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Jason argues everything is fractal, systems that work on small projects scale to large projects. Scrum example: ideal 3-9 people, scrum of scrums for larger organizations. Google/Apple use Scrum at massive scale. Mentors critical, treat advice like gold. Tony Robbins: get around a mentor for massive progress. Ideal project size: $60-100M. Billion-dollar project = 7-10 separate but connected projects of $60-120M each with executive leadership coordinating. 70 people can't communicate effectively as one group (Napoleon vs Austrians). Break into smaller autonomous teams. Executive team focuses on training, KPIs, milestone alignment. Geographic control (specific buildings), not scope-based. Don't ignore common areas (stairwells, entryways, loading docks). Listener question: $1B+ mega project with 50-70 associates. Issue 1: New people/culture—Solution: 2-4x the training, standardize systems, project podcast 2-3x/week. Issue 2: Lean not happening—Solution: Worker/foreman huddles build lean culture through proximity. Issue 3: Composite cleanup, GC handles general logistics areas (loading docks, hallways, parking), not trade work. Four focus areas: (1) Takt planning, (2) operational control system, (3) personal organization, (4) team balance/health. Control what you can, make your project heaven on earth, even on a chaotic mega project. Part 1 of 2.
What you'll learn in this episode:
Everything is fractal, small project systems scale to mega projects
Scrum: 3-9 people ideal, scrum of scrums for larger organizations (Google/Apple use this)
Mentors are critical, the quickest path to massive success
Ideal project size: $60-100M (prefer $80M)
Billion-dollar project = 7-10 projects of $60-120M each, executive team coordinates
70 people can't communicate as one group, break into smaller autonomous teams
Executive team focuses: training, KPIs, milestone alignment
Geographic control (buildings), not scope-based separation
Don't ignore common areas, assign the logistics team
Listener question: $1B+ mega project, 50-70 associates, P6 required
Break into $60-120M projects, each with Takt plan
P6 needs 6-12 schedulers, begin with Takt, always align with Takt
Issue 1: Culture/teaming, Solution: 2-4x training, standardize systems, project podcast 2-3x/week
The Empire State Building had runners use helpers to coordinate
Four focus areas: Takt planning, operational control, personal organization, team balance/health
Issue 2: Lean not happening, Solution: Worker/foreman huddles teach lean through proximity
COVID is not an excuse. Create a social group, implement a lean culture
Issue 3: Composite cleanup, GC handles general logistics (loading docks, hallways, parking)
Each trade cleans its own work, and the logistics foreman handles general areas
Part 2 coming: short-term scheduling, team health, morale, trade partner chaos
Everything is fractal. Scale excellence. On we go.
If you like the Elevate Construction podcast, please subscribe for free, and you'll never miss an episode. And if you really like the Elevate Construction podcast, I'd appreciate you telling a friend (Maybe even two 😊).
Also, here are links to our YouTube Channels:
· Jason Schroeder YouTube Channel: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UC4xpRYvrW5Op5Ckxs4vDGDg
· LeanTakt YouTube Channel: https://www.youtube.com/c/leanTakt
· LeanSuper YouTube Channel: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCzQDevqQP19L4LePuqma3Fg/featured
· LeanSurvey YouTube Channel: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UC-Ztn3okFhyB_3p5nmMKnsw
By Jason Schroeder4.9
139139 ratings
Jason argues everything is fractal, systems that work on small projects scale to large projects. Scrum example: ideal 3-9 people, scrum of scrums for larger organizations. Google/Apple use Scrum at massive scale. Mentors critical, treat advice like gold. Tony Robbins: get around a mentor for massive progress. Ideal project size: $60-100M. Billion-dollar project = 7-10 separate but connected projects of $60-120M each with executive leadership coordinating. 70 people can't communicate effectively as one group (Napoleon vs Austrians). Break into smaller autonomous teams. Executive team focuses on training, KPIs, milestone alignment. Geographic control (specific buildings), not scope-based. Don't ignore common areas (stairwells, entryways, loading docks). Listener question: $1B+ mega project with 50-70 associates. Issue 1: New people/culture—Solution: 2-4x the training, standardize systems, project podcast 2-3x/week. Issue 2: Lean not happening—Solution: Worker/foreman huddles build lean culture through proximity. Issue 3: Composite cleanup, GC handles general logistics areas (loading docks, hallways, parking), not trade work. Four focus areas: (1) Takt planning, (2) operational control system, (3) personal organization, (4) team balance/health. Control what you can, make your project heaven on earth, even on a chaotic mega project. Part 1 of 2.
What you'll learn in this episode:
Everything is fractal, small project systems scale to mega projects
Scrum: 3-9 people ideal, scrum of scrums for larger organizations (Google/Apple use this)
Mentors are critical, the quickest path to massive success
Ideal project size: $60-100M (prefer $80M)
Billion-dollar project = 7-10 projects of $60-120M each, executive team coordinates
70 people can't communicate as one group, break into smaller autonomous teams
Executive team focuses: training, KPIs, milestone alignment
Geographic control (buildings), not scope-based separation
Don't ignore common areas, assign the logistics team
Listener question: $1B+ mega project, 50-70 associates, P6 required
Break into $60-120M projects, each with Takt plan
P6 needs 6-12 schedulers, begin with Takt, always align with Takt
Issue 1: Culture/teaming, Solution: 2-4x training, standardize systems, project podcast 2-3x/week
The Empire State Building had runners use helpers to coordinate
Four focus areas: Takt planning, operational control, personal organization, team balance/health
Issue 2: Lean not happening, Solution: Worker/foreman huddles teach lean through proximity
COVID is not an excuse. Create a social group, implement a lean culture
Issue 3: Composite cleanup, GC handles general logistics (loading docks, hallways, parking)
Each trade cleans its own work, and the logistics foreman handles general areas
Part 2 coming: short-term scheduling, team health, morale, trade partner chaos
Everything is fractal. Scale excellence. On we go.
If you like the Elevate Construction podcast, please subscribe for free, and you'll never miss an episode. And if you really like the Elevate Construction podcast, I'd appreciate you telling a friend (Maybe even two 😊).
Also, here are links to our YouTube Channels:
· Jason Schroeder YouTube Channel: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UC4xpRYvrW5Op5Ckxs4vDGDg
· LeanTakt YouTube Channel: https://www.youtube.com/c/leanTakt
· LeanSuper YouTube Channel: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCzQDevqQP19L4LePuqma3Fg/featured
· LeanSurvey YouTube Channel: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UC-Ztn3okFhyB_3p5nmMKnsw

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