Episodios

  • Better, Faster, Together: Building Global Lean Community with Derek Sinnott (Episode 95)
    Mar 30 2026
    In this wide-ranging episode of Hoots on the Ground with No Bullshido, Adam Hoots connects with Derek Sinnott, a self-described pracademic from Wexford, Ireland. Derek is a civil engineer-turned-academic at SETU (South East Technological University), a Lean coach, and the Chair of the Supply Chain Sustainability School in Ireland. Adam and Derek first crossed paths in Japan, and the conversation that unfolded there clearly stuck — because Derek showed up in Ireland when Adam brought a team of Clemson students over for a construction competition, and that says everything you need to know about who Derek is. Derek opens up about his background growing up on a farm, finding his footing in engineering after struggling through secondary school, and ultimately discovering his true calling in training, coaching, and developing people across the construction industry. The conversation dives deep into: • Why the biggest inefficiency in construction is the illusion of collaboration • The difference between being efficient and being effective when coaching teams • What sustainability really means in Ireland — and why it goes way beyond green building • The supply chain as the true value-delivery engine of every project • Why early contractor involvement is critical, and what it looks like when done well • How asking good questions leads to better relationships — and better buildings Derek also shares his deep respect for trade workers and frontline teams — the people who actually put nail to formwork — and reflects on what real respect for people looks like in practice. He talks about the power of simply walking the job and being curious rather than coming in with a fixed agenda. They also revisit the ASCE student competition that brought Adam's Clemson team to Ireland (earning two third-place trophies and a Best Speaker Award), explore the possibility of teaming up for the upcoming November competition, and Derek teases a podcast of his own on the horizon. This episode is equal parts Lean philosophy, sustainability education, and authentic human connection — a reminder that no matter what ocean separates us, we're all telling the same story in different accents. KEY TAKEAWAYS: • Collaboration ≠ More Meetings: Real collaboration means breaking down silos and sharing learning, not just scheduling more conversations. • Coach, Don't Consult: The most effective intervention isn't solving problems for teams — it's helping them develop the ability to solve their own. • Sustainability Is Bigger Than Green: ESG — environmental, social, and governance — means taking care of your people, your community, and running an ethical business. • Supply Chain Is Everything: The trade partners and vendors who install and deliver are the true value-creators. Educating and supporting them is how projects succeed. • Decisions Made Early, Lived With Long: The choices made in pre-construction shape 90% of cost, schedule, and quality outcomes, and ripple through the building's entire lifecycle. • "Can't" Is a Four-Letter Word: Derek's most despised phrase — there's always a path forward, even when there are constraints. • Better, Faster, Together: The motto of Lean Construction Ireland and a philosophy that puts people first in pursuit of continuous improvement. EPISODE QUOTES (paraphrased): • "The biggest inefficiency in construction is the illusion that collaboration has taken place." • "The most efficient thing is to just go solve it. But the most effective thing is to step back and coach." • "I get disappointed when a group doesn't challenge me — that means nothing is landing." • "Good looks like better than before." • "Can't — that word drives me absolutely bananas." • "We're always in pursuit of perfection. I'm not sure what that looks like, but it's an awful lot better than what we do at the moment." • "It's not about being soft. It's just: how are you doing?" RESOURCE LINKS MENTIONED IN THIS EPISODE: • Lean Construction Ireland • Supply Chain Sustainability School • SETU (South East Technological University, Ireland) • Associated Schools of Construction Region 8 (ASC) Competition GUESTS FEATURED IN THIS EPISODE: • Derek Sinnott — Executive Coach & Strategic Advisor to CEOs & Senior Leaders in the Built Environment | Chair | MC | Speaker | Author | Director (https://www.linkedin.com/in/derek-sinnott) • Adam Hoots — Host/Producer of Hoots on the Ground and Lean builder focused on respect for craft and field leadership.(https://www.linkedin.com/in/adamhoots/) ABOUT HOOTS ON THE GROUND PODCAST: The Lean Builder's absolutely, positively NO Bullshido ...
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    1 h y 1 m
  • Lean at the Crossroads: Culture, Community, and Congress with Elizabeth Taylor (Episode 94)
    Mar 3 2026
    Lean at the Crossroads: Culture, Community, and Congress with Elizabeth Taylor (Episode 94) In this heartfelt and high-energy episode of Hoots on the Ground with No Bullshido, Adam Hoots sits down with Elizabeth Taylor, National Director of Lean at JE Dunn Construction and 2026 LCI Congress Co-Chair, to talk about leadership, culture, and what it really means to build community in construction. Elizabeth shares her journey from project management to Lean coaching, including her AMAZING Lean experience on the Williston Rec Center project in North Dakota, where living onsite and stumbling through The Last Planner System® created lifelong relationships and a powerful example of what Lean culture can truly look like. The conversation dives deep into: • The difference between Lean tools and Lean culture • Why relationships accelerate project performance • How to move from "doing Lean" to being a Lean organization • The importance of field-first thinking and supporting trade workers • What it takes to lead at scale inside a national construction firm Elizabeth also opens up about personal loss, vulnerability, and how the Lean community has supported her during one of the most difficult seasons of her life. This episode goes beyond business, it's about humanity, leadership courage, and creating intentional spaces where people belong. Check out Elizabeth illustrating true vulnerability, live in person as she handles the questions from Hoots. They also preview the 2026 LCI Congress in Atlanta, themed "Lean at the Crossroads: Building the Future Together." Elizabeth shares insights into this year's four tracks: 1. Next Generation Delivery Integration 2. Field First Lean: Tools, Flow & Daily Improvement 3. Becoming a Lean Organization Through Culture & Learning 4. Whole Team, Whole Project Integration If you've ever wondered what Congress looks like behind the curtains, whether your story is worth sharing, this episode is your sign to step up. Abstracts are due Thursday, March 5th. Don't wait. Submit to speak