I'm Ryan bell of Isaiah industries, manufacturer
Ryan Bell:of specialty metal roofing and other building materials.
Ryan Bell:And today my co host is Ethan Young.
Ryan Bell:Ethan, how are you doing today?
Ethan Young:I'm doing good today, Ryan.
Ethan Young:How you doing?
Ryan Bell:I'm doing great.
Ryan Bell:It's a beautiful day.
Ryan Bell:Friday weekends about here.
Ryan Bell:finally getting hot here.
Ryan Bell:So it feels like summer is here for once.
Ryan Bell:Today, our guest is Mike Zeppieri of Skanska.
Ryan Bell:An industry leader in construction and development that is redefining
Ryan Bell:safety standards by leveraging emerging technologies, such as AI and robotics.
Ryan Bell:Mike is a graduate of MIT and West Point, an army veteran,
Ryan Bell:currently the vice president of Emerging Technology at Skanska.
Ryan Bell:Mike, first off, thank you for your service.
Ryan Bell:it's great to have you on the show today.
Michael Zeppieri:Yeah, I appreciate you saying that, Ryan.
Michael Zeppieri:And thank you for having me on.
Ryan Bell:Well, let's, jump right into it here.
Ryan Bell:before we get into the tech side of this discussion, I'd kind of love it.
Ryan Bell:If you'd tell us a little bit more about yourself first.
Ryan Bell:I really, I read through your bio on LinkedIn and, and I
Ryan Bell:really liked it and I, it kind of resonated with me in a lot of ways.
Ryan Bell:So can you tell our listeners a little bit about you and how someone with
Ryan Bell:advanced engineering degrees and an MBA also has a passion for the arts
Ryan Bell:and creativity and why you kind of feel like they compliment each other.
Michael Zeppieri:Yeah, absolutely.
Michael Zeppieri:Right.
Michael Zeppieri:It's a fun place for us to start.
Michael Zeppieri:So I would say, and you already covered this in the intro.
Michael Zeppieri:There's really three aspects to my personality and on paper, they would
Michael Zeppieri:seem to maybe contradict one another.
Michael Zeppieri:But I actually find that in throughout my career, they've
Michael Zeppieri:complimented them quite well.
Michael Zeppieri:And I would say my career path, Hasn't really been linear.
Michael Zeppieri:It's been more monkey bars.
Michael Zeppieri:So, so my background and just kind of how I'm wired is has actually served me pretty
Michael Zeppieri:well, given the path that I've chosen.
Michael Zeppieri:So there's obviously the military aspect of my background.
Michael Zeppieri:And you know, it's funny, there's been a lot of articles over the last 10, 15
Michael Zeppieri:years about how corporate America has shifted from command and control to
Michael Zeppieri:like a more decentralized structure.
Michael Zeppieri:And you know how there's, I think there's a perception that command and control
Michael Zeppieri:is naturally kind of bureaucratic.
Michael Zeppieri:It's micromanagement.
Michael Zeppieri:It's inefficiency.
Michael Zeppieri:You don't get to empower people.
Michael Zeppieri:And while some of that is true, I think we in many ways have thrown like the
Michael Zeppieri:baby with the bathwater in terms of losing some of the benefits of command
Michael Zeppieri:and control, which I learned in the army and greatly appreciate it, which is a
Michael Zeppieri:need for predictability, the need for consistency, the need for discipline,
Michael Zeppieri:the need for clarity and purpose.
Michael Zeppieri:We call that commander's intent.
Michael Zeppieri:There was a lot of things I learned in the army about just setting
Michael Zeppieri:direction for an organization and actually empowering people.
Michael Zeppieri:I mean, there's, I think there's a lot of stereotypes around what happens in the
Michael Zeppieri:military in terms of empowering people.
Michael Zeppieri:And there's actually a lot of autonomy.
Michael Zeppieri:the military wouldn't function, as an organization if it wasn't for autonomy.
Michael Zeppieri:So, that part resonated very strongly with me at a very young age.
Michael Zeppieri:That need for kind of process, discipline, structure, and I like all those things and
Michael Zeppieri:then I think those things allow me to be effective as a leader in a global company.
Michael Zeppieri:The engineering mindset, you know, with that comes the discipline of just using
Michael Zeppieri:facts and data to evaluate things.
Michael Zeppieri:there's a little bit of a structure to the engineering mindset, but I'm also a big
Michael Zeppieri:fan of lean thinking and systems thinking.
Michael Zeppieri:So the damning cycle of the plan, do check act, you know, a lot of people can do
Michael Zeppieri:the planning into doing like, especially in a technology role, it's really
Michael Zeppieri:easy to get excited about technology.
Michael Zeppieri:It's really easy to go take it out on a job site and play with technology.
Michael Zeppieri:I mean, that's fun.
Michael Zeppieri:The hard part is the check in the act actually validating that what
Michael Zeppieri:you're doing actually achieve value or delivered value to your stakeholders.
Michael Zeppieri:So, so that part of definitely part of my, the wiring of my thinking.
Michael Zeppieri:But where the artistic side comes in, which was your question,
Michael Zeppieri:which one, it surprises people.
Michael Zeppieri:So people see my resume, they see Army, MIT, they think, okay, he's a
Michael Zeppieri:rigid thinker, he's disciplined, he's structured, he can get things done.
Michael Zeppieri:And like, all those things are true.
Michael Zeppieri:But then I surprise them when the creative side kind of comes into the equation.
Michael Zeppieri:So I'm going to use this moment because I think it's important
Michael Zeppieri:to recognize your mentors.
Michael Zeppieri:I've had a lot of great mentors in my life, but my artistic
Michael Zeppieri:journey started in middle school.
Michael Zeppieri:It was with my art teacher.
Michael Zeppieri:His name was David Gammonds.
Michael Zeppieri:He has since passed, but probably had as much of an impact on me as a
Michael Zeppieri:person as my own biological father in terms of kind of shaping my thinking
Michael Zeppieri:and kind of view of the world.
Michael Zeppieri:And I have a very specific moment that I shared with him that I think
Michael Zeppieri:is applicable to this conversation.
Michael Zeppieri:So I enjoy painting still lifes, but I was very rigid in my painting.
Michael Zeppieri:like I was trying to literally capture everything I was seeing in front of me.
Michael Zeppieri:So if I saw a reflection on the surface, that meant I had to throw that
Michael Zeppieri:color on the canvas and replicate it.
Michael Zeppieri:And as a result, I wasn't achieving realism in my painting.
Michael Zeppieri:It was like, it just, it was very stiff looking.
Michael Zeppieri:And I actually have a photo of him and I standing together where he was
Michael Zeppieri:giving me coaching on my still life.
Michael Zeppieri:And the advice he said is when you're trying to achieve realism, don't open
Michael Zeppieri:your eyes, squint your eyes, because what you're trying to do is capture
Michael Zeppieri:the essence of what you're seeing, not literally replicate everything
Michael Zeppieri:you're seeing and it really kind of changed how I approached art and kind
Michael Zeppieri:of flush out some of the rigidity in terms of how I was approaching it.
Michael Zeppieri:And a couple weeks ago I had the opportunity to bring my family to
Michael Zeppieri:Paris from my daughter's spring break.
Michael Zeppieri:And both of my daughters are now artists as well.
Michael Zeppieri:And we were standing in the Louvre and I said, okay, now stand back and
Michael Zeppieri:look at this painting and admire the photo realism of it, but now let's
Michael Zeppieri:get close to it and look at the imperfections and the brushstrokes
Michael Zeppieri:and you start to see kind of the human element that achieves that perfection,
Michael Zeppieri:that it's actually imperfection that's achieving the perfection.
Michael Zeppieri:So where I'm going with all this is like the artistic thinking is one in the
Michael Zeppieri:artist community, people aren't judged on the merit of their idea, right?
Michael Zeppieri:You appreciate art as the reflection of what the artist is trying to convey.
Michael Zeppieri:So in an innovation setting, when people bring ideas to me, my engineering mind
Michael Zeppieri:doesn't kick in in terms of trying to filter out why it's a bad idea.
Michael Zeppieri:I appreciate what they're bringing as the creative process.
Michael Zeppieri:And I say, you know what, even if it's not a good idea, even if
Michael Zeppieri:it's not aligned to the business.
Michael Zeppieri:There's an intent behind it.
Michael Zeppieri:Like, what is their artistic intent and what they're trying to convey?
Michael Zeppieri:And what I often find is that I learned more from my people and my
Michael Zeppieri:coworkers by understanding the intent of what they're doing, like more of
Michael Zeppieri:the creativity side of it than like the hard kind of engineering side.
Michael Zeppieri:And I think the other thing that, that I have brought in from my creative side is.
Michael Zeppieri:like in an engineering kind of world, people are very hesitant
Michael Zeppieri:to bring half baked ideas up for feedback from their peers.
Michael Zeppieri:Like it's like you want to have something fully baked before
Michael Zeppieri:you bring it in for input.
Michael Zeppieri:And I'm I am the exact opposite.
Michael Zeppieri:Like I really enjoyed the creative process.
Michael Zeppieri:My art teacher, Mr Gammond's and even other students like he would
Michael Zeppieri:bring other students before the painting was done to provide feedback.
Michael Zeppieri:And that makes you very vulnerable.
Michael Zeppieri:Sometimes it's hard to receive that feedback, but you don't
Michael Zeppieri:get better as an artist.
Michael Zeppieri:If you don't receive that feedback around technique around process.
Michael Zeppieri:So for me, when I have an idea and it's half baked, I will bring it into a meeting
Michael Zeppieri:and I will just throw it on the wall and I've had managers throughout my career,
Michael Zeppieri:it gets surprised by that because they, you know, again, the military engineering
Michael Zeppieri:side of me, they expect, well, he's going to be only going to have ideas
Michael Zeppieri:that are fully baked and I'll bring something in that's half baked and say,
Michael Zeppieri:start, let's, here's a piece of clay.
Michael Zeppieri:I don't know what I want to do with it, but I think we can make something.
Michael Zeppieri:And then like when other people engage.
Michael Zeppieri:With me, like that's probably like my favorite moment, like
Michael Zeppieri:the innovation process is like that kind of creative process.
Michael Zeppieri:So I would say like, that's, I know this is like kind of a long
Michael Zeppieri:winded response to your question.
Michael Zeppieri:But, like that's how like the artistic creative side of me has
Michael Zeppieri:kind of changed how I, I think it made me more effective in like the
Michael Zeppieri:innovation and engineering world.
Ryan Bell:That was a excellent explanation and I'm
Ryan Bell:glad you went into all that.
Ryan Bell:I find all that fascinating because I'm kind of the same way.
Ryan Bell:math was my favorite subject in school.
Ryan Bell:I was in advanced calculus classes.
Ryan Bell:I also loved art, but the world tells us that those two things don't go together.
Ryan Bell:When I went into college, I went into graphic design.
Ryan Bell:And I wanted to take math classes.
Ryan Bell:And my counselor was like, the graphic design students don't
Ryan Bell:take math classes because that's a different side of your brain.
Ryan Bell:Right.
Ryan Bell:That's always baffled me and I always thought I was like in a not
Ryan Bell:weird anomaly that found enjoyment in both, but so it was cool.
Ryan Bell:I was excited when I read your, your LinkedIn bio and I was like,
Ryan Bell:cool, I'm going to, I'm going to get along with this guy great.
