliver speed and cost savings, then this is where it should be proving its value at scale.

Not in theory. Not in pilot projects. In real communities, with real volume.

The Cost of Waiting

When we talk about housing delays, we tend to think in terms of months and years. What we don’t talk about is the human cost.

It’s the retired couple choosing between rent and groceries. It’s the individual sleeping in a living room because there’s nowhere else to go. It’s the quiet stress that builds when every lease renewal feels like a threat.

Waiting isn’t just a delay. It’s a condition.

Modcoach Observation

We’ve built an entire system around the idea that help is coming, eventually. But “eventually” doesn’t pay rent, doesn’t lower utility bills, and doesn’t give a 75-year-old peace of mind.

If we’re serious about solving housing, we need to stop measuring success by how many people we put on waiting lists and start measuring it by how quickly we get them off.

Is Investor Confidence in Modular Housing Slowing Down?


Strong Fundamentals Still Driving Interest

On paper, investor ambition for modular housing remains strong. The industry continues to promise faster construction timelines, improved cost control, and solutions to labor shortages—key factors that keep capital interested. Market projections still show steady growth, with modular construction expected to expand significantly through 2030 as housing demand remains high.

But Investment Has Become More Selective

At the same time, investor behavior has shifted from enthusiasm to caution. Rising interest rates, tighter lending standards, and broader economic uncertainty are making investors more selective about where they place their capital. Even in the broader construction sector, growth is expected to remain modest, with private investment showing signs of hesitation rather than aggressive expansion.

Execution Challenges Are Tempering Expectations

Modular housing has proven it can work—but not everywhere and not under every condition. Returns depend heavily on local zoning, transportation logistics, factory reliability, and project execution. These real-world constraints have made investors more cautious, as success is no longer viewed as automatic but highly dependent on disciplined delivery.

Past Setbacks Still Influence Investor Sentiment

High-profile struggles within the modular sector have also left a mark. Some large-scale investments have faced significant losses or shutdowns due to planning delays, high overhead, and slower-than-expected demand. These examples have reinforced the perception that while modular holds promise, scaling it profitably is more complex than originally assumed.

A Shift from Hype to Measured Confidence

What’s emerging is not complacency, but a transition. Investors are moving away from viewing modular housing as a “silver bullet” and toward seeing it as a viable—but execution-sensitive—strategy. Demand for affordable housing, urbanization, and policy support continue to sustain interest, but capital is now flowing more carefully, favoring experienced operators and well-structured projects over bold, unproven concepts.

Modcoach Observation


Investor ambition hasn’t disappeared—it’s matured. The early excitement around modular housing promised easy answers, but today’s reality is forcing investors to look harder at execution, scale, and risk. And in this industry, when ambition gets replaced by caution, the winners are usually the ones who can actually deliver what they promised.

From Idea to Action — Building a National Movement, One Factory at a Time - Part Two


Now Comes the Hard Part

I’ve had a lot of ideas over the years that sounded great over coffee and even better when I wrote about them. This one—factories helping pay down student loans to attract Gen Z talent—still feels like one of the rare ideas that could actually move the needle for our industry.

But ideas don’t change industries. Execution does.

And if we’re being honest with ourselves, execution is where offsite construction has historically stumbled. Not because we lack intelligence or resources, but because we tend to operate in silos, each factory trying to solve the same problems independently.

Starting Small Without Thinking Small

If I were advising a factory owner today, I wouldn’t tell them to wait for a national program. I’d tell them to start with five people.

That’s it. Five new hires, ideally recent graduates, brought into a structured pilot program where the factory contributes directly to their student loan payments. Not promises. Not bonuses tied to performance. Actual monthly payments sent to the lender.

This isn’t about charity. It’s about positioning your factory as a place where careers begin, not where jobs are filled.

Designing a Program That Doesn’t Backfire

Now let’s address the elephant on the production floor. What happens when your existing employees find out that the new hires are getting help paying off student loans?

If you don’t handle this right, you’ll create resentment faster than you can say “labor shortage.”

