Every year on the Fourth of July, we celebrate the birth of America. Fireworks fill the night sky, flags wave proudly, and somewhere during the festivities someone will say, “This is the day America became a nation.” It’s a wonderful tradition, but it’s only part of the story.
By the time the Declaration of Independence was approved on July 4, 1776, America’s Founding Fathers had made one thing perfectly clear—they wanted independence. What they didn’t have was a detailed roadmap explaining exactly how they would achieve it. They had a vision, determination, and ideas, but much of what happened over the next several years was driven by circumstances they could never have predicted.
That should sound familiar to anyone who has ever launched an offsite construction startup.
The Declaration Was the Starting Line
Most people think July 4th marked the end of the American Revolution. In reality, it was the beginning of a long, uncertain journey.
The Continental Congress had voted for independence two days earlier, but declaring independence and actually becoming an independent nation were two very different things. The colonies still had no stable national government, very little money, and an under-equipped army, and were preparing to fight what was arguably the world's most powerful military force. They desperately needed allies, supplies, financing, and a way to keep thirteen very different colonies moving in the same direction.
The Declaration announced where they wanted to go. It didn't explain every step needed to get there.
Over the next seven years, America’s leaders adjusted constantly. Military defeats forced them to rethink strategy. Victories created new opportunities. Financial problems required creative solutions. Political disagreements had to be resolved, and foreign alliances became essential. The destination never changed, but the route to reach it certainly did.
Every Startup Begins with Confidence
Over the past 40 years, I’ve met hundreds of entrepreneurs who believed they had the next breakthrough in offsite construction. Some developed new building systems. Others focused on automation, robotics, artificial intelligence, or manufacturing techniques they believed would change the industry forever.
Every one of them started with confidence. Most also had a business plan. Today, many arrive with a beautifully formatted plan generated in minutes by artificial intelligence. The projections are impressive, the milestones appear achievable, and everything seems neatly organized.
Then reality arrives.
A code official interprets a regulation differently than expected. An investor changes priorities. A key supplier misses delivery dates. Production takes longer than projected. Transportation costs increase. Sales cycles stretch from months into years. Suddenly, that carefully crafted business plan becomes less of a roadmap and more of a reference manual while the leadership team spends most of its time responding to situations no one anticipated.
That doesn’t mean the company is failing. It means the company has entered the real world.
Adaptability Wins
One of George Washington’s greatest strengths wasn’t simply his leadership on the battlefield. It was his willingness to adapt. There were times during the Revolutionary War when preserving the Continental Army was more important than winning the next battle. Retreating wasn’t surrender. It was recognizing that surviving today created the opportunity to win tomorrow.
Successful offsite startups face similar decisions all the time. The companies that survive are rarely the ones that stubbornly follow every page of the original business plan. Instead, they recognize when market conditions change, when customer demands shift, or when an unexpected obstacle requires a different approach.
There’s a big difference between changing your strategy and abandoning your vision. If your goal is to improve housing affordability, reduce construction time, increase quality, or solve one of the industry's persistent problems, there are often multiple paths that can lead to that destination.
The mission remains the same even when the route changes.
Great Leaders Learn as They Go
America’s leaders never stopped learning. When they realized they couldn’t defeat Britain alone, they sought help from France. When the Articles of Confederation proved too weak to govern the growing nation, they replaced them with the Constitution. They reorganized leadership, found new sources of funding, built new partnerships, and adjusted to circumstances that were impossible to predict in 1776.
Imagine if they had refused to change simply because they had already written down their original ideas.
The United States might never have survived.
I see that same lesson play out repeatedly in the offsite construction industry. A startup may discover its original target market isn’t the best fit. A manufacturer may realize licensing technology is more profitable than producing it. A company may shift from single-family housing to multifamily projects or decide that partnering with an established builder makes more sense than competing against one.
Those decisions aren’t signs of failure. They’re often signs of experienced leadership responding to new information.
Success Takes Longer Than We Think
America wasn’t secure on July 4, 1776. The Revolutionary War continued until 1783. The Constitution wasn’t written until 1787, and the new federal government didn’t begin operating until 1789.
From the first shots fired at Lexington and Concord until the nation had a functioning constitutional government, more than a decade had passed.
Yet many startup founders become discouraged after two years. Investors sometimes expect dramatic returns within eighteen months, and entrepreneurs often feel they’re behind schedule because the original timeline didn’t unfold exactly as planned.
History suggests they may simply be following the same path every successful pioneer has traveled before them.
Gary’s Observation
One of the biggest mistakes I see in offsite construction is believing that a business plan is supposed to predict the future. It isn’t. A good plan provides direction, establishes priorities, and helps everyone understand the destination. The real work begins when reality forces you to make adjustments that no consultant, banker, or AI-generated business plan could have anticipated.
America’s Founding Fathers didn’t succeed because they created the perfect plan in July of 1776. They succeeded because they remained committed to the vision while continually adapting to the challenges that stood between the Declaration of Independence and a nation that could actually stand on its own.
The best offsite companies I’ve known over the past four decades have done exactly the same thing. They never lost sight of where they wanted to go, but they were never afraid to change how they got there. That may be the greatest lesson the Fourth of July offers every entrepreneur who dreams of building something that truly lasts.

















