

There's more
than one way to build a become your own successful boss in the grading
and excavating business, especially when you start with skid-steer
loaders, mini-excavators and other compact equipment.
By Greg Northcutt
Compact construction
equipment-whether a skid-steer loader, a miniexcavator, a compact
track, or a small wheel loader-is designed to save time and labor
when working space is tight. But some enterprising contractors find
another compelling reason to invest in these quick and nimble machines:
to take charge of their destiny by becoming their own boss and building
their own business.
As they'll tell you,
the route to becoming a grading or excavating entrepreneur can be
a frustrating, trying experience. It doesn't always lead to success.
But for those who have survived the perils, the journey can lead
to a rewarding destination-not just in terms of money but in the
ability to call all your own shots.
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| As
part of his fleet of compact equipment, Hector Delacruz uses
the Bobcat 334 excavator and the 753 skid-steer loader. |
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Those who have achieved
success by starting a business with compact equipment have found
that small machines combined with drive, determination, and a knack
for managing people, projects, and money can be the key to achieving
some big dreams.
The first step to turn
the dream into reality, of course, is just that: the first step.
But it can seem like a gigantic one.
"I was scared to
death when I started," recalls Hector Delacruz. He began Hector's
Excavating Services in Kenner, LA, in 1997 after borrowing $5,000
from a friend to make the down payment on a used Bobcat 331 excavator.
With a wife, two kids, and a mortgage, the pressure was on. "I
didn't have a dime to my name, and I didn't know if I was going
to get this business off the ground."
Since then, he's added
a Bobcat 753 skid-steer loader, replaced his original excavator
with a new Bobcat 334 model, fixed up his house, and bought a 3/4-ton
pickup and a 1-ton pickup, as well as a gooseneck trailer to transport
his equipment. "It all happened within four years," he
relates.
Making things happen
for the better is what drives many wage earners to become wage payers.
That includes Jim Carr. He quit his job as an assistant national
parts manager with an equipment manufacturer to seek what he saw
as an even better deal-one entirely of his own making. He started
J&S Grading in Dawsonville, GA, in May 1999 with a Takeuchi
TL26 compact track loader. Since then, he's upgraded his equipment
twice and now has a Takeuchi TL 130, a 1-ton pickup, and a 24-ft.
tag-along trailer.
Compact equipment-skid-steer
loaders-also helped fuel the growth of a business operated by partners
Pete DeVore and Michael Kerten in Grayslake, IL. In 1985 they bought
a landscape contracting business from their boss. Annual sales of
the company, with a dozen people on the payroll at the time, was
about $350,000, DeVore reports. The first piece of equipment the
partners bought was a Case Uni-Loader. Over the years, they've bought
about 40 skid-steer loaders. Today their business, Landscape Concepts
Inc., is one of the largest landscape contractors in the Chicago
area, with 325 employees and annual sales of about $30 million,
DeVore notes. The company operates two subsidiaries, Landscape Concepts
Construction and Landscape Concepts Management. The total machinery
fleet numbers about 170 pieces of equipment, ranging from the skid-steer
loaders to bigger equipment, including tractor-loader-backhoes,
crawler loaders, and excavators as large as 70,000 lb.
Two other partners that
chose compact equipment to get their business up and growing are
Vince Alvaro and Gary Komasara. Friends for two decades, they formed
Alvaro and Associates four years ago. Unlike many new business owners,
each was a seasoned entrepreneur. Alvaro, for instance, has been
pouring concrete and building homes for 40 years, while Komasara
owned and operated a chain of auto-collision repair shops for 30
years.
Today the two partners
own a Gehl 5635 skid-steer loader and a Gehl 502 compact excavator,
which are used often for excavating work on residential jobs where
operating room is limited.
"I don't think we
could have built our business without compact equipment," remarks
Komasara.
