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Ever feel like there's a better way to build?

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I'm Matt and welcome to the Mindful Builder Podcast, where we believe

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And now onto this week's episode.

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I've known Devin for a long time.

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I'd say probably 2007 or 2018, um, when passive house definitely wasn't cool.

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No, def definitely wasn't cool.

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But I want to go back to where it all began for you.

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Mm-hmm.

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Because you've been in the space for.

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Arguably longer than that.

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Mm-hmm.

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Um, I'm gonna let you introduce yourself to, to the people.

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'cause there's, there's probably a lot of people out there that know you

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as Devon from Performance Membranes.

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Mm-hmm.

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But there is a big backstory before you

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got here.

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Big journey.

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Um, I guess it all started I guess chippy by trade.

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Yep.

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Um.

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So went outta school not knowing what I wanted to do.

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One of my best mates is like, there's a pre-app running, I

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can drop a year 12 subject.

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I'm like, sweet, I'll drop a year 12 subject and I'll do a pre-app.

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And then, um, went into my apprenticeship, um, worked with a guy for six months

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and he said I wasn't good enough.

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So he never signed me up even though I pushed him.

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So I ended up pushing away from that and leaving.

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I actually went to the builder, one of the main builders we worked for, and I said,

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look, I'm finishing up with this guy.

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And, um.

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I said, Sam, sorry, but I've enjoyed working on your jobs.

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And he said, well, I'll get rid of him.

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Come work for me.

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And so he chose to do all the carpentry in-house at the time, so it was

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sort of like semi-commercial work.

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So we ended up doing all the carpentry in-house, um, and he's like, work for me.

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So I did that for a few years and I really wanted to get into more domestic.

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So you did the pre your, your, your apprenticeship.

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Yeah.

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Started my partnership with that builder.

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Um, it was an Italian family essentially.

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Really?

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And that's what I think it came back to for me.

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It was like the community and the guys I was working with.

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We worked our asses off, but I got paid well.

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Um, he paid me above award, bought my first house at 21.

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Wow.

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'cause of that, which was a huge thing.

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Um, and, uh, but I was getting to my third year and I'm like,

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I'd never put a truss up.

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You know, other than some IES to mezzanines or that sort of thing.

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Um, and I felt like I was like really limited in my scope.

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So I actually went to the Master Builders like conference, their

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awards and their main conference they were running at the time.

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And I just approached some builders, um, who were looking for, if

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they were looking for apprentices who were award-winning builders.

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'cause I'm like, I want to try and start from the top.

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Got an apprenticeship with Hedger, um, one Victorian Apprenticeship

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Apprentice of the year.

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And my fourth year, in my fourth year I did my Cert four.

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Yep.

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So I was doing rebuild after Black Saturday.

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Okay.

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And, um, so traveling from Marysville into homeschooling in my fourth

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year on a Thursday, Friday, and Saturday to do my cert four.

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Um, can

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I jump in on that?

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There seems to be a common theme with carpenters who do their cert 3 0 4.

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In their apprenticeship end up becoming builders.

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It's not the first time we've heard it as well.

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I know.

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Was it Luke Davies?

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Luke Davies did it.

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I did.

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I did it.

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Yeah.

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I did it.

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I did it.

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I think it's a pretty good stepping stone.

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I think

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you can kind of see the really motivated people.

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Mm-hmm.

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Like, they're like, okay cool.

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Alright.

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What's next?

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What's next?

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What's next?

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Because it's not like there.

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There is a little bit of a. Well, I'm, I'm, I'm qualified.

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I'm a carpenter now.

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Yeah.

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I'm like, what the fuck?

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We've set an expect, we set an expectation.

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Learning doesn't

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stop there.

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I finished my tafe and then I met my now wife, and she was, let's call

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at the top of her class in the top three or four scores of her year.

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12. What, what did

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she, what did she do?

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She did a double degree in HR and business.

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Okay.

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Oh wow.

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And um, that's a great person to have in the background.

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Yes.

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And I was probably in the bottom two or three of year 12 marking, let's

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call it just school was social.

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Yeah.

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Um, so I wanted to also like.

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I've met her.

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I wanna prove myself a little bit.

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So I really wanted to do my cert four and push on from there.

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She is that the first time this everyone, anyone's done

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a cert four to impress a girl?

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Hey baby, I'm, uh, I'm doing my cert certificate four.

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I think it's just proving that you're like, you're pushing to do

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more, you know, I think that was it.

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It's

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part of our, so I actually have been making over the last few weeks, I know we

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can even make this, I can somehow maybe put it on the Mindful Builder website.

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Is it?

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If you're an apprentice that sign up for us, now you get a package

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of where you need to be at the first, second, third, fourth year.

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And that's the third.

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Such a great idea.

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You have to be doing your, um, cert four.

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Yeah.

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And it also says like what tools you need at each stage and they're

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your KPIs and if you don't meet them, we'll just get rid of you.

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Yeah.

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We had like, it's a really simple guide to being

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successful and granted we had a tool list that's like basically your first, second,

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third, and fourth year tool expectations.

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Um, and it was just good 'cause then like the other carpenters weren't

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sharing their tools or granted, wasn't.

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Reliance on it.

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Yeah.

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Just shows commitment.

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Yeah.

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Yeah.

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Um, so yeah, the journey was, um, finished my apprenticeship, I won

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Apprentice of the Year and I had quite a few offers to go into commercial site

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management just 'cause of winning the Victorian Award with the master builders.

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So I went into that.

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'cause to be honest, the high rise and the big projects were pretty shiny.

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Um, and I did a couple of, Dan Murphy's, I did a, um, development in South

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Melbourne just off Montague Street, which was won some awards with a

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commercial builder, but I got burnt out.

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Yep.

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I remember driving home from, um, I was doing Aria Shopping Center, an

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extension, a dent, uh, um, what was it?

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BWS.

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Yep.

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And a Kohl's.

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And the hoarding fell over, um, at one, one area or it was left

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open or something happened.

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And, um.

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The center manager called me and he is like the hoardings open,

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you're gonna have to fix it up.

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I remember calling my boss and it was like a Friday night I was done

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and I remember crying, driving back to Geelong 'cause I had to go back.

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He's like, my boss is like, your job, your responsibility.

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Wow.

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And I was

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done.

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At the time living in Packham, driving to Cario and Geelong.

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So it was, um, it was, uh, so I got really burnt out there.

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Um, yeah.

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But

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that's that industry, like, they just a field, especially with carpentry,

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they jump in the commercial industry because it's Oh, the big shining bunny.

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Mm-hmm.

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But then they're, they've gotta work you six days a week.

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Like what kind of lifestyle is that?

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Yeah.

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And they don't like, they just waste their money on crap 'cause they.

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Yeah, I got burnt out.

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It was from like, I had to do six days.

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There was no option.

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The site was open.

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Even RDO, like for the trades I had to be there to work out the contract, the, you

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know, scheduling and everything like that.

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But I learnt scheduling.

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I learned how to manage people.

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Yeah,

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really Well set you up.

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The bosses really like invested in that.

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'cause that's what they do Well yeah, they do scheduling, they invest well into that.

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Then my wife, um, one of her key accounts 'cause she was managing, um,

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assistant manager at Reese Burwood.

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Um, at the time she got, uh, one of her main accounts.

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Um, I went into site managing with them into residential.

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So I did that for nine months and then went to get my license, did

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my diploma at that point, and I got registered as a DBU in when I was 20.

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Just turned 25 I, that time I got mine.

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24. Such young.

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Yeah, 24.

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I was, um, I went for my interview in 25.

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I was in May.

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I got my, got my ticket and my DBU, so I was pretty stoked.

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Because I also, at that point in time, um, my wife and I bought a

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block in Boronia and we wanted to do a development, and so we did four

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townhouses and it was literally like.

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I either have to get this license or I've gotta borrow, you know, get someone

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else involved, this sort of thing.

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Um,

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were you on the tools at all then, or no?

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Yeah, so

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granted from the start I was, you know, that's when granted, constructions

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essentially started 2013 and I was on the, on the tools at that point

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with an apprentice and, um, guys, and I was probably on the tools

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for about three or four years.

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Um, and then after that.

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Um, I was just managing.

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Do you think you need to get pushed to the edge to find out where your limits are?

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Yeah, I was in, in granted, yeah, um, in 2021, but more so 2020.

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Um, granted constructions, I was, um, at the point where I'm

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like, I don't like what I do, so I know where I don't want to be.