I would structure the program so that new hires start at a slightly lower wage tier, with a clear, time-based path to full pay within 12 months. During that time, the student loan assistance bridges the gap. It becomes a trade-off, not a perk stacked on top of everything else.

At the same time, I’d look at ways to reward existing employees. Retention bonuses, performance incentives, or even profit-sharing models tied to productivity improvements. The goal isn’t to make everything equal—it’s to make everything feel fair.

Where the Money Actually Comes From

I can already hear the pushback. “Gary, this sounds great, but where does the money come from?”

The answer is simpler than most people think.

Turnover is expensive. Training is expensive. Mistakes from inexperienced or disengaged workers are very expensive. If this program reduces turnover, improves retention, and brings in more motivated employees, it starts paying for itself faster than you’d expect.

I’ve seen factories lose far more than a few thousand dollars a month just from inefficiencies that nobody bothers to track. This is one of those rare opportunities where doing something bold could actually cost less than doing nothing.

Creating a Blueprint Others Can Follow

Once a few factories prove this works, the next step isn’t expansion. It’s documentation.

We need real numbers. How many applicants did the program attract? How long did these employees stay? Did productivity improve? Did quality improve? Did morale shift on the floor?

This is where associations like the Modular Home Builders Association and the National Association of Home Builders should step in—not as leaders of the idea, but as amplifiers of proven success.

Our industry doesn’t need another white paper full of theories. It needs case studies that factory owners can read and say, “Okay, I can do that.”

Turning a Program Into a Movement

If enough factories adopt variations of this model, something interesting begins to happen. It stops being a recruiting tactic and starts becoming an identity.

Imagine a national message aimed at graduating seniors:

“Join the offsite construction industry. Build the future. And we’ll help you eliminate your past debt.”

That’s powerful. That’s different. And quite honestly, it’s something no other segment of construction is currently offering at scale.

But it only works if we stop thinking like individual factories and start thinking like an industry with a shared problem—and a shared opportunity.

The Role of Leadership (and a Little Courage)

I’ve been around this industry long enough to know that change doesn’t come easy. There will be factory owners who dismiss this outright. There will be managers who say it’s too complicated. There will be accountants who say it doesn’t fit neatly into a spreadsheet.

They’re not wrong. It is complicated.

But the alternative—continuing to struggle with labor shortages, declining interest from younger workers, and a workforce that’s aging faster than we’d like to admit—isn’t exactly simple either.

Sometimes the bigger risk is standing still.

Part One - When an Offsite Workforce Crisis Hides an Opportunity

Modcoach Observation


I’ve always believed our industry doesn’t have a labor shortage—we have an imagination shortage when it comes to solving it.

If we want Gen Z to take a serious look at offsite construction, we can’t just offer them a paycheck and hope for the best. We have to offer them a reason to believe this industry is willing to invest in them as much as they’re being asked to invest in us.

When an Offsite Workforce Crisis Hides an Opportunity -Part One

 


The Graduate Reality Nobody Wants to Talk About

I’ve been hearing more and more lately that recent college graduates are having a tougher time finding meaningful work than we’ve seen in years. On the surface, the numbers don’t look catastrophic, but when I start talking to people—parents, young graduates, even some factory owners’ kids—I hear a very different story.

What I’m seeing isn’t a lack of jobs. It’s a lack of the right jobs. These young men and women are walking out of college with degrees and expectations, only to find themselves taking positions that don’t require either.

Many of them are moving back home, not because they want to, but because they have to. Independence is being delayed, and with that delay comes a quiet frustration that doesn’t show up in the employment statistics.

The Weight of $390 a Month

Let me put something into perspective. The average student loan payment today is about $390 a month. For someone just starting out, that’s not just another bill—it’s the bill that shapes every decision they make.

I remember when a paycheck was something you could actually plan a future around. Today, that same paycheck is being carved up before it even hits their bank account. Rent, food, gas, and then that student loan payment sitting there like a constant reminder of a promise that hasn’t quite paid off yet.

