In construction, many people operations leaders say they’re drowning in administrative tasks. It’s not because they aren’t working hard enough. The issue is focus and alignment.
Companies are trying to fix everything at once. They’re layering new tools on top of broken workflows, spinning up initiatives without clear ownership, and watching the gap between HR and leadership quietly widen. It creates friction. And friction is a culture killer.
The companies that build the strongest cultures:
There’s a Russian proverb that says: if you chase two rabbits, you catch none. The best companies, the ones that are getting this right, are not trying to do everything.
They pick their priorities and they execute. They’re simplifying hiring, standardizing onboarding, and reducing admin work to focus on strengthening engagement and retention through better communication and development opportunities. They’re building training and enrichment programs to grow quality people, including leaders.
The core responsibility as a leader is to deliver opportunities for rewarding careers. But that can’t happen if you don’t have healthy, aligned leaders throughout your organization.
Mid-level leaders are the greatest point of leverage in many companies, because they’re closest to your frontline team members and your customers. If that layer of the organization is misaligned or underdeveloped, it shows up everywhere.
At Arcoro, we built a Leadership Academy where I teach two classes. One called Leadership Fundamentals, focused on our values, our purpose, and why serving the construction industry matters. The other, Leadership Practices, a practical and tactical training on things like: How do you run a one-on-one with a direct report? What does it actually mean to be accountable as a manager?
The leaders inside your organization should be doing most of the teaching, not outside consultants, because the people who know your culture are the ones best equipped to pass it on.
George Bernard Shaw said, “The single biggest problem in communication is the illusion that it has taken place.”
Most leaders send an email or mention something in a meeting and assume it everyone else understands the details and nuances. They don’t. Good communication requires frequency and redundancy. You have to say the important things several times across multiple mediums.
Every Friday at 10:30 a.m., I do a 15-minute open Q&A with the entire company where anyone can ask anything, either anonymously or live. We also have two all-company meetings each month. One is strategic, covering numbers, goals, and initiatives. The other is called Wins, and it’s exactly what it sounds like. We celebrate things like new product milestones, new customers, standout moments from existing customers, and our Hard Hats awards, where peers nominate teammates who’ve exemplified our core values that month.
The secret to doing this right is consistency. When people know there is a regular cadence and a safe venue for questions, it becomes something they look forward to.
When leaders communicate openly and often, trust builds. And when trust is present, fear shrinks. That matters more than most people give it credit for, because fear is one of the quietest drags on culture and productivity.
This isn’t a one-time initiative. I’ve been doing versions of this for over 15 years across two companies. It looked different on day one than it does today, and it’ll keep evolving. As long there is a sustained commitment to trust, that is what matters.
When you understand what you're trying to accomplish and the friction in your way is removed, you perform at a completely different level. That’s the goal. Not more tools, not more initiatives. Clarity. Focus. And the freedom to do what they do best.
The companies that figure this out, that build engaged, aligned, resilient cultures, are the ones that outperform. Not because they had bigger budgets, but because they invested in their people first, and never stopped.