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Yeah,

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but as a builder, I had the, at the time, like eight houses on

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three were certified passive house.

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Um, and I had a team of like 12 guys.

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And at that point I'm like, I don't like this.

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Yeah.

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I'm literally on the phone or on the computer all day, every day

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solving problems put into aspect.

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We're also dealing with all of COVID.

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Maybe I missed something here.

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Yeah, you got, you got to a point where you just hated building.

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Yeah, so 2020 I was just like, done.

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But that, but that, so 2020.

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So, but, but go back when you're driving down to Cairo.

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Yeah.

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And you know, you, I guess what I'm, what I'm trying to say is I actually

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think as entrepreneurs and as you know, probably, you know, rid that h ADHD kind

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of people, like we kinda, we, we stand on the edge of that, um, that dopamine hit.

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Yeah.

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And I think that it sounds as if.

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Yeah, you went there, you kind of fell off, you've come back and now in

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2020 you like realize, okay, hang on.

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I'm looking over the edge again now.

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Yeah.

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I don't like it, but I kind of almost feel like that driving down

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to Cairo and the, and the way that you've just described it, then you, I

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could probably see in your eyes that you still remember it very vividly.

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Yeah.

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Like you'd never gonna forget that.

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You're never gonna forget that lesson.

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No.

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But you've then used it in 20 20, 20 21 when you're like, hang on a

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minute, I'm getting to that edge again.

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Yeah.

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What

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was the year between that?

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When did you, so

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like probably, um, 13 I started granted.

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Yeah.

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Um, and then like granted did, was doing great year on year, you know, a

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deck and Pergola becomes an extension.

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Yeah.

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And becomes a new house and you just keep winning work.

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Amazing team that sort of built, um, site managers, carpenters,

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and that sort of thing.

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The right people come at the right time.

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Yeah.

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Is what we always believed.

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Um, and 2015, I was asked to, um, quote a, um, passive house by, um, by building

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survey was own home in Bella cla.

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And I didn't know what passive house was at all at that point in time.

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Um, but there was a course coming up, a tradesman course,

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so he had you heard of it?

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No, never heard of it.

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Um, so he was the build, he's a building surveyor and he was recommended, I

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always recommended to him as a builder from another building surveyor.

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Yep.

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So he told me that there's a tradesman course to learn about it, um, coming up.

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So that was the first one.

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And lo and behold, I was sitting next to Justin, a business partner now, and a

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poor, you probably chewed his ear off, but we're just really cut of the same cloth.

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That's all I can say.

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It's like both carpenters, both loved building, um, both like we

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weren't just brought up as a chippy.

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We were a builders carpenter.

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Yeah.

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Say like we poured the concrete.

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Yeah.

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We built everything.

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We're involved from the start to finish.

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Who else was in that course?

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Anyone else?

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Stuy Lee.

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Yeah, from in house.

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Um, they're the, the two that I like vividly remember who

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I know are sort of active.

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Yep.

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Um, in the space and.

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I'd say my wife, I came home that first day and I was like, buzzing.

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She's like, you love this trainer, don't you?

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That was burka.

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That was, um, Michael who came out from Ireland.

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Ah, yeah.

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Okay.

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And he just, Rick did one course.

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Yep.

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But she's like, oh my gosh, actually Justin,

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Justin brought him up.

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Yeah.

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Yeah.

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Justin brought him up.

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Amazing.

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You know, and I think that was before social media and everything like that.

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Yeah.

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So it's like this fresh air of how to do things differently.

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Um, thankfully I didn't win that job.

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Because three isn't into my app.

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Um, running my own business, buying windows in from Germany.

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Yeah.

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So

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another guy did it.

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He's not involved in passive house at all.

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He did the course.

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He got burnt.

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Did he?

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Uh, I think he just, he does very high-end architecture.

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Okay.

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Um, Bayside way.

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Um, and still, still runs his business, but he's not involved in any way.

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Why Thankful

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he didn't win that job.

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It would've pushed me over the end, I think Edge cash, flow wise, everything.

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Um, it was like off form concrete.

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It was like not just.

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A conventional building, but what happened is it opened my eyes to passive house.

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Yeah.

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And then my wife and Suzanne and I were like, if we believe in

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this and if I believe in this, we've gotta do it ourselves.

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Yeah.

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So that was, that was the journey.

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We bought a block in Emerald.

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Um, in, in Mount Danenong there and like, let's design and

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build a, um, a passive house.

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When was that?

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So that was, um, 2016.

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We bought the block.

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It was finished this year will be eight years in the house, couple weekends.

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So, um, 2017 it was finished.

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And, and you've recently retested that house, haven't you?

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Yeah.

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And tested it only a few weeks ago.

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Yeah.

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Point three three at, at certification.

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Yep.

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Efficiency managed matrix.

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Did that.

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And then, um, we just, I just tested it again.

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So eight years later, 0.36.

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And can I,

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I mean, it's not often that we have someone who's lived in a passive, their

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own passive house for that long, so, um.

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He was the sixth certified in

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Australia.

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So I'm interested to, is Justin let you know that he's was first,

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we always had the discussion, um, about it, but uh, it's like we

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only had each other to talk to, so

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I'm interested to understand the living experience in it over those eight years.

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Mm-hmm.

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Like, um, has it changed at all from that

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first year?

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So first year we actually didn't put.

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A split system in like in the November when we moved in.

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'cause we're like, do we need it?

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Do we not?

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There was not really any understanding.

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Yeah.

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Okay.

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And then we had a few rolling days of 35 to 37 and the

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retained heat was just too hot.

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Yes.

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Yep.

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So we roughed in like the P coil Yeah.

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For it.

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But um, and so I fitted it off, um, in the sort of January, February.

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It's like, no, we'd need the heating and cooling.

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It's two and a half kilowatt high wall split.

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You know, it's a small

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and that, that is, that is interesting.

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I mean, for people who don't know, like you.

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I mean, a hundred percent of our homes we're putting in at least two.

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Mm-hmm.

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Sometimes three.

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Yeah.

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You know, and we're even having a discussion now in some of our, the

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larger homes that we put in, that we're putting small ducted systems in.

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Yeah.

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Yeah.

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Because you still need heating and cooling.

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Yeah.

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Passive house, PSPP allows for a bit of overheating and mm-hmm.

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Under cooling, that the word Yeah.

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Yeah.

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Cooling load.

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Yeah.

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Cooling load.

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Yeah.

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So, so you do need to top it up or, or, or balance it.

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Yeah.

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So passive house is probably.

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Not the right word to call it.

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'cause there is a little bit of active, um, either opening your windows or

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putting your heating and corner.

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What about a fireplace in a passive house?

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Do you have any comments on that?

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Yeah.

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Don't you have a fireplace?

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We've got a fireplace.

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It was the first certified house in Australia.

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I'll say that with a fireplace.

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Um.

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It was challenging to do.

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My wife's like, we live in the hills.

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Like let's put a fireplace in.

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And at the time it's like, do we need it?

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Do we not?

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It was not any, not a lot of knowledge around.

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Um, so we, we put it in, um, often we'll have a window open when we'll,

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uh, when we actually have it on.

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Have you got, have you got make, have

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you got a makeup air for it too?

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Yeah.

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So it's got external air supply.

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Yeah.

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Um, for it.

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So it's a fully sealed unit.

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Um, and then just the flu.

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So and so you put it on and you need to open windows?

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Yeah, we have to open window.

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'cause it, it overheats the house.

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Wow.

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Um, but like my kids and like myself, I'm in shorts and a t-shirt inside the house

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all year and that's a unique experience.

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Like we don't change our blankets on our beds for the kids.

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Like a lot of people will be like, there's a winter set of blankets.

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Yeah.

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And then there's doers or that sort of thing.

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Yep.

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But we just don't change that.

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And that's something we probably take for granted, um, in that way.

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But, you know, uh, would I do it again?

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Yes.

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At the time, people.

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We're like, what the heck are you building?

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Um, one comment was a spaceship, but I think at that point it

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doesn't look like a spaceship.

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It's like a, it's a very typical weatherboard home.

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Yeah.

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Well that was what I wanted to break.

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That's why I designed it that way.

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'cause I'm like, I like recycled reds.

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I like pine lined eves.

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I like timber fascia and weather boards.

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And so like my house, you couldn't pick it any different from

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anything else on the street, but it's a certified passive house.

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Yeah.

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So getting back to

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the question I asked like year on year, is it.