When I look at it that way, I don’t see a wage problem. I see a cash flow problem for the individual, and most industries are completely missing that distinction.

Meanwhile, Inside Our Factories

At the same time, I’m talking to factory owners and General Managers who can’t find enough people. Not just bodies, but good people—trainable, reliable, and willing to stick around long enough to make a difference.

I’ve walked through enough factories over the years to know that this isn’t a new problem, but it feels more urgent now. The demand is there, the need is there, but the pipeline of workers just isn’t keeping up.

What strikes me is how disconnected these two problems are. On one side, we have young people looking for a way to get started. On the other, we have an industry looking for people to bring in. And somehow, they’re still missing each other.

A Thought That Won’t Leave Me Alone

So I started thinking about something a little different. What if we stopped trying to compete on wages alone and looked at what’s really weighing these graduates down?

What if a factory offered a job at a fair, competitive wage, but also made that graduate’s monthly student loan payment directly to the lender?

Not a bonus. Not a signing incentive. A real, ongoing commitment to helping them get out from under that debt.

The more I think about it, the more I realize how powerful that could be. That $390 a month might not seem like much to a company, but to a young worker, it could be the difference between staying stuck and actually moving forward.

Why This Changes the Conversation

I’ve spent a lot of years watching how companies try to attract talent. Most of the time, it comes down to a few extra dollars an hour and maybe a better benefits package.

But this is different. This speaks directly to the biggest financial pressure these graduates are facing. It tells them, “We understand where you are, and we’re willing to help you get where you want to go.”

That’s not just compensation. That’s a partnership.

And if I’m a recent graduate looking at two job offers—one that pays a little more per hour and one that helps eliminate my student debt—I know which one I’m taking.

The Problem I Can’t Ignore

Now, before we all get too excited about this, there’s something else I’ve learned over the years. Nothing you do in a factory exists in isolation.

If you bring in new hires with a benefit like this and don’t think about your existing workforce, you’re asking for trouble. The men and women who have been on your floor for years are the backbone of your operation, and they’re going to notice immediately if something feels off.

I can already hear the conversations. “So the new kid gets his loans paid, and what do I get?”

That’s not jealousy. That’s fairness. And in a factory environment, fairness isn’t optional—it’s everything.

A Glimpse of What Could Be

Even with that concern, I can’t shake the feeling that there’s something here worth exploring. The offsite industry has been trying to solve its labor challenges for years, and most of the solutions have looked the same.

Higher wages, better recruiting, more automation. All of it helps, but none of it has truly changed the game.

This might.

Because now we’re not just offering a job. We’re offering a way forward, a way out of debt, and a reason for someone to choose our industry over all the others competing for their attention.

Setting Up the Next Conversation

I don’t have all the answers yet, and I don’t pretend this would be easy to implement. There are real questions about fairness, structure, and long-term sustainability that need to be addressed before any factory jumps in.

But I do know this. When an idea keeps coming back to me, it’s usually worth digging into a little deeper.

In Part Two:

I’m going to walk through how something like this could actually be put into place, how existing employees can be included instead of left out, and what it would take to turn this from a single idea into something much bigger for the entire offsite industry.

Modcoach Observation


I’ve seen our industry try just about everything to attract new workers, and most of it has been a variation of the same old playbook. Maybe it’s time we stop asking, “How much should we pay them?” and start asking, “What’s holding them back?” If we can remove that one obstacle, we might not just fill jobs—we might change lives.


Failure Isn’t a Badge—Until You Can Explain It


 

You’re about to start something big, so don’t romanticize failure.

If you’ve been scrolling LinkedIn, watching startup videos, or listening to podcasts, you’ve probably heard the same message repeated over and over: failure is part of the journey. In America, we’ve almost elevated failure to something admirable, a rite of passage that signals you’re on your way to success. It sounds empowering, and in some industries, it even holds some truth.

But before you carry that mindset into offsite construction, it’s worth taking a hard look at what failure really means in this business.