The Value of Smaller
Machines
The ability to slip through
narrow spaces, sometimes no wider than 3 ft., and under overhead
obstacles as low as about 7 ft. and to maneuver quickly and easily
in confined areas are key advantages of compact equipment. In these
situations they can do the job much faster, easier, and more profitably
than hand crews, while outworking and outearning larger machinery.
That's becoming even more important as the size of new residential
construction sites decreases and redevelopment activity in crowded
urban areas increases. Transporting these machines is a lot less
tedious and a lot less expensive than moving bigger pieces around
from job to job too.
Once on the job, these
machines make the most of time and space. Skid-steer loaders, for
instance, can turn around completely in their own length to save
valuable time, while compact track loaders have the traction to
turn mountains into molehills and the flotation to keep on working
when the terrain gets soft or muddy. Meanwhile, compact excavators
can beat production of bigger digging equipment in tight quarters.
Size, however, is just one of the attractions of compact equipment.
Many of these machines are surprisingly big when measured by performance,
especially the latest generation of loaders and excavators. Features
include advanced hydraulic controls and impressive power in terms
of rated operating capacities, tractive effort, bucket breakout
force, and the like. Ergonomic cab and control designs, sophisticated
electronics, and such creature comforts as enclosed, heated, and
air-conditioned cabs add to the appeal of these machines.
Of course, a smaller
package also means a smaller price tag for compact equipment compared
to large pieces of machinery-another attractive feature, particularly
when starting a business.
All of these attributes
contribute to the single biggest selling point of compact equipment:
their incredible versatility. Backed by an ever-expanding list of
different types of attachments, a compact loader or excavator can
do more kinds of work than just about any other size or class of
construction equipment, including grading and excavating equipment.
That can mean a bigger return on investment and a faster track to
profitability for a fledgling business. That's why DeVore and Kerten
selected a skid-steer loader when adding to Landscape Concepts's
original equipment lineup, which consisted of mowing machines and
an old tractor.
Cashing In on Compacts
"We didn't know
just how big we'd get, but we wanted to expand the size of the company
from the day we bought it," DeVore says. "We felt a skid-steer
loader was a good piece of equipment to help us do that. We needed
to get the most productivity possible for our money. Skid-steer
loaders have allowed us to maximize the return from the dollars
we invest in our equipment."
Carr chose to base J&S
Grading on a compact track loader because that type of machine best
fit the opportunities he saw in the Atlanta area. "Atlanta
is a big-enough market where one guy with a small track loader can
make a decent living, unlike other areas where you need big equipment
to do that."
Affordability and performance
explains why Delacruz, who had 10 years of experience operating
tractor-loader-backhoes, began Hector's Excavating Services with
a compact excavator and later added a skid-steer loader.
A compact excavator and
skid-steer loader also best matched the needs and desires of Alvaro
& Associates. "We don't want the big jobs," states
Komasara. "They usually require large equipment, and that means
more employees, which we don't want."
Also, transporting the
compact equipment is a lot easier and a lot less expensive. "I
know what it costs in terms of trucks, trailers, licenses, moving
overhead power lines, and chase cars to transport a 105,000-pound
excavator," he says. "I don't want that anymore."
As Komasara will tell
you, the ability of compact equipment to work where bigger machines
can't is worth real money. "We can charge as much to dig a
hole with our compact equipment as we would to dig a hole six times
as large with big equipment because we can get into jobs that guys
with bigger equipment can't. In fact, some of the people we work
for who have large equipment are beginning to realize the benefits
of compact equipment in small work areas after seeing what we can
do with our compact machines."
Putting the Equipment
to Work
Compact loaders and excavators
are paying off in a wide range of jobs for these grading and excavating
contractors.
Although J&S Grading
does finishing work for small commercial jobs from time to time,
most of the work involves residential projects. Carr reports that
one of his clients builds more than 1,100 homes year. His bucket-equipped
compact track loader makes money backfilling basements, cutting
out driveways and sidewalks, and performing final landscape grading.
Hector's Excavating Services
works on both residential and commercial projects. Delacruz uses
his skid-steer loader with a bucket to move and spread dirt and
a grapple bucket to load concrete and other construction debris.
