Wednesday, March 7, 2018

Shocked on the job site.

If I were to ask you the most commons ways Construction people are shocked on the job site, what would you guess?

I was surprised to learn the number 2 most common way is actually poking through a wall or floor to hit something hidden behind. Drills, various saws, jackhammers, or even sledgehammers are all ways people manage to come in contact with energized electrical lines.

The other ways folks get hit are more common sense to me. 

The chilling part? How many times have you poked a hole through a wall without checking behind it? I know I’ve done it a lot. 

A few years ago I purchased a “stud finder” to help me locate the studs behind some drywall so that I could hang something, don’t remember what specifically, but it also had on it a setting for checking for electrical. The thing was dirt cheap and worked great, I really recommend getting one and using it, if even just hanging picture’s.

When it comes to digging though? 

That’s a hole different story, and one our community has had a really hard time finding the tools to help beyond dialing 811 (used to be called one call) which will only take you up to your meters typically. 

Gas line or electrical run to the garage? No help. 

Gutter drains? Still no help. 

Sewer? Same.

We’re going to help you with that.. 

I just purchased one of the nicest locating systems on the market and it will soon be available for rent. 

The Vermeer Corp. was doing a demo of one of these at a conference I went to in the Tri Cities area of Washington this Fall, and the new technology was simply amazing. Capable of looking well over 16’ into the ground, the tool is accurate both laterally (side to side) but also depth wise. A skilled person could get to within ¼” of where the sought after line is. Please don’t risk testing that, it isn’t worth the risk, but understand it will get you darn close. 

This could help you locate any metal line, any electrical, or even non-conductive lines that you could send something metal down like a drain snake or an electrical snake. 

The nicest thing about it? SUPER simple to use.

I’ll let you know when we have our hands on it and it is available. Know you have a job for it and want it as soon as it gets here? Reply with an email and I will get you on the pre-market list. You can learn more aboout this tool here >


Until then? Get that stud finder with the electrical line sensor in it, its money well spent. I don’t want to read about you or yours getting hurt. 

Have a tool or equipment need coming up? We’d appreciate your business

Roseburg 541-492-7368

Myrtle Creek 541-863-4385

Monday, March 5, 2018

700+ opportunities all in one spot.

What do you get out of us attending The Rental Show?

I will probably never forget the first time I walked onto the floor of The Rental Show for the first time. This is a buying opportunity for us like no other. When we have 700 plus vendors competing for our business all at the same time in the same place, it is going to be competitive. 

That competition translates into better rental rates and more opportunities for you. 

When I go there, the only thing on my mind is what can I bring to our market that you need most. We track this through “missed rentals” which could be either because we didn’t own what you requested or we didn’t own enough of them and what we had was already out on rent when you called. 

We invested big this year. I believe you and I are in the middle of a great few years economically. If you want more specifics on why, hit me up with an email and I’ll go into more detail. 

What can you do maximize your opportunities? 

To this day one of my biggest marketing mistakes was not knowing when to invest. I don’t care how good your advertising is, you’re not going to sell paint sprayers in January in Oregon. Lesson learned. 

Taking this concept further, what kind of work do you enjoy doing the most and which is more profitable? While the economy supports it, this is the time to fine tune your business. If you’re tracking your numbers (something I highly recommend) you will know what work is the most profitable. Is there a niche in there that you could explore to further separate yourself from the crowd driving up demand for what you’re doing?

A safe way to do that is to rent the equipment needed to explore those niche’s. This should be a small amount of your time and energy. I try to focus only about 10-20% annually on these new opportunities. You make time and resources available by dropping the 10-20% of your business that is either not profitable or not enjoyable. 

A little behind the scene’s insight for those of you who might not be in business. 

It still applies.

Look at what you’re doing daily. Annually, make a plan to stop doing 10% of it and intentionally replace it with something you think would bring more value to your time. It can be life altering.

Ready to talk about that niche, or better your space? Give us a call at 541-492-RENT (7368). 

Until then, I hope you got something from this. Most will simply be happy with things moving in a positive direction. Some of you will leverage the opportunity. A small change that can yield massive results. Your choice. 
Real live people by phone.

Roseburg 541-492-7368

Myrtle Creek 541-863-4385

Saturday, March 3, 2018

Do your competitors own or rent the equipment you see on the job site?

The answer may surprise you.