here: https://congress.leanconstruction.org/abstract-submission/ This one is part Lean strategy, part leadership masterclass, and part reminder that we can't do life, or construction, alone. Key Takeaways: • Lean Is More Than Tools: Last Planner may start the journey, but culture and trust sustain it. • Relationships Drive Results: Teams that cook dinner together and problem-solve together build projects differently. • Vulnerability Is Leadership: Real culture change starts when leaders model openness and humanity. • Field First Matters: Trade workers carry the weight of poor systems—Lean must serve them. • Lean at Every Level: Personal, project, organizational, and industry-wide transformation are all connected. • Congress Is Community: LCI isn't just about sessions—it's about conversations, connection, and shared growth. ABOUT HOOTS ON THE GROUND PODCAST: The Lean Builder's absolutely, positively NO Bullshido podcast. Join host Adam Hoots and his guests as they dig deep into the topics that matter most to those in the field. With stories from the trenches, lessons learned, and plenty of laughter, this podcast is for the men and women doing the hands-on work of construction. RESOURCE LINKS MENTIONED IN THIS EPISODE: • Lean Construction Institute (LCI) Congress 2026 — Atlanta, GA • JE Dunn Construction National Lean Program • Signia Hotel and conference Center (LCI Congress 2026 venue area) GUESTS FEATURED IN THIS EPISODE: • Elizabeth Taylor — National Director of Lean, JD Dunn Construction | 2026 LCI Congress Co-Chair (https://www.linkedin.com/in/elizabethmckiernan/) • Adam Hoots — Host/Producer of Hoots on the Ground and Lean builder focused on respect for craft and field leadership (https://www.linkedin.com/in/adamhoots/) EPISODE QUOTES (paraphrased): • "Lean tools are easy to grab onto. Culture is what makes them work." • "You can't tell me it won't work. I've seen it work." • "We're all just humans doing construction." • "We can't do this thing called life alone." • "Don't say 'we can't.' That's where the work starts." • "Make it visual. Make it simple. That's how you get everybody on the same page."
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    47 m
  • 1 in 4 Builders are Neurodivergent. Lean Might Be Built for Them! – Hosted by the Chiles Bros (Episode 93)
    1 h y 6 m
  • The Chiles Bros: One Lean Geek. One Old Dawg. (Episode 92)
    Jan 9 2026
    In this absolutely, positively NO Bullshido kickoff episode, Adam Hoots sits down with Brian Chiles and Mike Chiles—two brothers with deep roots in relationships, leadership, and Lean thinking lived out in the real world. Brian came into construction from a teaching/coaching and project management background; Mike brings 20+ years in the industry, raising four kids while remaining relentless about respect for people and building teams that work together. This conversation is equal parts family, field, and flow. The Chiles Bros unpack why Lean is not a tool, why relationships are the real work, and how the best leaders "feed the hungry" instead of wasting energy trying to convince people who don't want it. They talk about being curious, not judgmental, the difference between explaining tools vs. teaching them, and why the 87/13 (character over competency) shows up, whether you like it or not. If you're trying to build trust, reduce conflict, and lead people—not just tasks—this one is a straight shot of Old Dawg wisdom with a Lean Geek edge. KEY TAKEAWAYS: • Feed the Hungry: Stop spending 80% of your time trying to win over the 20% who don't care. Find the receptive people and build momentum through them. • Tools Don't Stick Without Trust: It's easy to explain A3, 5S, and planning tools. It's hard to teach them without relationships and psychological safety. • Optimize the Whole: The best projects don't pit field vs. office. They create one team—shared reality, shared plan, shared wins. • Be Curious, Not Judgmental: Great leaders pause before reacting, look for the system issue, and consider what wounds/stress might be driving behavior. • 87/13 Leadership: Your character is influencing people whether you intend it or not—choose whether that influence builds trust or triggers defensiveness. EPISODE QUOTES (paraphrased): • "Find the hungry—and feed them. Don't waste your fire on people who don't want it." • "It's easy to explain the tools. Teaching them takes trust." • "You can feel the health of a weekly work plan meeting the same way you can feel a locker room." • "People protect their wounds, but they'll brag about their scars." • "Your character is influencing the jobsite whether you mean it to or not—lead for good." RESOURCE LINKS MENTIONED IN THIS EPISODE: • Lean Construction Institute (LCI) Congress — relationship-fueled learning, community, and recharge. https://leanconstruction.org/ • Old Dawg Lean Thesaurus (Adam Hoots & Buddy Brumley) — Lean terms translated for the field (Old Dawg + Lean Geek). https://www.amazon.com/Old-Dawg-Lean-Thesaurus-Making/dp/B0C6W48CKF • Everything I Learned About Lean I Learned in First Grade — reminder that Lean is simple when you stop overcomplicating it. https://www.amazon.com/Everything-About-Learned-First-Grade/dp/1934109347 • Ted Lasso — "Be curious, not judgmental." https://tv.apple.com/us/show/ted-lasso/umc.cmc.vtoh0mn0xn7t3c643xqonfzy • The Tipping Point (Malcolm Gladwell) — connectors, influence, and how ideas spread. https://www.amazon.com/Tipping-Point-Little-Things-Difference/dp/0316346624 • Dave Ramsey — simple wisdom delivered in a way people can actually apply. www.ramseysolutions.com • Scrum / Felipe Engineer-Manriquez — learning a "new toy," then applying it with people-first intention. https://www.theebfcshow.com/ • Mac Story / Blue-Collar Leadership — 87/13 and character-driven leadership (referenced throughout). https://bluecollarleadership.com/ GUESTS FEATURED IN THIS EPISODE: • Adam Hoots | LinkedIn www.linkedin.com/in/adamhoots Host of Hoots on the Ground, The Lean Builder voice from the field. • Mike Chiles | LinkedIn https://www.linkedin.com/in/mike-chiles/ — Project Director at JE Dunn Construction - Construction leader, people-first builder, husband and father of four, Lean community connector. • Brian Chiles | LinkedIn https://www.linkedin.com/in/brianchilesmas/ — Lean Specialist at JE Dunn Construction - Lean specialist and former coach/teacher turned builder of teams, trust, and jobsite flow. ABOUT HOOTS ON THE GROUND PODCAST: The Lean Builder's absolutely, positively NO Bullshido podcast. Join host Adam Hoots and his guests as they dig deep into the topics that matter most to those in the field. With stories from the trenches, lessons learned, and plenty of laughter, this podcast is for the men and women doing the hands-on work of construction.
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    1 h y 19 m
  • Family, Flow, and Old Dawgs with Jeff Reilly (Episode 91)
    Dec 4 2025