He equips his compact excavator with 12-, 18- or 24-in.-wide buckets
to dig trenches for utility lines and uses a hydraulic breaker to
tear out driveways and sidewalks. His specialty, however, is removing
in-ground swimming pools, a niche he discovered when a homeowner
called for help in taking out an 8-ft.-deep backyard pool.
"The customer couldn't
find anyone willing to do the job because there was only a narrow
access to the site." Delacruz says. Using his compact excavator
with the hydraulic breaker to tear up the concrete pool and his
skid-steer loader to remove the debris and bring in dirt and backfill
the hole, he completed the work in a day and a half. "The customer
was shocked with how fast I did the job."
Alvaro & Associates
also does a lot of work in cramped backyards. That includes digging
footings and basements for house additions, moving dirt and other
construction materials, and some light grading. "Much of what
we do requires compact equipment," Komasara explains.
His skid-steer loader
attachments include an auger, pallet forks, and a four-in-one bucket,
while his excavator tools consist of 12- and 28-in. digging buckets,
a 48-in. grading bucket, and a hydraulic thumb. "We need small
equipment to work in those areas and to move dirt out to trucks."
DeVore says his Landscape
Concepts Construction crews use their skid-steer loaders with a
variety of attachments for work ranging from spreading topsoil and
carrying blocks for building retaining walls to loading and unloading
trees and shrubs. "Every crew has a skid-steer loader. We absolutely
could not operate without them. These machines enable us to do anything
you want to do on a landscaping job."
Management Tips
In pursuing their different
business dreams, these compact-equipment owners have learned a number
of lessons in managing such a business. Among them:
Finding the Work.
Before quitting his full-time salaried job with the equipment manufacturer,
Carr lined up several customers who agreed to use his services.
One represented a sizable chunk of business. When that opportunity
opened up, he made the switch to full-time business owner. "Without
that one account, I might have waited longer," he notes.
At times, Carr has more
work than he can fit in his schedule. In those cases, he refers
the jobs to other grading contractors. "There's a group of
us," he explains. "We're not family, but we are close
enough that we help each other out when needed. But we don't mess
in each other's sandbox either. We have a gentleman's agreement
that we don't call another contractor's project supervisor looking
for work. I get all my business by word of mouth."
Delacruz also continues
to rely on referrals by satisfied customers to bring in work for
Hector's Excavating Services. In addition, he does his part to spread
the word. "I get out and talk to anybody and everybody about
my services." This year, for the first time, Delacruz will
try an ad in the yellow pages of his local phone directory.
Hiring Employees.
Delacruz is careful about hiring help. At one time he had two employees
operating his skid-steer loader. Now he hires an operator only when
he needs one. "Even though a skid-steer loader is made of steel,
some guys will find the weakest part on a machine and break it,"
he remarks. "The two people I once had were tearing up the
machine almost as fast, it seemed, as I could get it fixed."
Past headaches from managing
employees is one reason why Komasara and Alvaro try to keep their
business a two-person operation. "We're done being babysitters,"
Komasara says. "We hire people only as we needed them and subcontract
out bigger jobs."
Pricing Services.
Delacruz's rate for his excavating services is $45 an hour. Carr,
on the other hand, charges a minimum of $150 for a grading job and
$50 for each hour of work. Normally he quotes the least amount a
job is likely to cost. If pressed, he'll set a cost ceiling that
reflects several more hours than he estimates the job will actually
require to complete. Even if the job takes longer, his bill doesn't
exceed that top estimate. "I make a little extra or lose a
little on a job, that's the way it goes," he comments. "I
recently charged one homeowner $400 for a $425 job to regrade a
driveway and spread gravel. She was really happy with that price
and told her neighbors. Now they want me to do their driveways.
That $25 difference could end up bringing in another $600. Right,
wrong, or indifferent, that's the way I charge."
Legal Considerations.