The Story You’ve Been Sold

In the startup world, especially in tech, failure is often rebranded as experience. Founders fail, pivot, raise more money, and try again, and investors frequently back people who have “been through it” before because they assume those individuals have learned valuable lessons.

You’ll hear stories about entrepreneurs like Elon Musk or Steve Jobs and how their early setbacks eventually led to massive success. Those stories are powerful, but they also tend to leave out an important detail, which is that those individuals were operating in industries and environments that allowed for recovery, reinvestment, and second chances.

That’s not the environment you’re stepping into.

Offsite Construction Doesn’t Forgive Easily

Starting an offsite factory isn’t like launching an app from a laptop in a coffee shop. You’re dealing with land acquisition, equipment purchases, workforce development, transportation logistics, code compliance, and significant capital investment long before your first unit ever leaves the building.

When failure happens here, it doesn’t mean regrouping and trying again next quarter. It can mean that investors walk away permanently, developers lose trust in your ability to deliver, and your reputation follows you far longer than you expected, especially in an industry where people talk and memories tend to stick.

This is a business where one major misstep can ripple through multiple projects and relationships at the same time.

So… Is Failure Acceptable or Not?

Failure is only considered acceptable if it comes with clear, hard-earned insight attached to it. If you can explain what went wrong, what you misunderstood, which systems were missing, and exactly how you would approach things differently next time, people will at least listen to you.

However, if your explanation leans on blaming the market, labor shortages, or developers not understanding your vision, you’re not demonstrating growth. You’re signaling that the same problems are likely to happen again, and this industry is very good at recognizing the difference between reflection and deflection.

That distinction matters more than most people realize.

What Gen Z Founders Need to Do Differently

You’re entering offsite construction at a time when innovation is everywhere, from AI and automation to robotics, new materials, and evolving financing models. That energy is exciting, but it also creates the illusion that speed is more important than structure.

It isn’t.

The most successful founders don’t rush into building a factory. Instead, they spend time understanding who their real customer is, which is usually the developer or builder rather than the homeowner, and they gain clarity on what their product truly includes and what it leaves out. They study how cash flow actually moves between the factory, the developer, and the project timeline, and they identify where risk exists at every stage, from design and fabrication to delivery, set, and finish.

They don’t avoid mistakes entirely, but they build systems that reduce the likelihood and impact of those mistakes before they occur.

Milton Hershey Failed Three Times Trying to Sell Candy

Milton Hershey failed three times to establish a successful business before finally achieving success. By age 30, he had launched failed candy ventures in Philadelphia, Denver, and New York before finally hitting success with the Lancaster Caramel Company, eventually founding his famous chocolate company in 1894.

  • First Failure (Philadelphia): In 1876, at 18, he opened his first candy shop, which failed after roughly six years.
  • Second Failure (Denver): He traveled to Denver to try again, but that business also failed.
  • Third Failure (New York/Chicago): He tried establishing businesses in Chicago and New York, which also ended in failure, leaving him broke and in debt.

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Despite these failures, Hershey persevered, stating, "I failed. It was a bad beginning... and I have a great memory for the good things." He eventually found success, sold his caramel company for $1 million, and launched the Hershey Chocolate Company in PA.

The American Advantage—Used the Right Way

Yes, the American business environment does offer more flexibility when it comes to recovering from failure than many other parts of the world. The system allows for second chances, and that can be a real advantage if it’s used wisely.

But that doesn’t mean you should plan on failing.

It means you should take calculated risks, learn quickly from smaller mistakes, and do everything possible to avoid the larger, more expensive failures that can shut you down before you ever get traction. There’s a significant difference between learning through controlled missteps and losing control of the entire operation.

Modcoach Observation


Failure isn’t your badge of honor. It’s your last line of defense.

If you’re about to start an offsite construction business, your goal shouldn’t be to fail fast. Your goal should be to understand faster than the next person, taking the time to learn what others have already paid millions to discover the hard way.

Because in this industry, you don’t get unlimited chances, and the people who succeed aren’t the ones who failed the most. They’re the ones who failed the least and learned the most before it truly mattered.