Ryan Bell:So thank you for explaining that.
Ryan Bell:so let's dive into, Skanska a little bit.
Ryan Bell:What exactly do you guys do and how does it affect the construction industry?
Michael Zeppieri:That's a great question.
Michael Zeppieri:I, so I liked how you phrased that question.
Michael Zeppieri:Like, how does it impact the broader construction industry?
Michael Zeppieri:Cause at the end of the day, you want to have, Impact.
Michael Zeppieri:I mean, at least for me, it's more than just showing up to
Michael Zeppieri:every day and having a job.
Michael Zeppieri:So what brought me to Skanska and what I love about Skanska is I've
Michael Zeppieri:always wanted, like for me, job fulfillment is always working in a
Michael Zeppieri:job where there's a higher purpose.
Michael Zeppieri:Like I, I need to work for organizations that have higher purpose.
Michael Zeppieri:Like I need to feel like that I have an impact on, on, you know,
Michael Zeppieri:society and in the world at large.
Michael Zeppieri:and what I love about Skanska is one, because it's a global company.
Michael Zeppieri:It's headquartered in Sweden.
Michael Zeppieri:It's a global construction company.
Michael Zeppieri:So one is, you know, being stationed in Germany and living in Europe for
Michael Zeppieri:a number of years when I was in the army, I gained an appreciation for how
Michael Zeppieri:European companies live their values.
Michael Zeppieri:And what I mean by that is, is, you know, I feel like in Europe they
Michael Zeppieri:do a really good job of recognizing the importance of work life balance.
Michael Zeppieri:And we're starting to get that in the United States.
Michael Zeppieri:I mean, you definitely see it in, you know, especially once, you know, kind
Michael Zeppieri:of Silicon Valley came into prominence and the tech industry kind of changed
Michael Zeppieri:what corporate America looks like, you know, we're starting to get it in the
Michael Zeppieri:United States, but I really appreciate.
Michael Zeppieri:the opportunity to work for a company that truly lives its values.
Michael Zeppieri:I mean, Skanska puts care for life very high, and take safety very seriously.
Michael Zeppieri:We're laser focused on sustainability and, you know, the
Michael Zeppieri:climate impact of construction.
Michael Zeppieri:I mean, you know, construction has a sizable carbon footprint and we are
Michael Zeppieri:a company that recognizes that and has made firm commitments to move
Michael Zeppieri:the needle and trying to change that.
Michael Zeppieri:Like, that's not just something, it's not a paradigm that we should accept.
Michael Zeppieri:Like we, we, as an industry, should be working to move the needle to reduce
Michael Zeppieri:our societal and climate impact.
Michael Zeppieri:So like we're a company that takes those things very seriously.
Michael Zeppieri:We take care of our people.
Michael Zeppieri:So it's a company that it's a construction company, but it's a construction company
Michael Zeppieri:that's trying to have a societal impact.
Michael Zeppieri:you know, and that's that resonates with me.
Michael Zeppieri:So that's what brought me to Skanska.
Michael Zeppieri:I mean, the other thing that's great about this company is because we are
Michael Zeppieri:a global company, we are very diverse in terms of our business units.
Michael Zeppieri:So we work in different markets, different market sectors, the nature
Michael Zeppieri:of Our business in each of our geographies is slightly different, but
Michael Zeppieri:we have a really true, great spirit of collaboration across the business unit.
Michael Zeppieri:So being in an innovation role, that's phenomenal because, you know, someone in
Michael Zeppieri:Sweden or Finland or the UK or Central Europe could be doing something and while
Michael Zeppieri:they may not necessarily be solving the exact problem that I'm trying to solve,
Michael Zeppieri:the opportunity to collaborate at a global scale is very, is a very fulfilling
Michael Zeppieri:for me personally and very exciting.
Michael Zeppieri:So that makes my job a lot of fun is being able to collaborate, you know, at
Michael Zeppieri:Global scale, in terms of like my specific function and how we're moving the needle.
Michael Zeppieri:so I lead the emerging technology function.
Michael Zeppieri:We sit within the strategy function of Skanska's U.
Michael Zeppieri:S.
Michael Zeppieri:Building business unit.
Michael Zeppieri:So within the United States, there's basically three business units.
Michael Zeppieri:We've got U.
Michael Zeppieri:S.
Michael Zeppieri:Building, which is vertical construction, U.
Michael Zeppieri:S.
Michael Zeppieri:Civil, which is horizontal construction, and then our commercial development,
Michael Zeppieri:division, which does what you would expect a developer to do.
Michael Zeppieri:So there's there's synergies between the three, but there's
Michael Zeppieri:also autonomy between the three.
Michael Zeppieri:And even within our business unit, I mean, where you know, U.
Michael Zeppieri:S.
Michael Zeppieri:Building is in every major metropolitan area up and down the East Coast, you know,
Michael Zeppieri:through the south and up the West Coast.
Michael Zeppieri:and yet each office is very different in terms of the markets that they
Michael Zeppieri:serve in the technology that they need in the scale of technology.
Michael Zeppieri:So it's it's very interesting puzzle of trying to kind of service
Michael Zeppieri:this very decentralized company.
Michael Zeppieri:with very different needs, sitting in a central technology function.
Michael Zeppieri:So, so my team, we basically existed, what I would say is the intersection
Michael Zeppieri:of the different innovation stream.
Michael Zeppieri:So we don't have a department of innovation.
Michael Zeppieri:that's actually something that's by design and by intent.
Michael Zeppieri:you know, we have learned through our journey as a company is, you know, and as
Michael Zeppieri:technology has evolved in construction, that a large central overhead function,
Michael Zeppieri:a large central training function, or a large central service function
Michael Zeppieri:really doesn't serve the business.
Michael Zeppieri:So my team is this very small and mighty group of overachievers that
Michael Zeppieri:sit in the middle of all these different innovation streams that are
Michael Zeppieri:coming at us from every direction.
Michael Zeppieri:It's coming at us from VCs.
Michael Zeppieri:It's coming at us from academia.
Michael Zeppieri:It's coming at us from startups.
Michael Zeppieri:It's coming at us increasingly from our job sites.
Michael Zeppieri:you know, I would say 10, 15 years ago, people on job sites weren't
Michael Zeppieri:necessarily digital natives or wouldn't necessarily gravitate to
Michael Zeppieri:technology, but they are today.
Michael Zeppieri:There's not that apprehension of technology and construction
Michael Zeppieri:that there was when I came over.
Michael Zeppieri:I would say, you know, 10 years ago.
Michael Zeppieri:So, you know, innovation coming at us from every direction.
Michael Zeppieri:And what my team does is basically evaluates those ideas
Michael Zeppieri:or those technologies and say, okay, there's merit to it.
Michael Zeppieri:We think this applies to solving a problem.
Michael Zeppieri:but then we put it through us and I know you want to talk a little bit
Michael Zeppieri:about our innovation process later in which we can get into the details of.
Michael Zeppieri:But basically it's does it actually solve a problem?
Michael Zeppieri:Does it reduce burden?
Michael Zeppieri:Does it increase productivity?
Michael Zeppieri:Does it truly add value for our clients?
Michael Zeppieri:And so does it pass muster in terms of actually adding value to us as a business?
Michael Zeppieri:And then the second question right behind that is, does it scale?
Michael Zeppieri:There are some technologies that are point solutions that we will use, kind of in
Michael Zeppieri:a very applied, you know, application.
Michael Zeppieri:But then there's others that scale enterprise wise that we
Michael Zeppieri:embraces as kind of our standard.
Michael Zeppieri:So, like, my team basically helps guide that process, make those decisions and
Michael Zeppieri:then inform, you know, the investments that we make as a company in technology.
Ryan Bell:Very good.
Ryan Bell:let's talk about AI a little bit.
Ryan Bell:How is Skanska currently utilizing AI to enhance things like project management
Ryan Bell:and efficiency in construction?
Michael Zeppieri:So pretty extensively.
Michael Zeppieri:So I have a very, strong opinion about A.
Michael Zeppieri:I.
Michael Zeppieri:So I should probably give that context before you know, we get into it.
Michael Zeppieri:So, so for those of us that have been on the digital transformation journey
Michael Zeppieri:since day one, I mean, I'm Gen X.
Michael Zeppieri:I remember the world before computers, and how things work before computers.
Michael Zeppieri:You know, to me, the A.
Michael Zeppieri:I.
Michael Zeppieri:conversation is really just is the evolution of digital transformation.
Michael Zeppieri:I mean, I remember in the early two thousands, all corporations
Michael Zeppieri:were talking about big data.
Michael Zeppieri:They recognize that there was value in their data sets and the patterns
Michael Zeppieri:and getting to like predictive and prescriptive analytics.
Michael Zeppieri:So, so the AI convocation conversation isn't new.
Michael Zeppieri:the data conversation isn't new, but the technology is moving at a rapid pace.
Michael Zeppieri:So I can't dismiss that AI is a radical leap forward in terms of
Michael Zeppieri:moving the needle towards achieving predictive and prescriptive analytics,
Michael Zeppieri:but I still see it as an evolution.
Michael Zeppieri:I mean, we, as a company had already made an investment in data prior to
Michael Zeppieri:generative AI and Chat GPT kind of capturing everyone's, imagination.
Michael Zeppieri:So when Chat GPT hit the scene and everyone was suddenly talking about AI,
Michael Zeppieri:I kind of saw it through two lenses.
Michael Zeppieri:So, so the first lens was like, okay, this is an evolution, like this
Michael Zeppieri:is a leap forward, but it's really just a leap forward in chat bots.
Michael Zeppieri:It's a leap forward in search.
Michael Zeppieri:It's a leap forward in digital assistance.
Michael Zeppieri:I mean, we understood the application of these things in our industry, but
Michael Zeppieri:the Chat GPT aspect of it, I mean, I think that was It almost came across
Michael Zeppieri:to me as like a marketing ploy.
Michael Zeppieri:It was like big tech needed the next big thing.
Michael Zeppieri:A.
Michael Zeppieri:R.
Michael Zeppieri:and V.
Michael Zeppieri:R.
Michael Zeppieri:didn't take off.
Michael Zeppieri:The metaverse didn't take off.
Michael Zeppieri:You know, Bitcoin didn't take off and crypto like there was like they
Michael Zeppieri:tech needed the next big thing.
Michael Zeppieri:And suddenly we had this toy, this generative A.
Michael Zeppieri:I.
Michael Zeppieri:toy that kind of mimicked human interaction where you felt like
Michael Zeppieri:you were getting a human response.
Michael Zeppieri:through, through, you know, common language queries
Michael Zeppieri:of, you know, basic search.
Michael Zeppieri:So my initial impression was skepticism.
Michael Zeppieri:I'm skeptical of this.
Michael Zeppieri:I don't see this.
Michael Zeppieri:I see this more as a hype machine and not really necessarily something
Michael Zeppieri:that's any different than what we already kind of understood is.
Michael Zeppieri:And once the hype kind of fizzles, we're going to land right where we thought
Michael Zeppieri:we were going to land in terms of how we were going to apply this technology.
Michael Zeppieri:But then I started to play with it, and there was a coolness
Michael Zeppieri:factor, and I'm not going to deny there's like that coolness factor.
Michael Zeppieri:The first time you do, you kind of prompt AI in fun and interesting ways.
Michael Zeppieri:I definitely I would say being given my creative side.
