GeoHeroes - Matt Moler
In this episode Guy Marcozzi interviews Matt Moler, PE, Vice President and a Region Director for S&ME and former GBA president. Matt shares his unexpected journey from golf course superintendent aspirations to geotechnical leadership, revealing how early construction work with his father shaped his approach to efficiency and strategic thinking. Discover his philosophy on team dynamics, the irreplaceable value of client relationships, and why he hand-delivered reports to build trust. Matt offers candid insights on industry evolution, the role of technology, and his optimistic vision for geoprofessionals. This episode is essential listening for anyone seeking authentic leadership wisdom and career guidance rooted in genuine passion and human connection.
Matt Moler, PE, is a husband, father of three, a Professional Engineer, and a Regional Director for S&ME. He currently lives in Greensboro, NC. With engineering licenses in North Carolina, Virginia, and West Virginia, it has allowed Matt to work on projects all over the place, and he loves the variety. Specifically, Matt's experience has been in geotechnical site investigations, construction materials testing services, Special Inspections, and forensic engineering. When he has time, he loves to mountain bike and other outdoor activities with family and friends (fishing, hiking, and camping).
Guy Marcozzi, PE, D.GE, LEED AP BD+C, is a GBA past-president and an experienced CEO, President and Board Member with a demonstrated history of working in the engineering, science and data technology industries and in leadership for various boards of ESOP, non-profit, professional and business organizations.
Show Notes
Introduction
Matt Moler, Regional Director of Operations at S&MECovers offices in North Carolina and FloridaFormer GBA President (just completed past-president term)Based in Greensboro, North CarolinaEarly Life and Education
Grew up in Charlestown, West Virginia (Jefferson County) Moved there at age 2 Above-average student; math and science came easier High school class of ~350-400 studentsWorked various jobs: father's construction business, CVS, golf course maintenanceFather was residential contractor - taught efficiency and thinking aheadOriginally planned to study agronomy/horticulture to become golf course superintendentChanged to engineering after realizing golf course work meant weekends with little time offCollege Experience
Attended West Virginia University for undergraduate civil engineeringWent to Virginia Tech for master's in geotechnical engineeringWorked with industry legends: Mike Duncan, Dr. Brandon, Dr. Phils, Jim MitchellThesis on water-filled tubes for flood mitigation with large-scale testingCompleted oral defense (described as "one of the more stressful events")Career Path
Met wife Jamie in grad school, married within a yearStarted at S&ME same day Jamie started her master's program in GreensboroBeen with S&ME for 23 yearsEarly "positive derailment": placed on construction materials testing project for 3 yearsLearned from coworkers, design teams, and contractorsGained insight into consulting relationships and field implementation challengesProgressed incrementally: individual contributor → small group manager → regional roles → service line leader → current positionKey Early Lesson
Initially excited about delivering reports as the main valueStarted hand-delivering reports and explaining findings to clientsRealized relationships and personal connections were the real valueLeadership
Philosophy: Don't give quick answers - encourage inquisitivenessAsk team members to bring problems AND potential solutionsBelieves in breaking out of "status quo" thinkingEmphasizes clearly articulating vision and goals for teamsFocus on finding the right people ("the who's") rather than trying to solve everything aloneValues face-to-face client interactions and relationship buildingTeam Philosophy
"The power of a team is so much stronger than anything I can bring to the table"Teams function best when aligned with clear understanding of rolesSynergy creates efficiency that surpasses individual capabilitiesThe Geoprofessional Landscape
What Hasn't Changed (23 years in industry)
Core interpersonal skills remain essentialHuman-to-human client interaction irreplaceableTrust and relationship building still fundamentalWhat Has Changed
Better use of technology (CPT, geophysical tools)Improved data handling and managementEvolution from paper reports → scanned PDFs → digital data systemsBetter subsurface condition understanding through dataFuture Vision
Data sharing between firms (like other countries)Leveraging AI and big data to make professionals better, not replace themEnhanced role in data interpretation vs. just collectionMaintaining human connections while using better toolsFocus on providing value: time savings, cost reduction, resilienceLife Advice
For New Professionals
Align passion with career - don't just chase moneyFind work that energizes you and makes you excited to start each dayGet involved in professional associations (especially GBA)Look for committee work and leadership opportunitiesProfessional Development
Association involvement provides broader industry perspectivePrevents "myopic" view from working at single firmRelationships and learning often outweigh what you contributeGBA experience: "get two, three, sometimes tenfold back"Mentorship Approach
Encourage fresh thinking over providing quick answersBe open to adapting yourself, not just expecting others to adaptListen and be receptive to new ideasHelp break people out of "this is how we've always done it" mindsetSpeed Round
Favorite Book: How To Win Friends and Influence People by Dale Carnegie, Unbroken by Laura HildebrandOptimism index: 5/5, Natural optimist in life and workBiggest Impact: Recognizing team power over individual capabilityWhat he'd change: Be more present in the moment instead of always thinking aheadAdvice for young professionals: Find your passion and align it with career, fulfillment comes from genuine interest, not just financial rewardsFinal Thoughts
Encourages association involvement for anyone not currently engagedLook for engagement outside normal day-to-day workCalls-to-action:
Visit the GBA Website at https://www.geoprofessional.org for other training resources and reference materials and/or to become a member.Visit https://www.gbapodcast.com for future podcast episodesContact us at [email protected] with any podcast-related questions or comments Subscribe
Subscribe to the GBA Podcast https://www.gbapodcast.com/subscribeThis episode was produced by the following GBA Members:
Ryan White, PE, GE – Principal Geotechnical Engineer/Apex