    In this no-bullshido episode of Hoots on the Ground, Adam Hoots sits down with "Old Dog" Jeff Reilly—a devoted father, husband, and superintendent with Mill Creek Residential Trust whose leadership philosophy bridges family, craftsmanship, and continuous improvement. From his Boston union roots to leading modern Lean projects, Jeff shares how lessons from his ancestors, parents, and mentors shaped his mindset on respect, environment, and the true meaning of Kaizen.

    Together, Adam and Jeff dig deep into what it means to balance family, work, and wisdom in today's construction world. They explore how true leadership comes from presence—not just productivity—and why the best Lean builders know that mentors don't always know that they're mentors. From developing young leaders to honoring the OG Old Dawgs Buddy Brumley and Mondo 3K, this conversation reminds us that Lean is more than tools—it's a mindset built on humanity, humility, and legacy.

    Key Takeaways:

    • Family-First Leadership: Jeff draws strength from his union roots and family traditions, building teams the same way his parents built him: with presence, purpose, and pride.

    • Kaizen with Purpose: Lean isn't about checklists or buzzwords; it's about creating environments that respect people, improve daily, and flow with intention.

    • Mentors Matter: Every worker is conditioning someone else; be self-aware enough to model the example you wish you'd had.

    Key Quotes:

    • "Presence builds people. Productivity is just the result."

    • "Lean isn't tools—it's how you show up for your team."