Michael Zeppieri:I started playing with the image generators more so than the text
Michael Zeppieri:generators, like trying to create, yeah, I'm a big nerd, you know, science
Michael Zeppieri:fiction nerds, like, you know, Star Wars, Dune, Tron, all those things.
Michael Zeppieri:So like, I've got all these things in my head, like I, so blend those things
Michael Zeppieri:and create, I was trying to create a LinkedIn banner for myself to kind
Michael Zeppieri:of blend all these things, with an avatar, I'm a shameless metal head.
Michael Zeppieri:So it's like I put a metal head, you know, in a technology environment and
Michael Zeppieri:with all these different elements.
Michael Zeppieri:And at first it was fun and it was a toy, a fun toy to play with.
Michael Zeppieri:But then as an artist, I started to say, okay, but the AI is pull
Michael Zeppieri:is generating this image because it's pulling from other people's
Michael Zeppieri:work.
Michael Zeppieri:And I didn't feel good about that, that, okay, so I'm able to now create,
Michael Zeppieri:I'm not a talented enough artist to necessarily create the image in my mind.
Michael Zeppieri:Now I can let generative AI do it, but it's taking other people's work
Michael Zeppieri:and it's not citing their work.
Michael Zeppieri:So I didn't feel good about that as an, as a someone who appreciates art, And
Michael Zeppieri:the other thing was is there's there's kind of a mediocrity to what it creates.
Michael Zeppieri:I mean, if you look at like a lot of the A.
Michael Zeppieri:I.
Michael Zeppieri:Images and stuff like you could tell their A.
Michael Zeppieri:I.
Michael Zeppieri:generated.
Michael Zeppieri:I'm sure we're gonna get to a point where that's not the case, but it's almost
Michael Zeppieri:getting to, I would say, there's like a sameness to the images that people create
Michael Zeppieri:because it's kind of pulling from the same archive of information and as the
Michael Zeppieri:patterns generating what it pulls from.
Michael Zeppieri:So I started to say, Okay, A.
Michael Zeppieri:I.
Michael Zeppieri:Is allowing me to create things I couldn't create before.
Michael Zeppieri:Which is kind of cool, but there's a mediocrity to what it's creating.
Michael Zeppieri:So then I like my second kind of impression of it was kind of this guilt
Michael Zeppieri:of, you know, the, I would think just the ethics of pulling from other people's work
Michael Zeppieri:and not being able to cite it where I am now is using it as a digital assistant.
Michael Zeppieri:So there's some applications that I have found it to be helpful.
Michael Zeppieri:And I think that's where we're going to land.
Michael Zeppieri:So like the more of the mundane tasks, the things that I would do if I had
Michael Zeppieri:time, but I don't have time, but.
Michael Zeppieri:But where my thinking isn't on that is, okay, so let's take meeting
Michael Zeppieri:transcription as an example, right?
Michael Zeppieri:We're all in meetings.
Michael Zeppieri:we've, we sometimes missed the opportunity to capture what was discussed in the
Michael Zeppieri:meeting, action items, critical things that people said, like, we're just,
Michael Zeppieri:we're not taking notes fast enough because we're all jumping to the next
Michael Zeppieri:meeting and we don't have time to pause at the end of the meeting to
Michael Zeppieri:actually document what we discussed.
Michael Zeppieri:So AI seems like this magical, what a great magical solution
Michael Zeppieri:to solve that problem.
Michael Zeppieri:But then I think, What's the root cause of that problem?
Michael Zeppieri:The digital transformation and the digital age is in many
Michael Zeppieri:ways buried us in information.
Michael Zeppieri:And now we almost need technology to unbury us from the pile of
Michael Zeppieri:things that, that, that have been piled on us by technology.
Michael Zeppieri:So is it a net gain?
Michael Zeppieri:is it, do I want to apply AI because I don't have time to actually
Michael Zeppieri:be more thoughtful in meetings because I'm worrying about the next
Michael Zeppieri:meeting isn't the better solution to maybe have less meetings.
Michael Zeppieri:It's like, like you're moving a pile of dirt.
Michael Zeppieri:So I moved the pile of dirt from here to here.
Michael Zeppieri:But have I actually really achieved anything?
Michael Zeppieri:If I haven't graded it so I can seed it, I haven't really moved the needle.
Michael Zeppieri:So, so that's kind of where I am at.
Michael Zeppieri:And I think, but that's my personal opinion.
Michael Zeppieri:Now, where we are as a company, though, is because we were on a data journey.
Michael Zeppieri:We were able to take this disruption in stride.
Michael Zeppieri:So we do have generative AI internal capabilities that people are using.
Michael Zeppieri:And I would say, you know, given feedback that we've heard from our employees
Michael Zeppieri:there, they're on a very similar journey.
Michael Zeppieri:there's some who are skeptical.
Michael Zeppieri:There are some who are finding applied uses like digital assistant
Michael Zeppieri:that they find to be very useful.
Michael Zeppieri:And then there's some that have concerns, about the technology, the ethics of it.
Michael Zeppieri:Privacy concerns.
Michael Zeppieri:you know, which I think are not unwarranted.
Michael Zeppieri:So, so where we are as a company is we've embraced the technology.
Michael Zeppieri:We've taken into stride.
Michael Zeppieri:I don't know that we've given into the hype of it, but we're
Michael Zeppieri:also seeing some promise.
Michael Zeppieri:so we're, I think we're on the journey of evaluating it.
Michael Zeppieri:We haven't dismissed it.
Michael Zeppieri:but we haven't gone all in on it.
Michael Zeppieri:I think we're being very pragmatic about what AI can do.
Ryan Bell:You know what blows my mind is that the image generators
Ryan Bell:can't get text right yet.
Michael Zeppieri:No, or four fingers.
Michael Zeppieri:You get like six fingers.
Michael Zeppieri:Yeah,
Ryan Bell:they really can produce some pretty cool stuff, but, and as a
Ryan Bell:creative, you know, that's what I went to the image generators first instead of
Ryan Bell:chat GPT, but, And just really, I spent a lot of time just putting stuff in there.
Ryan Bell:What can I make?
Ryan Bell:What, you know, and as a creative, it helps my thought process.
Ryan Bell:But again, the ethics of it and stealing other people's
Ryan Bell:work is certainly concerning.
Ryan Bell:And Adobe just had, there was some drama around Adobe
Ryan Bell:updating their terms and conditions, here recently where it.
Ryan Bell:Left a lot of creatives thinking that what they are going to create
Ryan Bell:in their programs now is going to be read and looked at by Adobe's, Firefly
Ryan Bell:and used across their applications.
Ryan Bell:So definitely interesting.
Ryan Bell:and something that I think we're going to be living with for a while.
Ryan Bell:Uh, can you share any examples of how AI is being used to improve
Ryan Bell:safety and risk management on, on your construction sites or job sites?
Michael Zeppieri:Absolutely.
Michael Zeppieri:So we're, I mean, that's one of the areas where heavily, investing in.
Michael Zeppieri:you know, the classic or the, I think the well known application is
Michael Zeppieri:catching the safety incident in the moment so that you can respond to it.
Michael Zeppieri:So an example of that is making sure, you know, because safety is very
Michael Zeppieri:important to Skanska, making sure that people are wearing their PPE properly.
Michael Zeppieri:So we have site cameras that's capturing, you know, imagery, you know, continuously.
Michael Zeppieri:We're looking at how do we take that imagery, and pass it through an A I
Michael Zeppieri:kind of, you know, way of evaluating that to catch incidents in the moment.
Michael Zeppieri:But, the limitation that we're finding is that's good capturing
Michael Zeppieri:the incident in the moment.
Michael Zeppieri:but there's other implications when you start thinking more kind of
Michael Zeppieri:holistically in terms of like a data mindset or a systems mindset is are
Michael Zeppieri:there additional applications of that data that would be of value.
Michael Zeppieri:So you capture the incident in the moment, but what if there's a pattern around
Michael Zeppieri:that particular individual over time?
Michael Zeppieri:What if that person is repeatedly not wearing their PPE?
Michael Zeppieri:So now you have a systemic problem around that individual and
Michael Zeppieri:there's different things that you would want to do to engage that.
Michael Zeppieri:Maybe they need training.
Michael Zeppieri:Maybe you need to go talk to that sub.
Michael Zeppieri:You need to address that, right?
Michael Zeppieri:Because now it's a systemic problem.
Michael Zeppieri:But what if that systemic problem extends to the sub itself?
Michael Zeppieri:It's not just their employee.
Michael Zeppieri:What if it's their crews?
Michael Zeppieri:And that's a systemic problem.
Michael Zeppieri:So, so you're capturing a safety incident here, around that, but how does that
Michael Zeppieri:then feed into subcontractor selection of pre qualification over there?
Michael Zeppieri:Like there's value to the data you're capturing around safety here, which
Michael Zeppieri:should inform how you want to work with that sub in the future because we
Michael Zeppieri:work with the same subs over and again.
Michael Zeppieri:and I'm not using this as a specific example to call out an incident
Michael Zeppieri:that to say that this has happened with any particular sub, but
Michael Zeppieri:hypothetically it could happen, right?
Michael Zeppieri:So you so you're capturing data in the moment, but there's value to that data
Michael Zeppieri:in terms of the patterns and the usage.
Michael Zeppieri:So that's how we're thinking about AI is capturing the data in the moment
Michael Zeppieri:is good, capturing patterns and then relating that to data to other things
Michael Zeppieri:that give us a broader view is better.
Michael Zeppieri:And, you know, so that's how we're kind of thinking about it.
Ryan Bell:Let's dive into kind of the emerging technologies side of
Ryan Bell:things that, that you guys look at and invest in what's some criteria
Ryan Bell:that you use or what's that decision making process look like for you guys?
Michael Zeppieri:So, my, my boss sent me a podcast and I'm not recalling
Michael Zeppieri:the name of it, right now, but I can, I'll send it to you if you want
Michael Zeppieri:to rerecord it or capture it later.
Michael Zeppieri:But it was about innovation through reduction and that podcast really
Michael Zeppieri:resonated with me because you take any innovation brainstorming process.
Michael Zeppieri:You bring a group of people today together to brainstorm around innovation.
Michael Zeppieri:It tends to be additive.
Michael Zeppieri:And I wish I could cite the podcast because this wasn't my thought,
Michael Zeppieri:but it really resonated with me.
Michael Zeppieri:So that's why I'm sharing it.
Michael Zeppieri:It's, you're in a room and when you talk about innovation and process improvement,
Michael Zeppieri:although it's always additive, what are the things that we can do, like we should
Michael Zeppieri:do this and we should do that and we should do, and then the pile starts, keeps
Michael Zeppieri:getting bigger and bigger and additive.
Michael Zeppieri:But when you think about innovation in terms of productivity and
Michael Zeppieri:what we're trying to achieve in construction, it really needs to be.
Michael Zeppieri:Reductive.
Michael Zeppieri:I mean, we need to reduce the burden on our people, on our job sites to
Michael Zeppieri:really move the needle on productivity.
Michael Zeppieri:And just so we're starting to look at innovation through the lens of
Michael Zeppieri:burden and reduction, because one of the things that we're hearing
Michael Zeppieri:loud and clear from our job sites is that, they're hitting app fatigue.
Michael Zeppieri:There's too many tools.
Michael Zeppieri:There's too many solutions.