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I mean, you're obviously just used to living in a passive house now.

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Mm-hmm.

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Like, but do you, has the performance dropped at all

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or has it, has hasn't changed like, um, at all.

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I, I, it just works the same.

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Yeah.

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It's a

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weird, so I've just moved into mine.

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Yeah.

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I'm 10 day Your flex.

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Huge flex.

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10 days in, I found the first night to be like, this is weird.

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Yeah.

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Like it's so quiet compared to where I've come from.

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I have moved from Braybrook, which is like hotspot of crime

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to Yar, which is beautiful.

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So I don't dunno whether it's just like.

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The second passive house we did, we actually put um, uh, data cable

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in for speakers of external, um, for, and microphones for external

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microphones for internal speakers because he didn't wanna lose.

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'cause that was in, it's in, um, Yara Junction and he was on a hundred acres.

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Just open the windows.

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No, he just didn't want to be in the middle of winter or anything.

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He wanted actually the outdoor inside still.

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So we set up our microphones outside to pick up birds and everything like that

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to run on the speakers inside the house.

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Really?

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Yeah.

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And does he still use them?

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Oh, it was only up there like a month and a half ago and this is

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2018, we finished you that house.

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Wonder why there's AAB bar in the house.

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Where's that mosquito?

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But it's very quiet, a passive house and people aren't, it is really

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realize how quiet it actually is.

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It's

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odd.

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So I, 'cause I put speakers in my house, not for me inside

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to out, but just for music.

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Mm-hmm.

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Um.

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And I have to have 'em on the full time because it's, it is, it's weird.

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It's weirdly quiet, isn't it?

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It just screw up a bit more and you have a bit more noise.

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I just can't.

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Yeah, I know, but I can't.

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I can't.

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I actually can't describe the comfort.

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This is where I'm really struggling and as even a marketing message to

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explain living in a passive house.

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I, I just, it's like you have to almost experience it.

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It's, mm-hmm.

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And it's, I think that's probably why people struggle to understand

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it, because once you in it, everyone's like, oh my God.

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Like, yeah, I get it.

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Mm-hmm.

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Yeah.

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I mean, fortunately, you know, we've, we've built a few passive and high

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performance homes now and we're good friends with some of the people

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that we built these houses for.

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Mm-hmm.

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So we quite often go and stay in the house up in Ton.

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And I remember, and I think I've told this story before, Lucy woke

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up the next morning and said.

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I get it now.

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Mm-hmm.

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Like, you know how, how, no matter how much explaining I say to her, yeah.

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Oh, you just, it's, it's quiet, it's healthy, the ventilation,

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all that kind of stuff.

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She just woke up in the morning.

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She's like, okay, I get it.

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Yeah, we have to go the opposite way.

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So like, we stayed in the city for Archie Build, we stayed at Airbnb just in the

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city, so it didn't, wasn't traveling.

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Yeah.

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I could still see the kids over three days and we're staying in Airbnb

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and CCC is like, I get it while like living in a ax, because you've got

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these split systems all running, it's cold in front of this big glazed

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wall and this like multi-story Yeah.

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You know, apartment, but it's, it's,

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it's, it's a, it's a strange concept where we are celebrating

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building the house correctly.

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Mm-hmm.

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Like that's an, it's a, like, it's a weird, it's a, it.

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That's what maybe my brain can't comprehend.

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So you like, you get a car and everyone, this is the latest technology

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in the car and how safe it is.

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Mm-hmm.

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We, we are just

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like, is it, is it correctly or is it just like built Well.

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Do you know what I mean?

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Like the concept of like building it well, so you're not standing in front

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of a single glazed 12 mil piece of glass versus a triple glazed window.

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It's like we're just doing it really well.

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Correct.

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Is like Yeah.

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It's an, it's a term that we might use as a builder.

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Yeah.

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But is it, is it actually, it's like it's a well-built

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Yeah.

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Building

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and you made a comment, I think last week about it being another

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metric that you just gotta.

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Follow where we like, you know, architect, it's a design parameter.

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Yeah.

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Like you, like you don't sit there analyzing all the

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structural computations mm-hmm.

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For the building surveyor or you, you've gotta build within

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your, your town planning regs.

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It's just, yeah.

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It's not the parameter.

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Well, I think that's, that's more to get the designers

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over the line, you

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know, but even like architects over the line, but even just building surveyors

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and clients, like, that's just, that's the parameter we've gotta work within,

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like as a society, not just, I don't think it's fair to put the pressure back on the

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architects that that's their parameter.

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It should be everyone's parameter.

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Yeah.

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I mean, I think come, I mean.

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If you wanna do something, you say it, you know, and I think

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we've, we, we've done it since.

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Yeah.

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You know, 2018 was 19 like I kind of.

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I kind of feel almost a little bit bad.

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Like you, you are, you are, you are up there like paving the way, and then all

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of a sudden this fucking punk comes in.

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We did to the podcast

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and was really loud about passive house.

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And then, and that's the, that's the interesting thing, right?

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Um, my whole journey is like, I love seeing other people succeed.

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Yeah.

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Right.

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You know, because I love getting a text message from someone or a

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phone call saying, Hey, we just did our blower door and we nailed it.

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And like, thanks for your training or thanks for your support.

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Like, that's what I love because I could.

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I can do it myself one by one or two by two, whatever it is.

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Yeah.

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But to see the growth of the industry Yeah.

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Is amazing.

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I'm sure I remember yourself and Mark standing at the front of my

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place on a passive house tour.

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Yep.

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Um, when I had open house and Mark MVH Mark being like, how do I get into this?

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Like how do we actually get into this more and more we quote jobs and like,

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how do we actually find more opportunity?

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And Nick, honestly, you guys are envious.

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I'm envious of you guys 'cause you're building these amazing buildings.

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And I'm not necessarily anymore.

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And that's hard, like some ways you said you didn't like building,

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you said you hated building.

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No, I mean this

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is, this is probably like almost a good segue to kind of get into now.

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'cause I would argue that you are having like an exponential impact on the building

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stock now, particularly in Victoria.

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And you know, as, as you kind of expand nationwide.

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Of like how many people have you had through this training center?

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Yeah, like two and a half thousand.

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Okay, so that's And that's only been here for two years?

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Yeah, two years.

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Yeah.

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Two and two and a half thousand people.

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I'm one builder building four to five homes a year.

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Matt's one builder building four to homes, four to five homes a year.

Speaker:

Like, and admittedly there's probably groups of people from businesses, so

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let's just say, yeah, each one, five, conservatively there's a thousand

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businesses that have come through.

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Yeah.

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Who are now going out and building better homes.

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Yeah.

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So 2020 2021, like absolute hell of a time to be a builder.

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You know, you're kind of, I remember that time I remember you having these beautiful

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like, um, uh, Ram Dearth projects going, I was watching on social media.

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I'm just like, wow.

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How do I do that stuff?

Speaker:

But it's interesting, like you're kind of seeing this image on social media

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and think fucking Deb's like killing it.

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But you're like, I'm not having fun.

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Yeah.

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I think it's 'cause I just was sitting in the office every day solving problems and

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quoting the next job, dealing with deals.

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Whereas like what I got passionate about the building

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is like I was involved with it.

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I'm involved with the guys on site.

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Yeah.

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We implemented Buildertrend like a software so that I could

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see on a daily basis what was happening across the six sites.

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Because I'm like, I just can't get there.

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Yep.

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Um, but it's like, yeah.

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And I look at some of those projects and they're amazing and I'm still good

Speaker:

friends with some of those clients and, and that sort of thing, which is great,

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but it's like I can't sustain this.

Speaker:

Um, and that's what really got me to the point where it's like.

Speaker:

I don't think you can get to the point of burnout.

Speaker:

Let burnout, let's call it, or whatever, to be like, I'm in a

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place that I don't want to be again.

Speaker:

Yeah.

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And now I know, um, where that fence is.

Speaker:

Yeah.

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Uh, I won't let it get to that point.

Speaker:

Um, that was definitely in the building business and I've probably got more

Speaker:

passionate about it in the last two or so years because I've got four guys.

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And we've just been ticking over projects one at a time.

Speaker:

So you can still build with you if someone approached you.

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Uh, at this stage, no.

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No.

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Okay.

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Um, I, I love performance membranes.

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I love what we're doing.

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I love what we're, um, developing with new products and the journey.

Speaker:

We'll just

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set your, um, URL if they.

Speaker:

Google granted it to the ghost to Ha Shaw.

