Business Operating System

Contractors must have a clear vision and goals for where they want to go.

D. Brown Management Profile Picture
Share

For example: Part of that goal might be to have at least a 30% market share on all higher-education construction within Georgia by 2025.  

Leadership Tools: Business Operating System (BOS)

Sitting in between all of these are the various meetings, tools, feedback systems, and decision-making processes that keep things on track.  

This is called the Business Operating System (BOS) and is very unique to all companies, evolving as the business scales. The Toyota Production System (TPS) is one such example.

It is the robustness of this layer of the business that determines how effectively the contractor will navigate each stage of growth.  


What are the key elements of your BOS, including people, meetings, feedback systems, and decision processes?  

Are these driving the results you want?  

Schedule some time to talk about your particular company. 




Four Dimensions of Effective Improvement Teams
Construction project owners are demanding more complex projects delivered faster, with higher quality and at a competitive cost. There are four major dimensions we look for when putting together effective improvement teams.
Cash Flow Tip 9 - The Project Schedule and Cash Flow
The smoother the project schedule is, the smoother your cash flow will be. Large variations in the resource loading across a project’s duration impact cash and productivity.
Balancing Modes of Prioritization and Career Progression
If your workload prioritization seems impossible, try looking at it from a higher-level of prioritization. We all must prioritize in life and at work. Our outcomes are heavily impacted by how effective we are at prioritization.