Michael Zeppieri:And I think where construction is different from manufacturing, where I
Michael Zeppieri:had spent a fair amount of my career is manufacturing, there's the whole nature
Michael Zeppieri:of production systems and assembly lines.
Michael Zeppieri:Like they, they were transformed, you know, the moment that Henry Ford
Michael Zeppieri:had the idea of the moving assembly line, and then was refined by the
Michael Zeppieri:Japanese through, through Taichi Ono and others with the Toyota
Michael Zeppieri:production system and lean thinking.
Michael Zeppieri:That works in manufacturing because it's repetitive and it's in a
Michael Zeppieri:controlled environment, but construction is not a controlled environment.
Michael Zeppieri:We, buildings don't come off of assembly lines.
Michael Zeppieri:So when you think about the scaling of technology on a construction job
Michael Zeppieri:site, if I were to snap the line right now across our company, all of our
Michael Zeppieri:job sites are at different phases.
Michael Zeppieri:Some are doing site work, some are doing logistics planning, some are fitting
Michael Zeppieri:out, some are about to close out.
Michael Zeppieri:And if you think about the duration of how long it takes to build a job,
Michael Zeppieri:most jobs are over multiple years.
Michael Zeppieri:Project teams are on this kind of journey with their client to
Michael Zeppieri:build what we built for them.
Michael Zeppieri:So let's say we introduce a new technology that we're trying to
Michael Zeppieri:scale, but it's applied at one phase of the construction process.
Michael Zeppieri:In any given moment, if I were to train people in the use of that technology,
Michael Zeppieri:we're not universally benefiting from it across the entire enterprise.
Michael Zeppieri:There's only a percentage of jobs that are actually in that moment.
Michael Zeppieri:But if you think about training, you typically want to train everyone at once.
Michael Zeppieri:So let's say I choose to train a project team on how to fly
Michael Zeppieri:a drone to do site logistics planning, but they're in fit out.
Michael Zeppieri:They're not going to be able to apply that learning in the moment on the job, on the
Michael Zeppieri:workflow that they're actually working on.
Michael Zeppieri:So it's going to be out of sight out of mind, you know, one week after
Michael Zeppieri:they've done it and we're gonna have to retrain them or revisit it.
Michael Zeppieri:So, so scaling technology in construction, it's kind of tricky that way and why
Michael Zeppieri:it's different than manufacturing.
Michael Zeppieri:So, so our thinking around technology is when we think about it is
Michael Zeppieri:really about reducing that burden.
Michael Zeppieri:How do we reduce the burden?
Michael Zeppieri:Making sure that it's not additive to that burden and also measuring
Michael Zeppieri:values to the other because we don't self perform a lot of work.
Michael Zeppieri:A lot of these technologies that the people who are actually going to
Michael Zeppieri:benefit from the productivity gains of the robots and a lot of these other
Michael Zeppieri:technologies, is not us necessarily.
Michael Zeppieri:it's it's the subs.
Michael Zeppieri:It's the trades, you know, so for us, it's less about us adopting the
Michael Zeppieri:technology and more about finding the right incentives for them.
Michael Zeppieri:to adopt the technology.
Michael Zeppieri:And I'll give you a very specific example.
Michael Zeppieri:So we're doing a lot of testing with site layout robots.
Michael Zeppieri:We have validated the use case that a site layout robot, can get to a more accurate
Michael Zeppieri:site layout, in a fraction of the time that it would take a human to do it.
Michael Zeppieri:So we validated the use case.
Michael Zeppieri:The technology works.
Michael Zeppieri:The problem is how does the technology fit into the broader landscape
Michael Zeppieri:of just how a job site functions?
Michael Zeppieri:So there's a lot of prep work in BIM and VDC to make the site layout work.
Michael Zeppieri:So who's going to absorb that cost and that labor and all the prep work?
Michael Zeppieri:Now, there are jobs in some geographies I mentioned, like, we have a lot of
Michael Zeppieri:disparity in terms of our markets and our, you know, all of our different offices,
Michael Zeppieri:service, different market sectors, different complexity, different clients.
Michael Zeppieri:So in some of our larger metropolitan areas where there's mega jobs, we have the
Michael Zeppieri:staffing to actually do that prep work.
Michael Zeppieri:There's people that have that skill set and the clients see value in it or want
Michael Zeppieri:to go play in that sandbox with us.
Michael Zeppieri:Absolutely.
Michael Zeppieri:We'll do it there and we can do it there, but I can't necessarily replicate that
Michael Zeppieri:on a smaller job in a geography where that may not necessarily be the case.
Michael Zeppieri:So, you know, when we think about technology, it goes back to the whole
Michael Zeppieri:plan, do check act thing, making it work in validating the value isn't enough.
Michael Zeppieri:It's validating the value, but then also saying, once you validated
Michael Zeppieri:the value, who realizes that value?
Michael Zeppieri:And then if you realize that value, if you look at it holistically, is
Michael Zeppieri:it actually creating a net benefit?
Michael Zeppieri:And then if it does create a net benefit of someone to pay for that.
Michael Zeppieri:So it's just so when we think through innovation, we're thinking through those
Michael Zeppieri:follow up questions around scalability.
Michael Zeppieri:yeah, we get this.
Michael Zeppieri:I had a really interesting conversation with someone who was part of our extended
Michael Zeppieri:network who said to me that he would love to see more kind of enthusiasm, for
Michael Zeppieri:technology and curiosity for technology.
Michael Zeppieri:Like, could we as a company be more enthusiastic and curious?
Michael Zeppieri:And that's important.
Michael Zeppieri:Like, that's the first step.
Michael Zeppieri:Like, you absolutely need to have a curiosity around innovation.
Michael Zeppieri:a willingness to try new things.
Michael Zeppieri:But there's also I think sometimes a confirmation bias in people who
Michael Zeppieri:kind of gravitate to technology.
Michael Zeppieri:It's like I like technology.
Michael Zeppieri:I'm gonna go test the technology, testing the technology,
Michael Zeppieri:validated that I like technology.
Michael Zeppieri:But we have to ask those hard follow up questions.
Michael Zeppieri:Does it scale?
Michael Zeppieri:Does it align with our business?
Michael Zeppieri:You know, can we deploy it as a service or people want to pay for it so that
Michael Zeppieri:so we built the process to kind of structure that and ask those questions.
Michael Zeppieri:I can't say we've perfected it, but people are starting to gravitate to
Michael Zeppieri:it and they like it because they're like it kind of goes back to where
Michael Zeppieri:we started with kind of the different aspects of how I operate personally.
Michael Zeppieri:It provides enough discipline and structure and process that we can
Michael Zeppieri:scale, but it also gives enough room for autonomy and creativity so that we
Michael Zeppieri:actually truly are harnessing innovation.
Michael Zeppieri:from our people in the field.
Michael Zeppieri:And I'm really proud of our team that we have been able to build
Michael Zeppieri:something that strikes that balance.
Michael Zeppieri:And like I said, people are people typically look at process, especially
Michael Zeppieri:when you try to impose process innovation.
Michael Zeppieri:They see it as a blocker, not an enabler.
Michael Zeppieri:It's innovation.
Michael Zeppieri:They try to find ways around it.
Michael Zeppieri:And what we're finding is people are increasingly gravitating towards
Michael Zeppieri:it, which is probably the best, I think, metric that it's working.
Michael Zeppieri:Is it perfect?
Michael Zeppieri:No.
Michael Zeppieri:Do we still hit obstacles and frustrations?
Michael Zeppieri:Absolutely.
Michael Zeppieri:But, I'm really proud of where we are as a team and what we've done with it.
Ryan Bell:So explain to me what a site layout robot is.
Ryan Bell:Like, I want to go type that into mid journey and see what it gives me.
Ryan Bell:But what, what exactly is that?
Ryan Bell:I don't know.
Michael Zeppieri:That's a good question.
Michael Zeppieri:So most construction jobs at some point, it's just a concrete slab.
Michael Zeppieri:Like you get to a phase of construction where you're just
Michael Zeppieri:looking at concrete slabs.
Michael Zeppieri:And at some point, You have to figure out where the different penetrations
Michael Zeppieri:are going to be because you've got, you know, mechanical, electrical, plumbing,
Michael Zeppieri:things that are coming through floors.
Michael Zeppieri:You've got walls that are going to be erected.
Michael Zeppieri:You know, you've got carpentry that's going to be done.
Michael Zeppieri:You know, there's a variety of tasks of like basically, you know, think
Michael Zeppieri:about, if you've ever built a Lego set, you know, the steps, those
Michael Zeppieri:initial steps, like you've got the kind of the slab, the base plate.
Michael Zeppieri:And you're starting to put those initial blocks down, which are the foundation upon
Michael Zeppieri:which everything else is going to build.
Michael Zeppieri:And then eventually you have walls and you have partitions and you have,
Michael Zeppieri:piping and you have utilities and all of these things that kind of go through.
Michael Zeppieri:So, so layout is the process of literally using chalk lines to create
Michael Zeppieri:the lines that, that, you know, so if you look at a set of drawings, a set
Michael Zeppieri:of drawings, you know, engineering drawings, architecture drawings, they
Michael Zeppieri:tell you where all those things are going to be dimensionally accurate,
Michael Zeppieri:because there's tolerances for all those things when you're building a building.
Michael Zeppieri:So, someone has to provide guidelines to help the people that are going to
Michael Zeppieri:build those things to know where to install the wall, where to put the
Michael Zeppieri:penetration, where to drill the hole.
Michael Zeppieri:So, that's what site layout does is it's through chalk lines and you know,
Michael Zeppieri:with intolerance of the precision, lays everything out for you, you know,
Michael Zeppieri:tells you where to put the Lego bricks.
Michael Zeppieri:That is a time intensive process to do manually and just the nature of even
Michael Zeppieri:just snapping the chalk line, you lose a little bit of accuracy just through the
Michael Zeppieri:means and methods of doing that manually.
Michael Zeppieri:So, the, so the idea of site layout.
Michael Zeppieri:It's think about putting a printer on a set of wheels that's talking to
Michael Zeppieri:a station that tells it where it is, you know, it geolocates it and it's
Michael Zeppieri:telling the robot, drive along this and as you're driving, paint the line.
Michael Zeppieri:So instead of doing the chalk line, it's painting the lines for you.
Michael Zeppieri:And what's cool about the robots is they can do other things like add annotations.
Michael Zeppieri:They can add QR codes, which allow you to then link to other
Michael Zeppieri:things, like if you want to pull in other contextual information.
Michael Zeppieri:So, so the site layout is actually a very intriguing.
Michael Zeppieri:use case for us because it allows us to do these other things.
Michael Zeppieri:It ensures accuracy.
Michael Zeppieri:It's less time consuming than doing it manually.
Michael Zeppieri:but the question is, we don't self perform that.
Michael Zeppieri:So there's like the questions we have to ask about the site layout is okay,
Michael Zeppieri:so I don't self perform site layout.
Michael Zeppieri:I'm paying a sub to do that.
Michael Zeppieri:Well, when I signed a contract with the sub to perform that
Michael Zeppieri:scope isn't quality expected.
Michael Zeppieri:So do I really care how they get there?
Michael Zeppieri:I'm paying for the quality.
Michael Zeppieri:And if there isn't the quality, then there's a means to claims and other things
Michael Zeppieri:to get, you know, compensation for that.
Michael Zeppieri:But then the other question is don't we want them to achieve first time quality?