There was a time when the “little guy” felt intimidated by the “big guys” that owned their equipment. If you haven’t been paying attention, you should know that times have changed.

According to a lot of recent research, more are renting than own the equipment you see on the job site. 


While this may or may not be the case for you, I wanted to share some of the more common reasons this number is steadily rising. If you are considering purchasing a new or used piece of equipment, consider this;

• If you are shopping the used equipment market, what you are looking at is likely not Tier 4 emissions compliant. Today that means you can’t use your equipment on most federally owned land. I suspect our State will soon follow and have heard of private entities requiring the same. 
• New equipment that is Tier 4 compliant requires a much higher level of expertise to diagnose and repair than the older equipment did. These expenses aren’t usually predictable and are hard to include in a job bid. 
• Technology is changing fast, what is acceptable technology to be competitive today, likely won’t be just 5 years from now. Will you eat the depreciation and buy new again so soon? When things didn’t change a lot from one year to the next, there wasn’t near the push to stay updated as there is now. 
• If you are growing your business, does this include moving into new geographical area’s? How will you move your equipment to the next location? Transporting heavy equipment requires a lot whether you hire it out or do it on your own. 
• Simple accounting and bidding. Rental costs have a lot less variability in them. In most cases X days = X cost. Add your margin to it and you have your line item for equipment costs. 

The list goes on from here, but these are the biggest reasons more equipment on the job site is now rented rather than owned. Currently the number is 53%, but it is steadily rising. 

Take some pressure off of yourself, let us handle the equipment expense, maintenance, storage, depreciation, and most repair costs. You mark up the rental cost and make money on it. 

The same applies to the homeowner. Storage and maintenance are the two killers for you. 

I can’t begin to tell you how many service requests we get for fouled fuel systems that sat too long. The shelf life of gas isn’t near what it used to be. We have had fuel go bad in as little as 30 days.

Rent it or own it? There are good reasons the majority are now renting.

When you are ready, remember our number 541-492-RENT (7368). 


Real live people by phone.

Roseburg 541-492-7368

Myrtle Creek 541-863-4385

Monday, February 26, 2018

Both electricity and natural gas failed

The cold snap of the past week and some time on my hands sitting in an airport had me thinking about what kind of chaos I’ve see over the years related to cold weather.

You have to have seen some of this too.

Frozen pipes

Car accidents

Power outages

The list could go on, the real difference tends to be in the action one takes leading up to it. Early on I remember a time when a couple of our customers with large businesses came in and rented everything remotely close to a heater about 2 days before the cold snap hit. 

What I hadn’t really thought a lot about prior to that day was the possibility of losing two utilities at the same time and how that can really change things, in a bad way. 

What would you do if both power and the gas lines quit working?

We had this in the ‘90’s when I was a mechanic for the Roseburg Public Schools. Both electricity and gas failed. In that chaos the school district lost tens of $1000’s of dollars worth of heating coils in the old humanities building. 

It might not be a bad idea to think about not just at home, but at work too. Taking it a step further, think about transportation, communication, security, and maybe more. 

What I can tell you is others are thinking about it and are both prepared and proactive. You don’t need to get carried away and create massive redundancy, I think it would be a waste of resources that could be better used elsewhere. What you can do is think about what kinds of things you’re not prepared for, and get to know what resources are out there to help should the need arise. If you wait until you need it, chances are someone else will have already beat you to it.

If the weather guessers miss, will you be scared or prepared?

-Tim-




Real live people by phone

Roseburg 541-492-7368

Myrtle Creek 541-863-4385

Sunday, February 25, 2018

What the Property Brothers told us in New Orleans

The Property Brothers (really the Scott Brothers, but you know the media, AKA the Property Brothers on HGTV) told us this in New Orleans this week.

“One of the biggest mechanisms for growth are relationships,” Jonathan said. “That’s why we’ve always said to become a community leader. Be a face in the community. Get involved in the community and all of a sudden, that will funnel business back to you. It’s good, not only from a social platform, but it’s great from a business platform.”

I couldn’t agree more and think it is good advice for anyone trying to grow their sphere of influence. 

It is also one of the favorite parts of this business for me. 

The resources you provide by doing business with us allow us to engage and facilitate a lot of great projects around town. Frequently, where volunteers gather to build, clean or repair something in the community you will see our equipment there, and sometimes even us.

As our customer, I hope you realize you play a role in that. 