Delacruz has learned to protect himself against the possibility
of lawsuits. Once a customer sued him for what Delacruz says was
a hairline crack in a driveway. The customer claimed the skid-steer
loader caused it as it repeatedly crossed a driveway to carry about
12 yd.3 of dirt from the front of the house to the backyard, he
relates. "We won that case by showing that the ground in the
neighborhood was settling and causing cracks in other driveways."
However, he lost another
lawsuit when a marble slab used to make countertops fell over and
cracked after he completed work for the day. That incident followed
four days of work at a commercial site, where he used a hydraulic
breaker on his excavator to break up a driveway.
"Now, before starting
a job, I take photos of driveways and pavement," Delacruz says.
"Also, I ask customers to sign a disclaimer waiving any claims
for damages to pavement or unmarked utilities from any vibrations
caused by the hydraulic breaker attachment."
Selecting Compact
Equipment. Providing employees good equipment not only reduces
downtime and repair costs, but it also helps attract and keep good
employees. "Employees make the business," states DeVore.
"We want to retain the best employees we can, so we treat them
fairly, give them good equipment to operate, and assign them to
machines that allow them to do the type of work they like to do.
That way, they're happier, they do a better a job, and they're more
productive."
That approach applies
to the boss as well, notes Komasara. That's why he and Alvaro buy
new equipment. "With new equipment you're not wasting time
and money fixing junk," Komasara explains. "Also, our
compact exactor is equipped with a comfortable seat; a heated, enclosed
cab; and a stereo sound system."
Delacruz also likes to
be comfortable when working. The enclosed cab on his compact excavator
features a heater, a stereo, and air conditioning. "The cab
isn't quite sound-proof, but I can hear the radio even when I'm
running the hydraulic breaker."
Selecting an Equipment
Dealer. The level of service and support provided by a dealer
can be every bit as critical to business success as the brand of
compact equipment you buy. "Most of the compact equipment on
the market today is good," remarks Komasara. "What makes
the difference is the ability of the dealer to provide you equipment
and service when you need it. For example, our dealer delivers attachments,
like a rented post-hole digger, to our job site. Service like that
is important when you're a contractor."
Barry Heinrichs, president
of Burris Equipment Company in Waukegan, IL, offers these tips for
selecting an equipment dealer attuned to the needs of a compact-equipment
owner:
- Check with other
contractors who have dealt with the various dealers in your area.
- Talk with various
dealers to get a feel for their operation and types of services
they offer, including financing programs, availability of rental
equipment and attachments, and scheduled maintenance contracts
to help keep equipment in tiptop shape and keep a lid on maintenance
costs.
- Don't forget to include
service and parts managers during your dealer visit to see how
they can help your business.
"One indication
of a dealer's commitment to customers is length of time in business,"
Heinrichs points out. "Generally, dealers who stay in business
for a long time provide good support to their customers."
The Payoff
Despite hard work, self-discipline,
and no guarantee of a regular paycheck-much less a profit-starting
and running a compact-equipment business has been worth it, say
these owners.
"We wanted to grow
Landscape Concepts large enough to compete with other large contractors
in the Chicago area," maintains DeVore. "We've achieved
that. Now our goal is to continue a more modest growth pattern and
become the best landscape contractor in northern Illinois."
Carr is also satisfied
with his decision to build a grading business with compact equipment.
"I'm getting a lot of repeat customers, business is growing,
I'm making more money, I bought a house, and I can take time for
my family," he states. "Plus, I get a lot of self-satisfaction
of knowing that J&S Grading is my company. "I own it, I
run it, and that's what I enjoy."
Had Delacruz not taken
a risk when he bought his compact excavator, he figures he'd now
be making $10-$12 an hour operating equipment for someone else.
"I'm happy I went off on my own," he remarks. "It
shows that if you have experience in the excavating business, know
how to operate equipment, talk to the right people, treat customers
fairly, and hustle, you can have a successful business with compact
equipment."Greg Northcutt is an editorial consultant to the
International Erosion Control Association and a writer on environmental
issues.
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