Michael Zeppieri:So don't we want the site layout companies, rather than dismiss it as
Michael Zeppieri:taking away a human job, recognizing that you still need the expertise of
Michael Zeppieri:what it takes to do a good site layout.
Michael Zeppieri:So we haven't replaced the human, but could the robot augment the human to
Michael Zeppieri:ensure that when they are on site.
Michael Zeppieri:the quality of their work.
Michael Zeppieri:They're achieving first time quality the first time.
Michael Zeppieri:we all know that there's a resource constraining construction.
Michael Zeppieri:We don't have enough people in the trades.
Michael Zeppieri:So does this allow the trade partners to actually increase their bandwidth?
Michael Zeppieri:Because now you're augmenting the human with the robot.
Michael Zeppieri:So instead of taking them three days to do a layout, they can do it in an hour.
Michael Zeppieri:but you also have to think about it in terms of the value chain.
Michael Zeppieri:So that all sounds good on paper.
Michael Zeppieri:And that's, you know, you talk to any of the site layout
Michael Zeppieri:companies, that's the use case.
Michael Zeppieri:They will tell you like, they'll tell you that's the value.
Michael Zeppieri:But you also have to recognize that there's a lot of prep work
Michael Zeppieri:that has to go into making sure that the robot knows where to go
Michael Zeppieri:and knows where to print the line.
Michael Zeppieri:So if you're willing and able to do the prep work and you're willing and able
Michael Zeppieri:to compel the subs to see the value in embracing the robot, then you have a path
Michael Zeppieri:to realize value with the technology.
Ryan Bell:Very good.
Ryan Bell:Thank you for painting that picture for me.
Ryan Bell:I what it is now.
Ryan Bell:Very well explained.
Ryan Bell:What about, uh, VR and AR?
Ryan Bell:you guys doing anything with that on your projects?
Ryan Bell:What are your thoughts on those technologies?
Michael Zeppieri:We are.
Michael Zeppieri:So this kind of goes to my comment on scale.
Michael Zeppieri:So they have a place in our industry, but I don't see a world where those devices
Michael Zeppieri:are universally kind of ubiquitous.
Michael Zeppieri:You know, the same as like an iPhone is like, I don't think they're
Michael Zeppieri:ever going to achieve ubiquity.
Michael Zeppieri:I think they're always, they have a place.
Michael Zeppieri:But if I go to my desk right now, you know, we have our grave, like in our
Michael Zeppieri:cubicle row, we have a kind of a graveyard of like technology that didn't work.
Michael Zeppieri:And most of the stuff that's sitting in that pile is a AR and VR devices.
Michael Zeppieri:The reason being is, one is the pace of the technology.
Michael Zeppieri:So the obsolescence of that technology is moving, I mean, that
Michael Zeppieri:tech is just moving very quickly.
Michael Zeppieri:you know, so there's just the form factor.
Michael Zeppieri:I mean, where augmented reality goggles were even like three years ago.
Michael Zeppieri:What I mean by that is like the, so the weight of the battery pack and where
Michael Zeppieri:it sits, I mean, like the technology is evolving, like the early iterations,
Michael Zeppieri:like you would feel the heat of the battery pack because it was sitting on
Michael Zeppieri:your head and it had a weight to it.
Michael Zeppieri:So it would kind of tilt your head and it was very uncomfortable.
Michael Zeppieri:So They weren't really practical devices for long duration use.
Michael Zeppieri:But the technology has moved very rapidly.
Michael Zeppieri:So we're not yet to the point where like, this is my AR device, like,
Michael Zeppieri:like where, like, as unobstructed as a pair of like reading glasses,
Michael Zeppieri:eventually we'll get there.
Michael Zeppieri:But until we're at that form factor, I don't think you're going to see it being
Michael Zeppieri:used universally, but there are use cases where we have found it useful, but it goes
Michael Zeppieri:right back to the site layout example.
Michael Zeppieri:The conditions have to be like the stars have to align, the
Michael Zeppieri:conditions have to be ripe for the application of those technologies.
Michael Zeppieri:So so an example of where AR we are finding to be very useful
Michael Zeppieri:is when you have high density M.
Michael Zeppieri:E.
Michael Zeppieri:P.
Michael Zeppieri:configurations and you're trying to coordinate around those.
Michael Zeppieri:So, so, so think about, you know, any industrial space where you have exposed
Michael Zeppieri:ceilings and you can see the pipes and the ducks and all the different runs of the M.
Michael Zeppieri:E.
Michael Zeppieri:P.
Michael Zeppieri:utilities.
Michael Zeppieri:There's some that literally all kind of sit on like one or two dimensions.
Michael Zeppieri:There's not a lot of complexity.
Michael Zeppieri:I mean, you might look at it in question.
Michael Zeppieri:Well, why did they move that duck around that pipe?
Michael Zeppieri:Like that didn't seem efficient.
Michael Zeppieri:And that's kind of the nature of construction is things come together in
Michael Zeppieri:the field, you know, when you coordinate things, but by and large, like most
Michael Zeppieri:jobs, like the office I'm in right now, I'm looking at our exposed ceilings.
Michael Zeppieri:I don't need AR to coordinate that.
Michael Zeppieri:They can do that with the BIM model.
Michael Zeppieri:with somebody kind of navigating on a screen, you know, driving
Michael Zeppieri:it and kind of guiding people to kind of talk through that.
Michael Zeppieri:But what we have found is that for really complex stacks where there's a
Michael Zeppieri:lot of density, having somebody drive.
Michael Zeppieri:And kind of try to find the view that's helpful to everyone isn't as useful as
Michael Zeppieri:putting them all in an AR or even a VR experience like that's actually more
Michael Zeppieri:intuitive interface for navigating a 3D environment because they could put
Michael Zeppieri:their head kind of literally like see what they would want to see if they
Michael Zeppieri:were getting on a ladder and doing it themselves like it's just more of like
Michael Zeppieri:a kind of intuitive UI for kind of experiencing space and interpreting space.
Michael Zeppieri:So for those use cases, we're seeing a lot of value.
Michael Zeppieri:The other, use case where it's kind of a, we're not sure if it's going
Michael Zeppieri:to be AI or AR that's going to solve it, but it's really ensuring
Michael Zeppieri:the quality of installed work.
Michael Zeppieri:So making sure that what's built actually matches up with the drawing.
Michael Zeppieri:So for progression tracking, for quality checks.
Michael Zeppieri:Like there's the idea of like projecting the model on what you're seeing in front
Michael Zeppieri:of you to ensure that what was built is lining up with what was planned.
Michael Zeppieri:So like we've had applications where that works very well
Michael Zeppieri:and people seem to like that.
Michael Zeppieri:But on the other end of the spectrum, so like that's in like the built environment.
Michael Zeppieri:But on the other end of the spectrum where we're seeing a lot of value
Michael Zeppieri:is also on informing design.
Michael Zeppieri:So so think about and it's not for every market sector.
Michael Zeppieri:But when you think about fitting out of space and like the classic example
Michael Zeppieri:is let's say an operating room.
Michael Zeppieri:Doctors and nurses have a very specific, they understand the space
Michael Zeppieri:and what that space has to do for them.
Michael Zeppieri:Like they know where the operating table is.
Michael Zeppieri:They want, they know where the lamp is.
Michael Zeppieri:They understand the different things that the plug into the air
Michael Zeppieri:and the water and all the different things that are along the wall.
Michael Zeppieri:And I'm not a doctor, so I can't speak in like specificity around all
Michael Zeppieri:those things, but a doctor or a nurse knows how that layout should be.
Michael Zeppieri:I mean, like even think about, something you're building for
Michael Zeppieri:yourself, like, like cooking.
Michael Zeppieri:You have a process, right?
Michael Zeppieri:You have a preferred way of like how you prep the ingredients, how
Michael Zeppieri:you cook things if, you know, you know, so, so same with like a doctor.
Michael Zeppieri:So, so using like VR, if you put them in the space and you show them the design,
Michael Zeppieri:here I, as the architect or the designer or the engineer, this is what you told
Michael Zeppieri:me the requirement was, which typically is articulated in text and documents.
Michael Zeppieri:But now you're seeing, you're seeing physically seeing
Michael Zeppieri:what it's going to look like.
Michael Zeppieri:And you can receive feedback from the people who are going to use the space.
Michael Zeppieri:We say, you know what?
Michael Zeppieri:If you put the table over there, that's actually a problem because I can't
Michael Zeppieri:get to it from this side when I hook up this, or I'm going to be bringing
Michael Zeppieri:in additional devices on carts that you don't see in the design because
Michael Zeppieri:they're not physically part of like your process, but we have all this additional
Michael Zeppieri:equipment that I'm going to bring in.
Michael Zeppieri:Where am I going to put it?
Michael Zeppieri:So, so using VR, as part of like the design process and the fit out process.
Michael Zeppieri:We're similarly finding it to be, very beneficial because if
Michael Zeppieri:you think about that, right?
Michael Zeppieri:So at the end of the day, you ultimately wanna build a space that
Michael Zeppieri:the owner needs, and eventually those things are gonna flush out.
Michael Zeppieri:The last thing you wanna do is build a space and then have a client come
Michael Zeppieri:in and say, well, that's wrong, or that's not what we thought.
Michael Zeppieri:'cause now you're talking about rework.
Michael Zeppieri:So, so there's a value to being proactive and it's, it really,
Michael Zeppieri:it's the translation of, like in manufacturing they do this very well,
Michael Zeppieri:like designed for manufacturing.
Michael Zeppieri:Like, so when you design something that's gonna be built.
Michael Zeppieri:The people who are actually going to be on the shop floor or understand
Michael Zeppieri:the manufacturing process have an opportunity to influence the design so
Michael Zeppieri:that the thing that you're designing can actually be built at scale.
Michael Zeppieri:We're getting smarter about design for constructability.
Michael Zeppieri:So, so can we use technology to prevent rework downstream?
Michael Zeppieri:So there's an investment we need to make upstream in terms of data, in terms of
Michael Zeppieri:information, in terms of partnership, and even contractually how we engage.
Michael Zeppieri:you know, with our partners, you know, there's contractual
Michael Zeppieri:implications, just how construction is done that create limitations
Michael Zeppieri:that don't exist in manufacturing.
Michael Zeppieri:But I mean, that's honestly where I am most excited about technology and
Michael Zeppieri:this kind of goes to my lean thinking.
Michael Zeppieri:I see a lot of the technology that's coming out now, particularly the
Michael Zeppieri:startups, is they gravitate to a problem that they see and they're
Michael Zeppieri:trying to solve the problem.
Michael Zeppieri:But the problem that they're solving is inherently inefficient.
Michael Zeppieri:It's inherently wasteful.
Michael Zeppieri:So what we're doing is we're using technology to get better at doing
Michael Zeppieri:something that's inherently wasteful.
Michael Zeppieri:If we just move upstream in the value chain and get to the root cause of
Michael Zeppieri:why that thing is so wasteful, could we use technology to prevent it?
Michael Zeppieri:So now I'm not, I'm not spending more money later to
Michael Zeppieri:fix things or to rework things.
Michael Zeppieri:I'm, it's cause I did it's that whole go slower to go faster kind of paradigm.
Michael Zeppieri:I'm moving upstream, spending more time in coordination.
Michael Zeppieri:And I think that's where the data BIM VDC AI thing is really going to move the
Michael Zeppieri:needle on construction is if we can get better and smarter around constructability
Michael Zeppieri:and planning, then everything downstream is becomes very fluid.