Speaker:

That's right.

Speaker:

Sancti all car construction.

Speaker:

Um, I had a call last week from a previous client wanting to do it again.

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Yeah.

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And look, I'd love to do it for them and in some ways

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like I could definitely do it.

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Um, but I just, I also like enjoy what I'm doing here.

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I'm developing new products.

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We're developing a journey of influencing the building industry

Speaker:

to build better, but like for a better long-term built environment.

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Yeah.

Speaker:

Whether that's new products, whether it's methodology.

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Whatever it is, the journey is like, I really want to get.

Speaker:

Um, a better built environment in five years that it's a

Speaker:

better outcome for builders.

Speaker:

It's a better outcome for homeowners, um, in that way.

Speaker:

Um, so that's probably like what I'm a bit more passionate about.

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Yeah.

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I think what I love the most about granted is the team.

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Yeah.

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But you still have that here pro

Speaker:

uh, performance membranes.

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I do

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now.

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Yeah.

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Yeah.

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And what's beautiful about it is I was able to go to Tazzie for four

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weeks with a caravan for January and come back Australia Day.

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Because as a team Yeah.

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You say Justin Tower as a builder a couple of days and he gave me some crazy court.

Speaker:

Um, but as a builder I was honestly like, yeah, my site managers are

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there, or my carpenters, but like I'm carrying everything myself.

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Yeah.

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Without a really strong partner.

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Yeah.

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Um, I systems would've

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fallen over.

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Yeah.

Speaker:

You gotta implement systems, but you're still there on the other end of the call.

Speaker:

Yeah.

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Whereas like, so that's where this is like, I've got a

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team, I've also got Justin.

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It's really nice to be in a place of.

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Having support.

Speaker:

Yeah.

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And so growing a business doesn't really scare me, let's say as much as it once

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did.

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Well, if you grew, I'll tell you what, if you've grown a reasonably

Speaker:

successful building company, I think every other business is easy.

Speaker:

Yeah.

Speaker:

Sometimes I wish I had a business partner with construction.

Speaker:

Like I just feel like, and it's, and then when you get through those humps and you

Speaker:

are like, fuck, I just wish there was someone else to share this with right now.

Speaker:

Yeah.

Speaker:

And then you're through it and you're like, no, I'm happy.

Speaker:

I'm by myself.

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I guess.

Speaker:

I think,

Speaker:

I think in retrospect, to be honest, I should have done that.

Speaker:

Um.

Speaker:

But we only know these things in hindsight.

Speaker:

Yeah.

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Yeah.

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Um, one of my.

Speaker:

You know, good mates.

Speaker:

He moved to Noosa Ruben.

Speaker:

He was a site manager with us.

Speaker:

I, I didn't know or know business well at that point, but he moved in 20 20, 22,

Speaker:

1, I I remember when he moved.

Speaker:

Yeah.

Speaker:

I remember talking to you about it and I know that it was a, it

Speaker:

was a, it was a challenging time.

Speaker:

Painful,

Speaker:

but he was like right hand.

Speaker:

You know, he was me on the ground and to clients and everything.

Speaker:

And I think like bringing someone in, it's not as, it's not scary anymore, but

Speaker:

at the time I didn't know that, you know, but that's age and that's the journey.

Speaker:

Yeah.

Speaker:

Um, but he's running his own business and doing great things in Noosa.

Speaker:

Yeah.

Speaker:

Lucky is he building passive houses.

Speaker:

No, he's actually a real estate agent.

Speaker:

Oh yeah.

Speaker:

He got his real estate license during COVID.

Speaker:

So he worked for a builder up there in Noosa.

Speaker:

He's like, air leak, air leak, air leak.

Speaker:

He went to someone's house and they're like, it's a passive house.

Speaker:

He's like, this is gonna be interesting 'cause he did passive house with me

Speaker:

and uh, to sell as a real estate agent.

Speaker:

And he walked in.

Speaker:

It's like single place, like, sorry, it's not a passive, I can't sell it.

Speaker:

Is that ventilation?

Speaker:

Ventilation system?

Speaker:

Nothing.

Speaker:

Okay.

Speaker:

Had lure windows.

Speaker:

Um,

Speaker:

so, so we've touched on performance membranes.

Speaker:

So, you know, uh, when, when did you start performance membranes?

Speaker:

And I know that there's a connection with.

Speaker:

PHCP down in ta.

Speaker:

How'd that conversation start?

Speaker:

Like where?

Speaker:

Yeah, so Justin and I, I was essentially just helping guys that Justin was

Speaker:

supplying in Victoria 'cause there was too many people wanting to start buying it.

Speaker:

And so I'd hold some stock at my house and then go and catch up with the builder.

Speaker:

Um, and it was PH CCP TAs, essentially.

Speaker:

Yeah, I was, Justin was just sort of paying me to, to see someone every so

Speaker:

often up here once a month or something.

Speaker:

And then I, uh.

Speaker:

Said to him like, like, this is like, could be a thing, um, together,

Speaker:

let's do it, you know, properly.

Speaker:

Um, because again, my good wife, Suzanne, she's like, you're doing all this work.

Speaker:

You're investing, you're actually making something like

Speaker:

why don't you be part of it?

Speaker:

Um, and so Justin's like, are you serious?

Speaker:

Sort of thing.

Speaker:

I'm like, yeah.

Speaker:

And he called me back on Monday and he's like, yep, let's do it.

Speaker:

So I think it was late 17 or something like that.

Speaker:

I reckon

Speaker:

that's when I first bought membranes from Justin and he's like.

Speaker:

And then you called me about it.

Speaker:

I'm like, no, no, I buy it from this guy called Justin.

Speaker:

And you're like, no, no, no.

Speaker:

I'm with Justin.

Speaker:

Like, no, you're not.

Speaker:

I need Justin from Tazzie.

Speaker:

Like you're in Victoria.

Speaker:

Yeah.

Speaker:

And the whole concept at that start, I was like, no, but you're a builder.

Speaker:

And that was probably a point where like builders didn't communicate with

Speaker:

other builders and help each other.

Speaker:

Yeah.

Speaker:

And I think that was almost my first, um, experience of interaction and support.

Speaker:

Yeah.

Speaker:

I'm like, wait, did this guy, Devon.

Speaker:

Yeah.

Speaker:

Who wants to help me?

Speaker:

Who's another builder?

Speaker:

Like what's the catch?

Speaker:

Yeah, so that was like 17, 18 'cause we did our first um, child

Speaker:

when that sort of all happened.

Speaker:

Yeah.

Speaker:

In 18.

Speaker:

And um, and it was PHTP Vic, so passive house construction products.

Speaker:

But every phone call often is like, I want to use the membranes, I wanna use the

Speaker:

roof membrane, or I wanna use the tape.

Speaker:

'cause I've heard it's good.

Speaker:

But I'm not building passive house.

Speaker:

So that was a big part of changing from passive house construction

Speaker:

products to performance membranes.

Speaker:

'cause it's not just the passive house system.

Speaker:

No.

Speaker:

Yes.

Speaker:

It's like 42 passive houses.

Speaker:

Is it like, yeah.

Speaker:

Yeah.

Speaker:

So, um, that was the journey.

Speaker:

So it was really like, oh, this is gonna be a side hustle.

Speaker:

It's just gonna be something that'll tick over a side hustle.

Speaker:

And um, and then momentum and it kept, kept moving.

Speaker:

Building was really busy during COVID we had, um, so I approached a, a friend who

Speaker:

was sort of, came back from the States or from England actually, as he was sort

Speaker:

of a general manager sort of type thing.

Speaker:

And he came on with us for about two years, um, two or three years.

Speaker:

And um, just to support, 'cause Justin and I couldn't keep up while

Speaker:

running our building businesses.

Speaker:

And stuff.

Speaker:

So, and it is now performance membranes and, um, so it's fun.

Speaker:

It's great to have a team.

Speaker:

It's great to have the support.

Speaker:

It's great to see the industry grow from being like in the

Speaker:

first passive house group.

Speaker:

And I remember getting given at that point in time, a roll of, um, x extra

Speaker:

tape and I saved that for my house and stuff like that, you know, but it's like,

Speaker:

it was really interesting to go on that, go on that sort of journey and see the

Speaker:

development, um, of what it is today.

Speaker:

So I've got a question.

Speaker:

You, um, you spoke about, uh, you've had two, two and a half

Speaker:

thousand people come through here.

Speaker:

Yeah.