If you choose to step it up and get more hands on with a volunteer project that requires equipment, don’t hesitate to email here. Just hit reply, and let me know what your working on, I’ll see what equipment we have that might be able to help. 

That brings us to our Friday Special for you on this list. (If you are reading this on our blog you’re too late, get on our email list to receive these when they come out. The link is on this page under social media links)

Ryan says we are looking good on tractors for this weekend, so we will offer a tractor rental for the weekend for the 4 hour price.

Same as last time, that is the Tractor only, no trailer, no damage waiver, bring it back clean and full of fuel. Only offered to the folks on this list. Not on our email list, not going to get this price. First come first serve, one only. Pick it up Saturday morning, bring it back by 9am Monday, don’t put more than 4 hours on it (additional hours on the meter will be billed at the normal hourly rate). 

The safest way to make that happen is to call 541-492-RENT (7368) and make the reservation. You can’t email me here (I’m still in New Orleans!). 

Good luck!

-Tim-


Real live phone people

Roseburg 541-492-7368

Myrtle Creek 541-863-4385

Thursday, February 22, 2018

What could you be doing now to save time this Spring?

Delaying, dabbling, procrastinating…

Hey, I’m as guilty as anybody when it comes to this, but maybe, just maybe we can work together to trim it up a bit.

One of my favorite go to references for this industry is the OSU Garden Calendar. They have on their site a monthly calendar detailing what you should be doing with your yard, tree’s, garden and other landscape items. I’ll link to that below for this month.

I bring this up because like most things in life, you don’t need to re-invent the wheel. Too often we get so busy that we take shortcuts (sometimes these just develop over time) and end up costing ourselves the very precious time we’re trying to save. 

After all, we both know our days are numbered, so we’d do best to make the most of that precious allotment.

While we’re both learning the best way forward for me to bring value to you, I’ll be trying some things. One I’m wondering if you’d appreciate is a link to the reservation page for an item or category of equipment I’m discussing. 

As we inch up on Spring, the gardening and landscape equipment will get busy in a hurry. 

No matter how much equipment we have, there is never enough to fill every need, some folks will have to schedule around the availability.

I’d like for you to not be one of those folks. 

If there is one thing you can do to make sure you get what you need when you want it, it is the reservation. I will always recommend a phone call first, but if you’re more inclined, here is the link to view and reserve landscape equipment online.


Oh, and that calendar? Not a lot to do this month, so breath easy. I’ll let you know when it is about to get serious. http://extension.oregonstate.edu/gardening/gardening-calendar 

Real live phone people

Roseburg 541-492-7368

Myrtle Creek 541-863-4385

My favorite kind of pain

As I’m reading through a business book recently I came across a tid-bit that hit me in the face like a ton of rocks.

The author got off topic and started talking about fear, and that it is something everyone has nearly complete control over, but few have any idea how, or what to do about it

He went on to explain that fear lives in a very small space between becoming consciously aware of something, and the moment a person takes action against it.

The moment a person takes action against it.

Tearing the band-aid off and eliminating fear is now my favorite kind of pain. 

An example.

Recently, I was concerned about a test at DMV related to getting my CDL Drivers license. I was studying the book, looking for more info. out in the digital world, and asking anyone I knew that held a Commercial Drivers License what I needed to know for the test. 

When I finally wised up, and remembered where this fear ended, I simply went and took the test.

It was a Friday. I passed the main test and failed the next two. But now I had first hand knowledge of what was going to be on the test.

The following Monday I went back down and passed both tests by a large margin.

For weeks I languished, and in around 45 minute’s of activity, eliminated the fear. 

Operating equipment for the first time is an example where a healthy amount of fear can be a good thing. Its powerful and can do damage. 

So was driving car, and most of us lived. 

When it comes to your projects, not letting fear hold you back may just be the fastest way toward peace of mind and a better space. 

If it involves equipment, we’d love to help you rip that band-aid off and will help keep you safe. 

Ready to rip that band-aid off? Call 541-492-7368 or you can make your reservation request online at www.roseburgrental.net 

-Tim-

P.S. If you haven’t been paying attention to the weather, you need to know it is going to reach damaging freeze temerperature’s overnight. For some Winter storage tips on equipment you might be interested in this old blog post a while back.

Real live phone people

Roseburg 541-492-7368

Myrtle Creek 541-863-4385