Michael Zeppieri:and then you'll appreciate this.
Michael Zeppieri:you know, given your background, Ryan, in, in kind of prefabrication,
Michael Zeppieri:it opens up the door for now moving more of the construction process
Michael Zeppieri:into a controlled environment.
Michael Zeppieri:So if I'm doing the planning up front and I'm coordinating things up front,
Michael Zeppieri:I am now finding opportunities.
Michael Zeppieri:I'm never going to be able to get a building to come off of a job site, but I
Michael Zeppieri:can get components of a job site to come off of a, of assembly line MEP stacks.
Michael Zeppieri:you know, wall assemblies, things like that.
Michael Zeppieri:So, so that's why I'd love the industry to get to.
Michael Zeppieri:and I think that's, I mean, like with that's going to be our Henry Ford moment.
Michael Zeppieri:Like, we, like, we have not had.
Michael Zeppieri:Um, like one of my, I told my coworker, Mark Moore, who sits here in Boston,
Michael Zeppieri:that I would use this quote in a podcast.
Michael Zeppieri:He has this great quote that I love that he says that, um,
Michael Zeppieri:construction is an unbroken line since the days of the pyramids.
Michael Zeppieri:And he's not wrong.
Michael Zeppieri:Like, we have not had that, like, if you think about manufacturing used
Michael Zeppieri:to be a craft industry, the same as construction, but it had that
Michael Zeppieri:transformational moment the industrial revolution was the catalyst for it.
Michael Zeppieri:but.
Michael Zeppieri:They had that moment, you know, the Henry Ford, the Taichi Ono,
Michael Zeppieri:the moment where somebody radically transformed manufacturing.
Michael Zeppieri:We haven't had, we haven't had that moment in construction yet.
Michael Zeppieri:but I think data, AI, some of these other technologies, if we move it
Michael Zeppieri:upstream, I think that will get us there.
Ryan Bell:Are you guys do anything special or specific to address the
Ryan Bell:skills gap or the labor shortage in the construction industry?
Michael Zeppieri:We are, and it's through a number of different, channels.
Michael Zeppieri:And so this is a topic that I'm, I'm particularly passionate about.
Michael Zeppieri:and I have a very strong opinion on it.
Michael Zeppieri:So, so, and this is because I come from an immigrant family.
Michael Zeppieri:So, so, you know, my, my grandparents came off a boat from Italy.
Michael Zeppieri:They weren't college educated.
Michael Zeppieri:And, you know, so my family story is weaved through the
Michael Zeppieri:trades of New York City.
Michael Zeppieri:So, and I have a lot of kind of pride, like when we, you know, my dad, I remember
Michael Zeppieri:as a kid, like we'd be going down to New York for the Rangers game and on
Michael Zeppieri:our way down to Madison Square Garden.
Michael Zeppieri:You know,, your grandfather worked on that.
Michael Zeppieri:Your uncle worked on that.
Michael Zeppieri:Like there's a pride.
Michael Zeppieri:Of being part of like the American journey, but also I think a pride of
Michael Zeppieri:being in the trades Like I remember like the community that I grew up
Michael Zeppieri:in New York Not a lot of the moms and dads had white collar jobs.
Michael Zeppieri:People were plumbers.
Michael Zeppieri:They were electricians They were carpenters they were and like that was
Michael Zeppieri:the foundation of the middle class.
Michael Zeppieri:So I feel like at some point in pushing everyone to get college degrees.
Michael Zeppieri:I mean, technology kind of created this suddenly this
Michael Zeppieri:opportunity for work life balance.
Michael Zeppieri:And, you know, I'm a hypocrite in some extent, right?
Michael Zeppieri:Because I'm in a white collar job.
Michael Zeppieri:I mean, I'm not on the job site every day.
Michael Zeppieri:Although the army was like that, I think that's what attracted me to the army.
Michael Zeppieri:And I do.
Michael Zeppieri:I do miss that, like, just the energy of just being out in the
Michael Zeppieri:field, doing things with your hands.
Michael Zeppieri:I mean, I enjoy that personally and I get a lot of fulfillment from that.
Michael Zeppieri:So, so to me it's like we lost our way pushing everyone to get college
Michael Zeppieri:degrees and diminishing the importance of people in the trades and even the
Michael Zeppieri:fulfillment that you get from the trades.
Michael Zeppieri:But also you have to look at, construction does not have great work life balance.
Michael Zeppieri:I mean, there's a reason why people have also gravitated to office jobs is because,
Michael Zeppieri:you know, it's nice to be able to get home in time for your kid's soccer game.
Michael Zeppieri:I coach my daughters in soccer.
Michael Zeppieri:I probably wouldn't be able to do that if I was out on a job site.
Michael Zeppieri:I mean, it's like we have put an increasing burden on our
Michael Zeppieri:construction, people out in the field.
Michael Zeppieri:The days are getting longer, the timelines and the expectations around
Michael Zeppieri:what it takes to build something have been compressed, it's putting a
Michael Zeppieri:tremendous amount of pressure and people just as a result, people just aren't
Michael Zeppieri:attracted to construction anymore.
Michael Zeppieri:So.
Michael Zeppieri:But I think there's still a lot of fulfillment to it.
Michael Zeppieri:I mean, I, you know, construction is still the last of the great trade industries.
Michael Zeppieri:You know, you can't outsource it.
Michael Zeppieri:It has to be done here on site.
Michael Zeppieri:you know, I think it kind of weaves into the whole kind of, you know,
Michael Zeppieri:kind of migrant conversation.
Michael Zeppieri:I mean, our, like the construction trades have always been, that's where migrants,
Michael Zeppieri:I mean, the whole kind of immigration, you know, journey of America and the melting
Michael Zeppieri:pot is largely driven through the trade.
Michael Zeppieri:So like, I see the trade as the pipeline of solving, not just construction.
Michael Zeppieri:challenges, but also broader societal challenges.
Michael Zeppieri:I have a great deal of passion about attracting people to construction.
Michael Zeppieri:So, but how do you do that?
Michael Zeppieri:How do you get kids like my kids, right?
Michael Zeppieri:Who have had devices in front of their faces from the day they were
Michael Zeppieri:born and like to sit, you know, they don't go outside and play and kick the
Michael Zeppieri:soccer ball around like I used to do.
Michael Zeppieri:They forced them to do that.
Michael Zeppieri:They gravitate to the technology.
Michael Zeppieri:How do you get people that are now digital natives and live in a digital
Michael Zeppieri:world to get excited about construction.
Michael Zeppieri:And I think that's where technology might be able to help us.
Michael Zeppieri:So augment them with robots, augment them with drones.
Michael Zeppieri:Like suddenly there's an excitement to technology.
Michael Zeppieri:Like there's a technology aspect to building things in construction.
Michael Zeppieri:that I think is very enticing.
Michael Zeppieri:So that's like that.
Michael Zeppieri:That's the first thing.
Michael Zeppieri:And we're and you know, we're exploring that as a company.
Michael Zeppieri:you know, through communities, through, through trade partnership,
Michael Zeppieri:through trade mentoring.
Michael Zeppieri:how do we do that?
Michael Zeppieri:So that's the first avenue.
Michael Zeppieri:The second Avenue, and this is something we're very passionate about as a
Michael Zeppieri:company is how do we improve the quality of life for construction workers?
Michael Zeppieri:How do we reduce the burden, the physical burden and toll of construction?
Michael Zeppieri:I mean, if you look at the opioid crisis, the suicide epidemic in construction,
Michael Zeppieri:a lot of that is attributed to the work life balance implications, but also
Michael Zeppieri:just the physical toll of construction.
Michael Zeppieri:you know, I mean, I don't know if either of you have done any, you know, overhead
Michael Zeppieri:work for any extended period of time, but I mean, it blows out your shoulders.
Michael Zeppieri:It blows out your upper back.
Michael Zeppieri:It has implications.
Michael Zeppieri:So, so that's where technology can help us.
Michael Zeppieri:You know, so instead of putting somebody on a scissor list, scissor lift and
Michael Zeppieri:they're doing overhead work all day.
Michael Zeppieri:could we use exoskeletons to reduce that burden?
Michael Zeppieri:Could we have robots perform that work?
Michael Zeppieri:You're not taking the human out of the equation, but you're augmenting them to
Michael Zeppieri:reduce the physical toll on their body.
Michael Zeppieri:So that, that excites me.
Michael Zeppieri:The other thing is creating pipelines into construction for
Michael Zeppieri:our underserved communities.
Michael Zeppieri:Like I'm, I am very passionate about helping veterans find
Michael Zeppieri:paths into construction.
Michael Zeppieri:I think construction is a wonderful place for veterans.
Michael Zeppieri:One is because there's a similarity and familiarity.
Michael Zeppieri:you know, being out on a job site and working with superintendents, is like
Michael Zeppieri:being with the platoon and working with a great non commissioned officer.
Michael Zeppieri:I mean, there's so many parallels between the culture of the military and
Michael Zeppieri:the culture of a construction job site.
Michael Zeppieri:I mean, at the end of the day, both are about, you know, performing under, high
Michael Zeppieri:stress situations and managing risk.
Michael Zeppieri:you know, so I'm very passionate about helping veterans find,
Michael Zeppieri:places in construction.
Michael Zeppieri:So they, and in our companies as well, I mean, actually, I
Michael Zeppieri:purposely wore this shirt today.
Michael Zeppieri:You can see it like we, this is a patch that they created for all the veterans.
Michael Zeppieri:they sent this out on Veterans Day, the shirts, all the Skanska
Michael Zeppieri:employees that are, veterans.
Michael Zeppieri:And like, we're very appreciative of that.
Michael Zeppieri:like we do a very good job through our diversity inclusion efforts.
Michael Zeppieri:to not just do that, but also we mentor, you know, trade partners that
Michael Zeppieri:are owned by underserved communities.
Michael Zeppieri:So, so women, minorities, you know, increasingly, people who are not
Michael Zeppieri:English as, you know, their native language or their first language.
Michael Zeppieri:for their first language.
Michael Zeppieri:you're finding ways to make sure that those people have a place,
Michael Zeppieri:to find paths, you know, rewarding construction paths in construction.
Michael Zeppieri:So we do a lot of work through mentoring trade partners, we have a number of
Michael Zeppieri:different programs that we do for that.
Michael Zeppieri:I've personally, actually taught classes that we've given to some of our
Michael Zeppieri:minority and women owned, businesses.
Michael Zeppieri:And it's such a great opportunity to kind of give back to the
Michael Zeppieri:communities we serve in.
Michael Zeppieri:And also kind of expand the bench.
Michael Zeppieri:because like a lot of the talent and a lot of the capability, that
Michael Zeppieri:we need for our industry, like resides in those Communities.
Michael Zeppieri:So we would be negligent, not to tap into the diversity of that to
Michael Zeppieri:kind of solve the resourcing issue.
Michael Zeppieri:And then lastly, you know, we're doing a lot in recognition of, you know, making
Michael Zeppieri:construction more approachable for women.
Michael Zeppieri:I mean, if you look at any of the trades, they're still predominantly men.
Michael Zeppieri:And if you think about the, what are the things that are barriers
Michael Zeppieri:for women to work in construction?
Michael Zeppieri:Like I, I become more in tune to this because both of my daughters
Michael Zeppieri:are pretty serious athletes.