Speaker:

And this is a very maybe question you might know the answer.

Speaker:

Do you know your retention on your customers

Speaker:

retention rate?

Speaker:

Um, it's hard to judge now.

Speaker:

Um, but we would say that 70 to 80% of people who came through the

Speaker:

training room would use the products.

Speaker:

Yeah.

Speaker:

At least

Speaker:

once.

Speaker:

So what I that I was hoping your number was quite highlight that.

Speaker:

Yeah.

Speaker:

'cause what I'm saying is like, yeah.

Speaker:

It.

Speaker:

The product obviously works.

Speaker:

The people who keep continually coming back mm-hmm.

Speaker:

And have 80%, eight outta 10 builders are coming back to use it.

Speaker:

The thing

Speaker:

is, the builders in tradespeople are like a tactile, and when

Speaker:

people experience using the tape or the membranes, they can't.

Speaker:

Um, unlearn it.

Speaker:

Unlearn it.

Speaker:

Yeah.

Speaker:

And that's why the training room works so well.

Speaker:

And the actual description and understanding and

Speaker:

explanation being in place.

Speaker:

And we don't, we max it out at like 15 people in our training room.

Speaker:

'cause we want it to be interactive.

Speaker:

I want it people to not be scared about asking a question

Speaker:

and talking things through.

Speaker:

Um, so,

Speaker:

but even like the product, we've used it forever and even pro

Speaker:

climbing, our sponsoring the podcast that we, when we originally

Speaker:

spoke about and openly hear about.

Speaker:

Product sponsorship.

Speaker:

We only wanted to work, uh, a, uh, podcast sponsorship.

Speaker:

We only wanted to work with people who we a hundred percent aligned with.

Speaker:

Yeah.

Speaker:

It

Speaker:

wasn't a money grab, it was a, it was a, we, we wanna be aligning

Speaker:

ourselves with people with products we actually believe in.

Speaker:

Mm-hmm.

Speaker:

And I think we've, both of us have got runs on the board from

Speaker:

2019, 2018 and 19 from using the products to, to, to now to play

Speaker:

almost

Speaker:

with

Speaker:

it.

Speaker:

Like, um, I definitely had to play to play.

Speaker:

Yeah.

Speaker:

And this, this is why I'm, I'm so envious of the.

Speaker:

People coming through now.

Speaker:

Mm-hmm.

Speaker:

Yeah.

Speaker:

You know, and even we've got an event tomorrow, Dan in Hastings at

Speaker:

the Big Bowens, um, uh, rethink, uh, HQ down there and like that,

Speaker:

this wasn't there when we started.

Speaker:

How easy

Speaker:

is it now?

Speaker:

Like

Speaker:

I know you, you were, you were probably even that step, further step behind,

Speaker:

like there was, there's no, there was nothing like I had you, I had Justin, I

Speaker:

had all these other people that I could.

Speaker:

Talk to.

Speaker:

Yeah.

Speaker:

I, I remember buying my windows from Unilock windows and

Speaker:

buying them in From Germany?

Speaker:

Yeah.

Speaker:

For my house.

Speaker:

And like, I had no idea how they were gonna turn up, whether

Speaker:

they had reveals on 'em or what.

Speaker:

Yeah.

Speaker:

You know, like, I'd never done this before.

Speaker:

But the process

Speaker:

is so easy though.

Speaker:

It's easy now.

Speaker:

Yeah.

Speaker:

It's snap, but at that point in time it was like emails.

Speaker:

It wasn't like FaceTime.

Speaker:

You know, there wasn't, um, zoom or anything like that to have a conversation.

Speaker:

Every conversation that I had, um, with Stuart, um, from, um, like he's a

Speaker:

great, he's a great fellow, isn't he?

Speaker:

Yeah.

Speaker:

On the phone or on email, and it's like you don't get that interaction

Speaker:

the same way as we do Yeah.

Speaker:

Today in that trust or understanding.

Speaker:

Yeah.

Speaker:

You know, I'm sure now I could probably FaceTime the factory and

Speaker:

see them or see get photos of that.

Speaker:

Yeah.

Speaker:

It just wasn't available.

Speaker:

Um, and that's where, uh, having, having some support, like with Justin, I remember

Speaker:

being on the phone to him that many times.

Speaker:

It was.

Speaker:

I remember asking him, do I use the blue tape or the black tape

Speaker:

on the outside of the building?

Speaker:

I've asked, I've asked you that question before.

Speaker:

Which one do you use?

Speaker:

I actually was

Speaker:

with Dan at Pro Climber last week, and I asked him why.

Speaker:

Yeah, and like do you wanna explain the difference?

Speaker:

Yeah.

Speaker:

So Xdo is basically UV stabilized.

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So it's made for the external use, whereas Vanna is technically

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an internal membrane, um, tape.

Speaker:

But Vanna is used all around the world as external and internal, but

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Australia and New Zealand have uv.

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Um, that's not LA anywhere else in the world.

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So Xstore has been developed for that.

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So we.

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But it's the same, the same adhesive, everything like that.

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It's the same price.

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So just use the big pack, buy it cheaper, and use it on so we inside or outside.

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So a hundred percent

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of the time we use X extra everything.

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I've never

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bought the ard.

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I don't, it's not even in my price catalog on my, my one, it's in the

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catalog just because worldwide it is the product that's on all the

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photos, all the documentation.

Speaker:

And that's really why it's maintained in the Australian market, because worldwide

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that's what it's, you don't wanna,

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you don't wanna change the pictures.

Speaker:

Well.

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Germany don't want to change the picture.

Speaker:

Yeah, no, that's fair enough.

Speaker:

So, so,

Speaker:

so what, like what I'm hearing now, like, and if we fast forward to

Speaker:

2025 now there's like real, there's actually no excuse not to feel better.

Speaker:

No,

Speaker:

uh, there's not like there, there a, you're actively making a choice not to.

Speaker:

I, I agree.

Speaker:

And, and it's actually something that I'm gonna talk about tomorrow.

Speaker:

You know, the, the people actually have a choice now to build shit.

Speaker:

Mm-hmm.

Speaker:

Uh, I've got that conundrum at the moment because I'm doing two townhouses.

Speaker:

I've got them designed and I'm ready to build them.

Speaker:

And I've designed them to passive our standard.

Speaker:

And it's a way, 'cause I've drunk the Kool-Aid, you could say.

Speaker:

Yeah.

Speaker:

Right.

Speaker:

And I fundamentally believe in the system and I think.

Speaker:

Doing developments that are terrible, you can do it for the same price point.

Speaker:

It is slightly more expensive.

Speaker:

Right.

Speaker:

To do it the way that I'm doing it, to passive our standard.

Speaker:

But I fundamentally, this believe this is where we'll be in five years.

Speaker:

Yeah.

Speaker:

And I've always been wanting to lead by example, and I'm wanting to be like,

Speaker:

there's a better way to do developments.

Speaker:

There's a better way to do the lived environment, but at

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the same, and so I can't just.

Speaker:

Oh, okay.

Speaker:

It's probably a hundred thousand over budget for the bank's view.

Speaker:

Yes.

Speaker:

As a valuation.

Speaker:

Yeah.

Speaker:

Right.

Speaker:

But it's like I can't just rip out the one 40 walls and the intel

Speaker:

and everything like that because I want to get it to that price point.

Speaker:

I'm like, I'm just gonna push it back a little bit.

Speaker:

Yeah.

Speaker:

To be like, let the, let the pricing catch up.

Speaker:

Yeah.

Speaker:

To be like, I can't just rip it out just to do it.

Speaker:

Shit job.

Speaker:

I mean, if we look at,

Speaker:

if we look at, you know, 20 20, 20 21 to now that's, that's five

Speaker:

years have gone and it kind of feels like, you know, a second ago.

Speaker:

Yeah.

Speaker:

But it also seems like a really long time let go as well.

Speaker:

Yeah.

Speaker:

And you look at where the market is now.

Speaker:

Mm-hmm.

Speaker:

Right?

Speaker:

Like the fact that you've got two and a half thousand people that have

Speaker:

come through here, that's only gonna double or triple in the next two years.

Speaker:

Mm-hmm.

Speaker:

So.

Speaker:

There's more people producing this, there's more awareness

Speaker:

in the broader market.

Speaker:

Yeah.

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From homeowners.

Speaker:

And I'd argue that, and again, we all live in a bit of a bubble 'cause

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people are coming to us for the bubble.