Michael Zeppieri:Like most of the athletic equipment that they use for soccer, for
Michael Zeppieri:lacrosse, for basketball, it's designed for the male body.
Michael Zeppieri:It's not designed for women's bodies.
Michael Zeppieri:And there's actually articles right now, there's like an epidemic of
Michael Zeppieri:college level female athletes that are suffering from meniscus injuries
Michael Zeppieri:and they don't know they don't.
Michael Zeppieri:There's this pattern of female athletes when they hit a level of intensity in
Michael Zeppieri:terms of their training and their play.
Michael Zeppieri:They're all suffering these need knee injuries and there hasn't been
Michael Zeppieri:enough research in this, which is unfortunate to solve the problem.
Michael Zeppieri:But I think the hypothesis is that it's because the shoes that they
Michael Zeppieri:wear and the equipment is just not reflective of their bodies.
Michael Zeppieri:and my daughter is actually dealing with some knee injuries right now
Michael Zeppieri:and it's, and I guarantee you that's probably part of the equation.
Michael Zeppieri:So like we're partnering with vendors that are designing work boots for
Michael Zeppieri:women where we're partnering with companies that are creating PPE that
Michael Zeppieri:actually conform to a woman's body that accommodates them when they're, pregnant.
Michael Zeppieri:So that they can continue to be on a job site and wear PPE and wear it in
Michael Zeppieri:a way that's not discomfort to them and then solving, the broader problem
Michael Zeppieri:is like the burden of motherhood, largely falls on working mothers.
Michael Zeppieri:It's it's but job sites require people on site like so, so how do you create an
Michael Zeppieri:environment on a job site where someone could choose to be a field construction
Michael Zeppieri:worker and also choose to be a mother, you know, because mother still kind of
Michael Zeppieri:bear the burden of childcare and all those things, and how do you create
Michael Zeppieri:programs that accommodate for that?
Michael Zeppieri:So like we're looking at all those things of the company and it's like that's what
Michael Zeppieri:makes me proud to work for this company is because and trying to solve the workforce
Michael Zeppieri:Problem, we're not just kind of looking at technology as a way to replace or fill
Michael Zeppieri:that void, we're looking at can we use technology and innovation to augment our
Michael Zeppieri:workers and bring more people make it more of a people conversation and not a
Michael Zeppieri:technology conversation, so And if I'm rambling on this for a long time, it's
Michael Zeppieri:because I'm very passionate about it.
Michael Zeppieri:And I'm actually very proud of what our company is doing in this space.
Ryan Bell:Well, you should be.
Ryan Bell:Yeah, you should be.
Ethan Young:I was going to say, it kind of ties back, obviously not quite the
Ethan Young:same, but when you made that earlier point about AI, like going back to the root of
Ethan Young:the problem instead of trying to just kind of put a band aid fix on it, you know?
Ethan Young:Same thing you're talking about here, just how can we look at this from a
Ethan Young:holistic view and see like, what can we do to improve in these different areas?
Ethan Young:Not just, well, let's just automate this or, you know, use the robots here.
Ethan Young:So I think that's definitely in line with what you were saying earlier.
Michael Zeppieri:yeah, I mean, it's really about being, I mean, it really
Michael Zeppieri:comes down to being like very inclusive.
Michael Zeppieri:It's like you, you know, you're planning a meeting and you
Michael Zeppieri:fail to kind of accommodate for vegetarians like in the menu.
Michael Zeppieri:So, I mean, it's like it's thinking about everyone that's going to be
Michael Zeppieri:in the room, and in trying to make a kind of thinking, you know, thinking
Michael Zeppieri:about everyone in the room and also thinking about who's not in the room.
Michael Zeppieri:I would say, like, that's like where we have really moved the needle on
Michael Zeppieri:innovation is the people that care about innovation will gravitate to it.
Michael Zeppieri:But then you get a little bit of group think it's sometimes you have to pause and
Michael Zeppieri:think who's not in the room and I would say we've gotten the best outcomes when
Michael Zeppieri:we bring in the people who typically are not in the room and get their perspective
Michael Zeppieri:because it's it's really kind of expanded our thinking around how we solve problems
Michael Zeppieri:for our company and as an industry.
Ryan Bell:Well, thanks so much, Mike.
Ryan Bell:This has been great.
Ryan Bell:We're really thankful for the time we've had with you today and
Ryan Bell:everything you've shared with us.
Ryan Bell:We're close to wrapping up what we call the business end of things.
Ryan Bell:Is there anything that we haven't covered yet today that you would
Ryan Bell:like to share with our audience?
Michael Zeppieri:Yeah, I actually Ryan where we started, which is, you
Michael Zeppieri:know, my appreciation of your, you know, your stack behind you and your
Michael Zeppieri:are kind of shared love for music.
Michael Zeppieri:So there was a, like another analogy I wanted to use around, like, kind
Michael Zeppieri:of how I think about technology and it's very centric to music.
Michael Zeppieri:So my parents were both shameless hippies.
Michael Zeppieri:In the sixties, they, I think their first date was they went to, the
Michael Zeppieri:Woodstock documentary, the movie.
Michael Zeppieri:So like, like, like my parents, have seen the Rolling Stones and at their
Michael Zeppieri:peak, the Beatles, Cream, like, like all those bands, like my dad's
Michael Zeppieri:a huge Clapton fan, Beatles fan.
Michael Zeppieri:So I grew up around music and my dad, didn't have a lot of money, but the one
Michael Zeppieri:thing my father always would invest in.
Michael Zeppieri:Was a good audio setup.
Michael Zeppieri:Like he, he had the, like the full stack and the speakers.
Michael Zeppieri:And when cassettes came into, to being, and we started going on road trips as
Michael Zeppieri:a family and we, and they had their first cassette player in the car.
Michael Zeppieri:My job was to create the playlists for our family trips.
Michael Zeppieri:So I would literally record from the vinyl to the cassettes and
Michael Zeppieri:why I'm sharing this is like with physical media, it wasn't just about
Michael Zeppieri:creating the playlist like that.
Michael Zeppieri:There's something like, as I'm telling this story, like, like I can just
Michael Zeppieri:like in a matter of seconds do that digitally today, but it was, and there
Michael Zeppieri:was imperfections in like the recordings and you'd get the pops but yet going
Michael Zeppieri:through that journey because I couldn't digitally skip around very easily.
Michael Zeppieri:Is it forced me to kind of experience the albums as they were designed and intended
Michael Zeppieri:by the audience, I mean, by the artist.
Michael Zeppieri:And as I sat on the floor listening to music, I would open up the cover and I
Michael Zeppieri:would read the liner notes and I would explore other aspects of what the artist
Michael Zeppieri:was trying to convey through the music.
Michael Zeppieri:And I got very interested in like the art, like the album covers.
Michael Zeppieri:I love album covers.
Michael Zeppieri:I, and I miss the days of when you could open up the cover and kind of flip
Michael Zeppieri:through and like have this experience.
Michael Zeppieri:It wasn't just about the music, there was an experience.
Michael Zeppieri:And I similarly kind of miss going to record stores and that there was like,
Michael Zeppieri:they typically, musicians were the people that work there and you'd find someone
Michael Zeppieri:that worked there that shared your interests and you'd spend the Friday night
Michael Zeppieri:with them kind of exposing you to new, like, that's how I discovered most of the
Michael Zeppieri:bands that I love today, was on a Friday night hanging out in a record store with
Michael Zeppieri:some dude that played in a band and was passionate about the same music I was.
Michael Zeppieri:So yeah, so we moved everything digital, right?
Michael Zeppieri:we've got the convenience.
Michael Zeppieri:I can create a playlist in a moment.
Michael Zeppieri:I certainly could search and maybe experience genres, you
Michael Zeppieri:know, from across the globe.
Michael Zeppieri:So I mean, digital has opened up some things, but we've lost something too.
Michael Zeppieri:Like I feel like we've lost like that human connection, like that, that
Michael Zeppieri:the joy of discovery and exploration.
Michael Zeppieri:Like they're always, there's the urgency that technology brings, right?
Michael Zeppieri:the, like the speed of being able to do something quickly so I can get to the
Michael Zeppieri:next thing that you lost, you lose the opportunity to kind of savor the moment.
Michael Zeppieri:and how I kind of apply that to like my role in a corporate function is like,
Michael Zeppieri:so let's apply that to data, right?
Michael Zeppieri:It's very easy for me to now pull together a whole bunch of spreadsheets, model
Michael Zeppieri:it in Power BI and visualize the data.
Michael Zeppieri:But there was something about.
Michael Zeppieri:the journey of discovery back in the day when you had to manually tabulate the
Michael Zeppieri:data and explore the data at a slower pace as you started to see things that
Michael Zeppieri:you just don't see when you're moving at a rapid pace that technology enables.
Michael Zeppieri:So there's that, I guess where I'm going with all of this is while like
Michael Zeppieri:productivity always seems to build a selling point for technology.
Michael Zeppieri:And I think that we laser focus on productivity, the ability to churn
Michael Zeppieri:things out and it kind of goes back to maybe my earlier comment about the
Michael Zeppieri:mediocrity of like what AI produces.
Michael Zeppieri:is there's something about the journey?
Michael Zeppieri:there's value in the journey.
Michael Zeppieri:It's not just about the productivity.
Michael Zeppieri:Like, so for me, it's how I kind of overcome that is like understanding
Michael Zeppieri:the intent of why you're doing what you're doing with the technology.
Michael Zeppieri:What's the problem that you're trying to solve?
Michael Zeppieri:How does it add value?
Michael Zeppieri:How does it fit together in the bigger picture?
Michael Zeppieri:And I think we lose sight of those things, but they're so important
Michael Zeppieri:because I think you don't get to like true learning and really, I think
Michael Zeppieri:fulfillment from technology, if you don't take the pause, the kind of saver.
Michael Zeppieri:like you would an album back on the day.
Michael Zeppieri:So I'll end there.
Michael Zeppieri:I thought that was a fun place to
Ryan Bell:That
Ryan Bell:Was excellent.
Ryan Bell:Great analogy.
Ryan Bell:Thank you.
Ethan Young:I think that's an interesting microcosm of like how technology has
Ethan Young:changed how we interact and stuff.
Ethan Young:Like, even like you said about making a playlist, like, and giving it to
Ethan Young:somebody or like having it for, you know, like nowadays, if I want to make
Ethan Young:a place, I just go on Spotify and make it in like two minutes, you know, it'll
Ethan Young:have like, Oh, you like this song, put it in the playlist, blah, blah, blah.
Ethan Young:And you can do it super fast.
Ethan Young:And you know, you can just, there's a share button right there.
Ethan Young:You can share with whoever instantly.
Ethan Young:It's not the same as like, I don't know.
Ethan Young:I was too young for cassettes, but like I had CDs, so I kind of
Ethan Young:get that, but yeah, it's kind of a different thing right and like even
Ethan Young:the Like you said like discovering it.
Ethan Young:It's that's a lot of that's based on an algorithm now.
Ethan Young:It's not you know.
Ethan Young:Oh, hey, let me talk to this guy next to me in the mosh pit or whatever at
Ethan Young:the concert Who else do you like it's?
Ethan Young:Okay, i'll just you know, this is the next recommended song.
Ethan Young:Okay, here we go You know, I think it's an interesting reflection of
Ethan Young:how we've changed around technology and maybe how it's changed us.
Ryan Bell:Yeah, very well put Ethan.
Ryan Bell:Well, before we close out here, I have to ask if you would like to participate
Ryan Bell:in a little game we like to play at the end here called rapid fire.
Ryan Bell:We have seven rapid fire questions, some of them are serious.
Ryan Bell:The majority are a little funny, I believe.
Ryan Bell:all you gotta do is give a quick response to each question.
Ryan Bell:Are you up for the challenge?
Michael Zeppieri:All right, let's do it
Ryan Bell:All right, Ethan and I will alternate asking question.
Ryan Bell:Do you want to start us off, Ethan?
Ethan Young:Yeah, I can be the first one.
Ethan Young:what's a hidden talent that you have?
Ethan Young:If you have a hidden,
Michael Zeppieri:Well, then we talked about the artist thing So a
Michael Zeppieri:lot of people don't know that about me But that's to most that's a hidden
Michael Zeppieri:talent that they don't know that I have.
Ethan Young:It's a good one.
Ryan Bell:Question two.
Ryan Bell:What's the strangest thing you believed as a child?
Michael Zeppieri:Oh, that's a good one what is the strangest
Michael Zeppieri:thing that I believed we'll have to go back to that one.
Michael Zeppieri:I can nothing comes top of mind, but I know there was definitely some
Michael Zeppieri:strange things I believe there's a kid we'll have to go back to that one.
Ethan Young:Okay, I'll do the next one then.
Ethan Young:I guess we already shared one, but could you share like a pivotal
Ethan Young:moment in your life that kind of changed who you are today?
Michael Zeppieri:Yeah, there's been, there's been a couple.
Michael Zeppieri:I would say the moment that kind of really broadened, kind of my, my, I would say,
Michael Zeppieri:the significance that I put on like the diversity inclusion conversation is so,
Michael Zeppieri:so, you know, as a man coming, you know, we go kind of exploring and navigating
Michael Zeppieri:life as a man, you kind of lose sight of, perspectives and you don't have to, you
Michael Zeppieri:know, I don't think you recognize, how things are kind of aligned in a way to
Michael Zeppieri:kind of further your journey as a man.
Michael Zeppieri:And like, you don't really gain an appreciation for what women deal
Michael Zeppieri:with until like you kind of really experienced things through their eyes.
Michael Zeppieri:And my wife, so Ryan, she's a graphic designer.
Michael Zeppieri:She's an artist too.
Michael Zeppieri:She's a very talented graphic designer.
Michael Zeppieri:you know, we, we hit a point in our, on our journey as a couple where, you know,
Michael Zeppieri:where we were trying to get pregnant, you know, the company that she worked
Michael Zeppieri:for knew that they were downsizing and she was kind of pushed out of the
Michael Zeppieri:workforce as a result, she was laid off.
Michael Zeppieri:And, and, you know, and then you have kids and you have to accommodate
Michael Zeppieri:childcare and then global pandemic.
Michael Zeppieri:So it's been this kind of series of events that have prevented her, from
Michael Zeppieri:being able to get back into the workforce.
Michael Zeppieri:I mean, she's she's college educated.
Michael Zeppieri:She has more talent than I do in many ways.
Michael Zeppieri:but yet there's barriers and I don't know that I truly appreciated and
Michael Zeppieri:recognize those barriers until I kind of experienced them through her eyes.
Michael Zeppieri:And I think it was a pivotal moment for me to kind of to see that
Michael Zeppieri:and acknowledge that it's kind of like it's a sombering realization.
Michael Zeppieri:Because it's easy to dismiss that when you're only seeing it from your
Michael Zeppieri:perspective, but when you see it from someone else's perspective and you
Michael Zeppieri:take the time to see it from someone else's perspective, it's very somber.
Michael Zeppieri:But I also think, but as a result of having that kind of like realization,
Michael Zeppieri:it makes you a better leader.
Michael Zeppieri:because that's always top of mind for me now.
Michael Zeppieri:It's like, I'm always.
Michael Zeppieri:I'm always thinking about like, like, okay, someone's not performing.
Michael Zeppieri:Like it's actually, it's given, I know this is not a short answer
Michael Zeppieri:to your rapid fire, but it's,
Michael Zeppieri:it's, you know, it's like, like, so let's say I have an
Michael Zeppieri:under, underperforming employee.
Michael Zeppieri:It's very easy to just dismiss that.
Michael Zeppieri:And like, now it causes me to really pause and kind of say, okay,
Michael Zeppieri:well, what else, what's going on?
Michael Zeppieri:Like, like, like, don't just dismiss it based on face value of like,
Michael Zeppieri:see it from their perspective.
Michael Zeppieri:you know, every so there's always other second, there's always other
Michael Zeppieri:circumstances and you need to take the time to understand them.
Michael Zeppieri:So, yeah, so I, I think that was a really pivotal moment for me in terms of how I
Michael Zeppieri:think about people's like what they're experiencing in their personal lives and
Michael Zeppieri:how that sometimes you don't even know right what's happening behind the door.
Ethan Young:Yeah.
Ryan Bell:Question number four.
Ryan Bell:If you could have any animal that's a carnivore as a pet, regardless
Ryan Bell:of practicality, what would it be?
Michael Zeppieri:Oh, probably a shark.
Michael Zeppieri:Without a doubt, A shark.
Michael Zeppieri:Yeah,
Ryan Bell:That'd be cool.
Ryan Bell:. Ethan Young: that'd be sweet.
Ryan Bell:Yeah.
Michael Zeppieri:With lasers.
Michael Zeppieri:We have to have sharks with lasers.
Ryan Bell:Of course
Ethan Young:All right.
Ethan Young:How do you stay motivated, inspired, especially during tough times?
Michael Zeppieri:have a lot of hobbies that I tap into to distract.
Michael Zeppieri:Like music, music is my passion..
Michael Zeppieri:I think there is, there is in a recording studio.
Michael Zeppieri:Um guitar.
Michael Zeppieri:I'm like, I'm not to make music.
Michael Zeppieri:I can't play lead okay at rhythm.
Michael Zeppieri:so like when I'm stressed out Um, I go to that place like I like, like,
Michael Zeppieri:music is always my sound like it's always like kind of like I like
Michael Zeppieri:there's like literal albums that I listen to when I'm in certain moods
Michael Zeppieri:that lift me up or motivate me or, um, I even my high school yearbook,
Michael Zeppieri:my quote in my high school yearbook was a was lyrics from a Queen song.
Michael Zeppieri:so there, there are songs that hit me a certain way and
Michael Zeppieri:lyrics hit me a certain way.
Michael Zeppieri:So like that's always where I go when I need to pick me up.
Ryan Bell:What's the most ridiculous thing you've ever bought?
Michael Zeppieri:Oh, so my wife will tell you it's my collection of Star Wars toys.
Michael Zeppieri:so, so this is a funny, like I, so talking about the different
Michael Zeppieri:aspects of my personality, right?
Michael Zeppieri:So when my wife and I met, she knew I was a military veteran.
Michael Zeppieri:She knew I was going to MIT.
Michael Zeppieri:She didn't know I was a nerd because all my nerd possessions were in storage.
Michael Zeppieri:And we got engaged and we moved to California and the
Michael Zeppieri:nerd thing stayed in storage.
Michael Zeppieri:because we weren't sure how long we were going to live in California and
Michael Zeppieri:that ended up being a decade, but never took the time because we didn't
Michael Zeppieri:live in a big enough apartment to move the nerd stuff over, to California.
Michael Zeppieri:So we moved back to the East coast and now I'm reunited with my nerd stuff.
Michael Zeppieri:And my parents will live in New York.
Michael Zeppieri:You know, they'd come visit us periodically and every time they came
Michael Zeppieri:up, it was the box of Star Wars stuff.
Michael Zeppieri:And after the first box, my wife was like, okay, I knew you were into Star
Michael Zeppieri:Wars, but maybe not to this extent.
Michael Zeppieri:And then the second box shows up and she's like, okay, I understood
Michael Zeppieri:why you had the action figures, but do you need all the play sets?
Michael Zeppieri:And then the third box shows up.
Michael Zeppieri:She's like, oh, you got all the spaceships too.
Michael Zeppieri:And then it's like the fourth thing comes up, and it's like,
Michael Zeppieri:Shit, you've got costumes, too.
Michael Zeppieri:And by the time the fifth box came, and she's like, if I knew you had all this
Michael Zeppieri:stuff, I wouldn't have married you.
Michael Zeppieri:So, yeah, so, so, yeah.
Michael Zeppieri:So that's like the most ridiculous.
Michael Zeppieri:I don't buy them anymore.
Michael Zeppieri:No, no, I won't.
Michael Zeppieri:I'll take that back.
Michael Zeppieri:I have learned to fulfill that need through my children.
Michael Zeppieri:So my daughter's have a lot of Star Wars lego sets because they wanted them.
Michael Zeppieri:I get to build them with them, but they're all sitting on my, in my office now.
Ryan Bell:Well played there.
Ryan Bell:Well, Mike, thanks again for your time today.
Ryan Bell:We really appreciate it for anybody that wants to learn more about
Ryan Bell:Skanska or get in touch with you.
Ryan Bell:What's the best way for them to do that?
Michael Zeppieri:So LinkedIn is always a reliable way to
Michael Zeppieri:I'm pretty active on LinkedIn.
Michael Zeppieri:So that's the easiest way.
Michael Zeppieri:to find me.
Michael Zeppieri:if not, I mean, you can find me on email.
Michael Zeppieri:It's my first name dot last name at Skanska.
Michael Zeppieri:com.
Michael Zeppieri:So my full first name.
Michael Zeppieri:so Michael.
Michael Zeppieri:Zeppieri at Skanska.
Michael Zeppieri:com.
Michael Zeppieri:So, so either way,
Ryan Bell:Awesome.
Ryan Bell:We will put that in the show notes.
Ryan Bell:before we wrap up here, we need, I forgot to mention it at the
Ryan Bell:beginning, but we were playing our challenge words game and we were
Ryan Bell:all successful at working our word.
Ryan Bell:And Mike, your word was.
Michael Zeppieri:vegetarian.
Ryan Bell:Vegetarian.
Ryan Bell:He worked at him very well.
Ryan Bell:Ethan, your word was.
Ethan Young:Mine was mosh pit.
Ryan Bell:You did great, man.
Ryan Bell:I was a little nervous for you, trying that one in there.
Ryan Bell:and mine was carnivore snuck it in there at the end and the challenge words, or
Ryan Bell:I'm sorry, in the rapid fire questions.
Ryan Bell:So good job guys.
Ryan Bell:Well, thanks so much for tuning into this episode of construction disruption
Ryan Bell:with Mike zeppieri, Vice President of emerging technology Skanska.
Ryan Bell:Please watch for future episodes of our podcast.
Ryan Bell:We are always blessed with great guests.
Ryan Bell:Don't forget to leave us a review on Apple podcast or give us a thumbs up on YouTube
Ryan Bell:until the next time we're together, keep on disrupting and challenging those in
Ryan Bell:your world to better ways of doing things.
Ryan Bell:And don't forget to have a positive impact on everyone you encounter.
Ryan Bell:Make them smile and encourage them, two simple yet powerful things we
Ryan Bell:can all do to change the world.
Ryan Bell:God bless and take care, this is Isaiah Industries signing off until the next
Ryan Bell:episode of Construction Disruption.