Speaker:

That solution, we live in a bubble, but, but I think the bubble's growing.

Speaker:

It has feel the bubble's

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growing.

Speaker:

I'm gonna, I'm gonna argue I agree, but I'm gonna argue the opposite side.

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Is it like from my

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side as a supplier?

Speaker:

Yes.

Speaker:

Yeah.

Speaker:

I think it's has a hundred percent because there's a lot

Speaker:

of guys who dunno what intel is.

Speaker:

For an ex, as an example, as an air tightness membrane.

Speaker:

Yeah.

Speaker:

But they know what a good WRB is.

Speaker:

Yep.

Speaker:

And a fully sealed in it.

Speaker:

But that's a great start.

Speaker:

But that's, that's a great, but that's a ability of better conversation.

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Yeah.

Speaker:

I, I,

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I agree.

Speaker:

Mm-hmm.

Speaker:

Is that lifting the passive house side of things?

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Because ultimately that's the, the gold sticker.

Speaker:

I, I

Speaker:

think, I, I personally think we should stop.

Speaker:

Focusing on the passive house thing.

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'cause I actually feel it's a bit of a barrier.

Speaker:

Mm-hmm.

Speaker:

And I think we need to just look at durable, healthy buildings.

Speaker:

Yeah.

Speaker:

And 'cause we can get a durable, healthy building that's not a passive house.

Speaker:

Yeah.

Speaker:

We can get a durable, healthy building that's just got extra saana on it.

Speaker:

Mm-hmm.

Speaker:

But as a builder, you need to understand what the risks are if you're not

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putting an intelligent membrane on.

Speaker:

Mm-hmm.

Speaker:

Or if you're not managing your ventilation.

Speaker:

Right.

Speaker:

Yeah.

Speaker:

But I think that's where like all these young builders coming up now.

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With all the information that you are doing and all the information that we are

Speaker:

putting out and all the information the SBA is putting out and all the other huge

Speaker:

amount of people giving up their time.

Speaker:

Joel se Cameron, Monroe, like all of those people builders have

Speaker:

the information to make decisions around where is the risk point.

Speaker:

Yeah, it's just

Speaker:

not builders though.

Speaker:

On a building permit goes to engineers license number, the architects

Speaker:

license number, the builder's license number, it's not far off.

Speaker:

A trade's gonna put their license number on it.

Speaker:

It's just becomes this and we Well, that,

Speaker:

that, that, that's probably more recent.

Speaker:

That's what I'm, yeah.

Speaker:

So I'm like,

Speaker:

what I'm saying is like, we're all liable here.

Speaker:

Yeah.

Speaker:

Like, and that's a huge Yeah.

Speaker:

That's gonna play out in the court somehow.

Speaker:

Traditionally, like it's been the builders hold the Yeah, I reckon it's

Speaker:

a building surveys that hold the, they're the ones that hold the bucket.

Speaker:

And that's what I think

Speaker:

what we're, what we're looking at here.

Speaker:

Behind us.

Speaker:

The sex asana is probably the cheapest insurance policy

Speaker:

that you are ever

Speaker:

gonna take out.

Speaker:

As a builder,

Speaker:

what, what is 80% of VA and DDRV claims?

Speaker:

Water, water.

Speaker:

That could be bathrooms.

Speaker:

And we are coming, the standard has changed in regards to bathrooms.

Speaker:

You've got water stops, you've got flood testing.

Speaker:

A lot of guys are starting to do and that sort of thing.

Speaker:

Essentially outside of that, it's like you got water leaks from

Speaker:

cladding and windows and that sort of thing, and like claddings.

Speaker:

To be honest, they're tested with a membrane and a lot of the time it's

Speaker:

our membranes behind that because they know our membranes work properly.

Speaker:

Yeah.

Speaker:

But they want to get the certificate saying their cladding is compliant.

Speaker:

But it's the system, right?

Speaker:

So there's a lot of claddings that leak, but they're relying

Speaker:

on the WRB behind, I think.

Speaker:

Are you in the in install guide now?

Speaker:

So like for example, and I'll use a product that's James Hardy, for example.

Speaker:

Yeah.

Speaker:

Behind where they've got their own product that they have.

Speaker:

Yeah.

Speaker:

But would they say, Hey.

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To make our system warranted as per the install guide, you

Speaker:

have to now use the pro climber.

Speaker:

There's multiple products that say you have to use X

Speaker:

Designer behind the cladding.

Speaker:

I'm pretty sure where the techs are one of those where the techs has it now.

Speaker:

Yeah.

Speaker:

And I

Speaker:

think Abodo Cladd has it eex.

Speaker:

There's heaps and heaps of claddings that, um, have it,

Speaker:

um, which, which makes sense.

Speaker:

Yeah.

Speaker:

Like, and it's not just, you know, we're not just, you know,

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standing behind a, you know, pretty

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blue backdrop here.

Speaker:

Like, this shit works, but it, it, it's like, it's also that the testing

Speaker:

has started to say you have to specify the membrane that was used, whereas

Speaker:

there was a bit of a loophole saying that supplies were doing the test.

Speaker:

Ours, but they were saying you have to just use a, a

Speaker:

membrane that's a WRB behind it.

Speaker:

Class four or something.

Speaker:

Yeah, class four.

Speaker:

And so it's, it wasn't.

Speaker:

Giving the full picture.

Speaker:

Yeah.

Speaker:

But now that's actually revver reversing and there's actually, which is great

Speaker:

for us in the long term, but it's also great for the building that people are

Speaker:

using the right system, complete system.

Speaker:

People need

Speaker:

to understand cladding doesn't protect your building from water.

Speaker:

Mm-hmm.

Speaker:

I think that's probably the one myth that we've all grown up with as a builder.

Speaker:

Mm-hmm.

Speaker:

Yeah.

Speaker:

Or tradie or architect or anyone.

Speaker:

This,

Speaker:

this, this is your weather, this, this is, this is your line of defense.

Speaker:

Yeah.

Speaker:

And

Speaker:

the, the fact that like when we build now, it's, it allows us to.

Speaker:

What we're about to go into summer here.

Speaker:

Yeah.

Speaker:

Um, there's gonna be a few 35 degree days.

Speaker:

Uh, it's also gonna go to everyone's in Christmas, having time off for probably

Speaker:

by the time we listen to this four weeks and their frames can get wet.

Speaker:

But also it gives 'em a chance when they get back to we can keep working.

Speaker:

Because if it's 35 degrees, we've got shade.

Speaker:

We've got a whole house of shade.

Speaker:

Yeah.

Speaker:

I, I'm

Speaker:

actually gonna have two projects like we think we're gonna get tin on.

Speaker:

We're not gonna get flashings on, but we think across, you know, project in

Speaker:

Ham, a project in, um, a furniture.

Speaker:

We'll get the building wraps on.

Speaker:

Mm-hmm.

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And I, and I know I can go away for three weeks at Christmas time and

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know that those buildings are my

Speaker:

Instagram, I think post video tonight.

Speaker:

Okay.

Speaker:

It's, I'm actually like going like the whole, like the best thing you

Speaker:

can buy yourself for Christmas as a builder is put this on your house.

Speaker:

Yeah.

Speaker:

And for also your clients long term.

Speaker:

Yeah.

Speaker:

We're wrapping the Christmas present.

Speaker:

A couple of years ago.

Speaker:

I did an Exte big extension and we had it plastered.

Speaker:

With just meant on the roof.

Speaker:

Yeah.

Speaker:

Oh no.

Speaker:

We've, we've, we've, we've, pla we, we have, we have had cladding going on and

Speaker:

plaster going on, on, I had join, I've had

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joinery on walls, painting without pizza cladding on.

Speaker:

Yeah.

Speaker:

Um, which is, so, it's, it's concept fun that it works.

Speaker:

Yeah.

Speaker:

So, so, um, over the last few weeks actually, you've had some new products

Speaker:

come out and I think like the, the, the name changing to performance

Speaker:

membranes has probably allowed you to kind of then expand into.

Speaker:

I guess other product offerings as well.

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And you know, behind us we see all these ventilated cavities, which,

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sorry, that all the cavity closes.

Speaker:

All the cavity closes and you know, ventilated cavities become a thing, right?

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Yeah.

Speaker:

Everyone's putting ventilated cavity.

Speaker:

Everyone loves showing that on social media and that is awesome.

Speaker:

Like if you go back three years ago, it might have been a couple of us doing it.

Speaker:

Now everyone's doing thing.

Speaker:

Treat a pine or not treat a pine shut up.

Speaker:

It's awesome, right?

Speaker:

It's really great.

Speaker:

But, you know, ask Justin, um, these, these cavity closes, like these are.

Speaker:

Not only allowing proper ventilation, but great for bushfire areas.

Speaker:

Great for vermin and roading control.

Speaker:

Yeah.

Speaker:

So yeah.

Speaker:

Other than the cavity closes, are there other things kind of, um, yeah.

Speaker:

Bubbling away at performance membranes?

Speaker:

Yeah, so there are probably, Justin and I have probably about five or

Speaker:

six products that we're developing.

Speaker:

Um, I can't say that'll be the end either, but five or six that we're

Speaker:

developing at the moment, which will be.

Speaker:

Performance membranes products, cavity closes was one of those.

Speaker:

But we have quite, um, these five or six others that were in development.

Speaker:

So over the next 12 months, we, more than luck, we'll launch three or four of those.

Speaker:

Awesome.

Speaker:

Um, but it's really like hearing, and from my experience, it's like.

Speaker:

I remember doing my first four 10 houses, Suzanne and I did for ourselves,

Speaker:

wrapped it with foil, super tight.

Speaker:

'cause I was passionate and stuff.

Speaker:

And then putting EPS straight on it.

Speaker:

And I just am like, I think those buildings are still

Speaker:

standing all good right now.

Speaker:

But um, for me it's like we developed this and I want to

Speaker:

be the solution based approach.

Speaker:

Yeah.

Speaker:

And Justin and I being builders.

Speaker:

We understand to talk the talk, we understand the buildups, we understand

Speaker:

the details Well no, you know, do that

Speaker:

You understand risk.

Speaker:

Yeah.

Speaker:

How, how do we, um, fix a, find a solution for a problem that's in the industry

Speaker:

or, um, that builders come up against?

Speaker:

'cause it's always gonna be that way as a new technology or a new standard comes out

Speaker:

as the NCC comes with new, new standards.

Speaker:

It's like, how do we keep finding solutions for these changes?

Speaker:

Yeah.

Speaker:

And that's, I guess, what the focus is and having a team.

Speaker:

Pro climber essentially rolling a lot more now.

Speaker:

Um, Justin and I are able to become a lot more again, um, innovative.

Speaker:

Yeah.

Speaker:

From where we were with pro climber when it started.

Speaker:

We were innovative of bringing it to market to Australia and we can

Speaker:

essentially continue on that, um, pro climber journey, but we can actually,

Speaker:

what else goes in that built Yeah.

Speaker:

Envelope or anything like that, that we can, what goes, what goes in that

Speaker:

structure?

Speaker:

Like what, what, what is the best world built?

Speaker:

And I think, um.

Speaker:

You know, there's builders like us and Carlin and the VHS and the

Speaker:

Dylans, and you know, and we are like always talking to you guys saying,

Speaker:

Hey, I think this is a good idea.

Speaker:

Can you guys

Speaker:

look into

Speaker:

it?

Speaker:

Mm-hmm.

Speaker:

We have the answers now they're all here.

Speaker:

Like we, yeah.

Speaker:

Do our, how much better will can our buildings actually get if we

Speaker:

already use the pro climber system?

Speaker:

Can,

Speaker:

do we need to worry about anything else?

Speaker:

So like in 20 20, 21, I was done with building, but I already

Speaker:

had like seven contracts signed.

Speaker:

Reuben finished up with me and I was like, I can't opt outta this.

Speaker:

I'm not a cafe that can say I'm not selling hot food tomorrow.

Speaker:

I'm just doing pastries and coffee.

Speaker:

Like I was done.

Speaker:

Right.

Speaker:

And what happened?

Speaker:

I explained it like a barge.

Speaker:

It, it takes a long time for change.

Speaker:

Yeah, and if I look at what performance membranes or PHCP started in with 2018,

Speaker:

selling to a couple of you guys and a couple of roofers or clatters who are

Speaker:

interested and maybe a pallet a month.

Speaker:

To now at least a 40 foot container a month.

Speaker:

That's where you can see the industry changing.

Speaker:

It's not, it's, if you look at the journey and probably over the last

Speaker:

18 months, it's gone from, you know, we're doubling our product.

Speaker:

It's going to market, but that's, that's because there's more.

Speaker:

You know, awareness and the bubble, if you wanna call it that, is growing,

Speaker:

changing bubble burst in a sense that like in a good sense, yeah.

Speaker:

Um, it's a matter of like being, I always pictured being at the start of passive

Speaker:

house as being at the start of the wave.

Speaker:

Yeah.

Speaker:

I always pictured being like the person who's like really going on

Speaker:

this journey to be at the start of the way things are gonna change.

Speaker:

I always say to people, I'm not emu egg farming.

Speaker:

You are the earthquake.

Speaker:

You're the earthquake that creates

Speaker:

a tsunami.

Speaker:

Yeah.

Speaker:

I'm not emu egg farming.

Speaker:

I'm not doing some, you know, random.

Speaker:

Fidget spinners.

Speaker:

I explained that to Justin once.

Speaker:

I'm like, Justin, we're not selling fidget spinners.

Speaker:

And at the time he didn't know what they were.

Speaker:

He probably should need one J

Speaker:

Justin definitely needs

Speaker:

spinners.

Speaker:

And then, uh, he looked it up after we had that meeting 'cause I was like,

Speaker:

you know, I was talking about getting this facility in training facility.

Speaker:

What you have to

Speaker:

get performance

Speaker:

membranes.

Speaker:

Branded fidget.

Speaker:

Yes.

Speaker:

Get, get rid of the rulers.

Speaker:

Just get fi fi spinners.

Speaker:

I would use it for sure.

Speaker:

You know, that's the journey of being like.

Speaker:

It's trusting that this is the way that it's gonna go, um, but also

Speaker:

being like I'm not, um, just selling something that's not a good outcome.

Speaker:

Yeah.

Speaker:

You know, fundamentally it is the best thing for the building, the

Speaker:

homeowner and the industry long term.

Speaker:

So what

Speaker:

would you change then to create to, to not fast track this?

Speaker:

Um, bubble.

Speaker:

Mm-hmm.

Speaker:

Like, how, what, yeah.

Speaker:

What would you change to create widespread adoption of better building?

Speaker:

Oh, that's,

Speaker:

that's a tough question.

Speaker:

Mm-hmm.

Speaker:

Um, I honestly believe that like what the SBA are doing is what I never had.

Speaker:

And that's a massive thing to actually have collaboration and conversation.

Speaker:

If I was like, could I have one thing?

Speaker:

I would say that if I could have like the SBA fully funded by government so that

Speaker:

there can actually be people out there.

Speaker:

Going and teaching at TAFEs.

Speaker:

Mm. Going and continually educating architects because essentially where do

Speaker:

architects get their information from?

Speaker:

Like, let's, how do we cross pollinate these industries of the

Speaker:

builder, the architect, the supplier?

Speaker:

How do we continue to have that conversation?

Speaker:

'cause they're all almost seen in isolation.

Speaker:

So that's essentially what industry bodies have been, but poor Phil and Vinu.

Speaker:

At the Master Builders.

Speaker:

He's been one man in sustainability, in the master builders for the, since

Speaker:

I won the award with them in 2011.

Speaker:

Smokes and

Speaker:

mirrors, Hey, we're sustainable.

Speaker:

Just, but we really don't care.

Speaker:

It's,

Speaker:

I would, I would love them to actually invest in that and actually

Speaker:

have some, put some like skin in the game to be like, this is the

Speaker:

future of the way things are going.

Speaker:

I don't know.

Speaker:

The HAA, I don't know where they're at.

Speaker:

I don't know.

Speaker:

Other industry, I'm not a member of either.

Speaker:

It

Speaker:

is, it is.

Speaker:

It is interesting though.

Speaker:

I mean, obviously I'm reasonably close to what's happening in SBA A at the moment.

Speaker:

Yeah.

Speaker:

Um, and there are some really great conversations I've been having, but

Speaker:

you've hit the nail on the head.

Speaker:

We're seven busy builders.

Speaker:

Mm-hmm.

Speaker:

Right.

Speaker:

And we've now got a, um, part-time COO Beck, but we're still, we've still got

Speaker:

so much that we want to achieve, but our, we, we, we hit a ceiling with.

Speaker:

What I can do with what Brian, so like what all the other guys can do.

Speaker:

So you're absolutely right.

Speaker:

We need some kind of funding and I'd say it's a couple hundred grand.

Speaker:

Mm-hmm.

Speaker:

To be like, if we got that from the government.

Speaker:

We could then employ people to really, like,

Speaker:

it's just an investment.

Speaker:

That return will come back to them.

Speaker:

And, and look, I don't wanna let too, you know, catch outta the bags,

Speaker:

but there will be chapters, so.

Speaker:

Yeah.

Speaker:

You know, we we're, there are people in Tassie and Adelaide and, you know,

Speaker:

um, Sydney, like wanting mm-hmm.

Speaker:

These events to be over there.

Speaker:

And I'm just like.

Speaker:

Just be patient.

Speaker:

Yeah.

Speaker:

You know, there's only so much we do and we want to do it right and

Speaker:

we're not running out to, to roll it out really quickly just to happen.

Speaker:

Like we want it to be done.

Speaker:

Right.

Speaker:

Yeah.

Speaker:

But we do need money and you know.

Speaker:

Yeah.

Speaker:

Performance membranes.

Speaker:

And I don't wanna hijack the conversation too much, but you know, you guys have been

Speaker:

big supporters for a while and you guys are very generous with your contribution.

Speaker:

And trust me, that money does not go into my fucking pocket.

Speaker:

I tell you right now,

Speaker:

it's like anything government need to do r and d Yeah.

Speaker:

To then fund it.

Speaker:

It comes back to them multiple ways.

Speaker:

There's a reduce, uh, reduction in buildings failing.

Speaker:

There's a reduction in the healthcare system because people aren't getting

Speaker:

sick in their homes, like mm-hmm.

Speaker:

That a hundred, 200 grand will save them millions and millions of dollars.

Speaker:

Yeah, I think very quickly, like to be honest, like the industry would benefit in

Speaker:

such a big way by having some champions.

Speaker:

Yeah.

Speaker:

You know, some who are actually on the road there for a phone call.

Speaker:

Yeah.

Speaker:

There for a conversation.

Speaker:

This is what I'm wanting to do for homeowners to actually reach out

Speaker:

and actually get some information really quickly and easily.

Speaker:

Yeah.

Speaker:

Like those.

Speaker:

You know, you call it a, it's not a, it's just an industry champion, uh,

Speaker:

to, to, for a better built environment instead of just companies, let,

Speaker:

let's say a sustainability manager.

Speaker:

Yeah.

Speaker:

It's like, let's take it out of that and be like, let's change

Speaker:

industry, not just this project.

Speaker:

So, and, and what I will say it, it's like sustainable Bills

Speaker:

Alliance is not the answer.

Speaker:

Mm-hmm.

Speaker:

Like if you look at what the name is, it's an alliance of whoever.

Speaker:

Yeah.

Speaker:

Whoever wants to be a part of it.

Speaker:

Like, all we're trying to do is be a conduit for.

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Other people to jump on board and other people to get involved.

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Yeah.

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And you know, like we're always keen to hear what other people have to offer and

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like, we're getting this, you talked about this wave, the wave's getting bigger,

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there's more people coming along to it.

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And I know, but.

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Sort of jumping on a, a little bit of a tangent here, but, um, I

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think it just showcases that there is a thirst for building better.

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Yeah.

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Um, but it, we, we need that injection of something.

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Yeah.

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Bigger than what we've got to really make an impact.

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And you know, the fact that you got, as I said before, two and a half

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thousand people coming through here now.

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I mean, I'm, I can't wait to see the size of this thing, you know,

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in the next two or three years.

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'cause you're gonna outgrow this pretty quickly.

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Yeah, that's on the cards, that's for sure.

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Hope

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that's a bit closer to my side.

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We've gotta jump into our, uh, MEG team.

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Mindful moment.

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Australia's leading apprenticeship provider.

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We signed up another apprentice yesterday, and this particular apprentice

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in his third year going into fourth year, uh, had, was really struggling

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with one of his past employers and.

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Um, also at, at tafe.

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Mm-hmm.

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And this all came out yesterday and I'm, and I'm hoping, you know, I'm not gonna

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name any names, but I'm hoping that, you know, he doesn't mind me talking about

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this, but chatting with the guys from, uh, MEGT yesterday, there's actually

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some funding available for businesses.

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And I didn't know about this until yesterday.

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We all know about the.

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Um, incentive program for apprentices.

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There's actually a, and I hate the word, but there's actually a, uh, a disability

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funding available for employers, um, which includes neurodivergent people,

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a, SD, um, A DHD, and um, dyslexia.

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Yeah.

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Now, if we look at the industry broadly.

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I guarantee there is much more neurodivergent people in here than

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there is actually neurotypical people.

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Yep.

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Now we are gonna apply for this funding 'cause it is two to $300 a week, which we

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can reinvest back into our staff members.

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Yep.

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And we can have the support and we can know that we can take a little bit

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more time to adapt the way that we're delivering, um, training to individual

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people within our organizations.

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Yep.

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And I think I didn't know about this until yesterday.

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So MEGT, um, thank you for bringing it up.

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It isn't a a federally, we've gotta get

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' em on to get, talk about all these incentives.

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It's a federally

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funded, it's not just MEGT, but it's federally funded thing.

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So that's my, uh, mindful moment.

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So if you haven't.

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If you don't know about it, definitely look into it, because

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I guarantee if you're a business owner in the construction industry,

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one of your apprentices is, yeah.

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Um, I'm gonna say spicy.

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Spicy, yeah.

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One, one thing about apprentices, I often hear trades say, you know, there's no good

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carpenters coming through, there's no good plumbers, or that sort of thing, where

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our own worst energy enemy, 'cause we don't wanna commit to an apprenticeship.

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Journey or an apprentice.

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Yeah.

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It's like what is the future of the industry gonna look like if you don't

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invest in having an apprentice today?

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This is the government system

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prom, though.

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They're wanting to spit out.

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Three apprenticeships.

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Yeah.

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And fast track it.

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So the numbers look good, but long term it fucks everything.

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But builders and the way the industry's built is like, we often

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will have like a subbie, um, come on.

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Or we want carpenters to get the job done, but we don't invest in the

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actual apprentice from the start.

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I've got, I know a guy at the moment who's got two of my previous apprentices

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working for him, and he loves it.

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He's offsite because he's like.

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They're awesome.

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Yeah.

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But it's like, it's because there was an investment from the start.

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Yeah.

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If you want the long-term reward of having a good industry, then invest at the start

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and get an apprentice that you train and who can watch you and go on the journey.

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And I, and I've, I've actually said this a number of times, I actually

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think there's also a disconnect of builders or lead carpenters

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or qualified carpenters, uh, of.

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Taking on apprentices, not knowing how to teach 'em.

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Mm-hmm.

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Like, we're not teachers.

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Yeah.

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So there actually needs to be a program mm-hmm.

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To teach the trainers.

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Train the trainer.

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Train the trainer.

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In my opinion, there needs to be a trainer, trainer, train the trainer,

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and only certain people should be able to take on apprentices.

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Trainer.

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You, you do.

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You should have to have a certain.

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Period of education or level of education, just not a cert three to stop

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what should be part of the cert four.

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Yeah, yeah.

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Like a cert.

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The issue I have is you can't be a fourth year carpenter getting

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a, becoming a carpenter and then you go getting a first year.

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You still got, that's, you've just starting your learning

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at a fourth year apprentice.

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Yeah.

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Yeah.

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Oh, we've just solved all the problems.

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So

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thank you for coming on.

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Um.

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I'll speak on behalf of Hamish.

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She's someone that we've both looked up to over the last

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5, 6, 7 years of our journey.

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Definitely getting to where we are.

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Um, you've the amount of support that you've gave us.

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Um, we can't ever repay.

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So thank you on that behalf.

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No, thank you.

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To get in contact.

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You, you are the Victorian distributor of the Proclama products.

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That's correct, yeah.

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So, um, give a yell out to Dev and Justin, um, social media performance membranes.

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Yep.

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Uh,

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Instagram's performance membrane.

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Oz. Um, e allows our website's membrane stop build.

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I'm not your OnlyFans.

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Gotta stop

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asking that someone, one day he's gonna say, he's gonna swing it out.

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I really hope it's not dead.

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And it's Dan Sue sitting right behind us.

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Dan, his face, who's next on the podcast, he's like, oh, I

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finally can answer that one.

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Awesome.

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Thanks Dave.

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Awesome.

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Thank you.