    • "Your kids and your crew need the same thing: your time and your attention."

    • "Every Old Dawg was once a young pup watching someone else."

    • "Environment is leadership—design a space where people can succeed."

    ABOUT HOOTS ON THE GROUND PODCAST:

    The Lean Builder's absolutely, positively NO Bullshido podcast. Join host Adam Hoots and his guests as they dig deep into the topics that matter most to those in the field. With stories from the trenches, lessons learned, and plenty of laughter, this podcast is for the men and women doing the hands-on work of construction.

    RESOURCE LINKS MENTIONED IN THIS EPISODE:

    The Lean Builder — Blog, book, and field tools for Lean practitioners. (https://theleanbuilder.com/)

    This is Lean — Niklas Modig — A modern reframing of efficiency, flow, and value. (https://thisislean.com/)

    Old Dawg Lean Community — Wisdom-sharing group continuing Buddy Brumley's legacy. (https://www.skool.com/olddawg)

    LCI Congress — The annual gathering of Lean construction leaders shaping industry transformation. (https://congress.leanconstruction.org/)

    GUESTS FEATURED IN THIS EPISODE:

    Adam Hoots | Host of Hoots on the Ground and Lean Construction Shepherd with ConstructionACHEsolutions. (https://www.linkedin.com/in/adamhoots/)

    Jeff Reilly | Superintendent with Mill Creek Residential Trust, Old Dawg Lean Leader, and builder of teams, families, and better jobsite environments. (https://www.linkedin.com/in/jeff-reilly-640b66b9/)

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    1 h y 5 m
  • The Old Dawgs Live at LCI Congress (Episode 90)
    Oct 31 2025
    Recorded live inside the Lean Construction Institute's Live Podcast Booth at LCI Congress 2025, the Old Dawgs got together for an unfiltered, field‑first discussion. This fast‑moving conversation captures what decades of hard‑won (700+ years) experience have taught these seasoned Lean builders about the superiority of modern Lean construction methods over traditional methods. Led by podcast host Adam Hoots, this is one "Hoots on the Ground" episode you DO NOT want to miss! (And if you usually go audio-only for our podcasts, this one is one to WATCH – 12 Old Dawgs crammed into a podcast studio – you can see and feel the passion!) From the origins of Lean Construction to the latest experiments in production planning, the Old Dawgs trade war stories, share missteps, and reveal the practical moves that create flow, reliability, and above all respect for environments and people. You'll hear how they've adapted The Last Planner System® practices for tough schedules, why Takt thinking clarifies handoffs, and how real trust is built when leaders keep promises and elevate the voices of craft professionals. What the Old Dawgs get into during this podcast: The shift from "tools talk" to a people‑first culture that enables tools to work.How trust, psychological safety, and clear promises drive schedule reliability.Evolving Last Planner System behaviors (constraints removal, PPC as coaching, daily huddles that add value). Using Takt planning to simplify sequencing, stabilize labor, and reduce chaos at handoffs. Preconstruction to production: designing for flow, defining capacity, and right‑sizing batch sizes. Leadership on the deck: what foremen and supers need from project leaders to protect the crew's time. Respect for People in action: craft voice in planning, mental health, and creating environments where capability grows. Rapid‑fire reflections: the one behavior each Dawg would start tomorrow to improve team performance. Key takeaways include: Reliability is a relationship. When leaders make and keep clear promises, crews reciprocate—and schedules stabilize. Small, stable cadences beat heroics. Short planning horizons, visible commitments, and simple feedback loops win.Design for flow early. Define constraints and capacity in precon so production plans are realistic, not aspirational.Psych safety isn't "soft." It's the precondition for surfacing constraints, learning from misses, and improving PPC.Respect for people is the strategy. Elevating craft expertise and well‑being accelerates learning and performance. It's a lively, candid celebration of the Old Dawg community that continues to push the industry forward—reminding us that Lean is less about perfection and more about continuous learning, with dignity for the people doing the work. ABOUT HOOTS ON THE GROUND PODCAST: The Lean Builder's absolutely, positively NO Bullshido podcast. Join host Adam Hoots and his guests as they dig deep into the topics that matter most to those in the field. With stories from the trenches, lessons learned, and plenty of laughter, this podcast is for the men and women doing the hands-on work of construction. RESOURCE LINKS MENTIONED IN THIS EPISODE: The Lean Builder — Blog, book, and field resources for Lean practitioners.Old Dawgs Lean Community — www.skool.com/olddawgLCI Congress — https://congress.leanconstruction.org/ GUESTS FEATURED IN THIS EPISODE: Adam Hoots | LinkedIn — Host of Hoots on the Ground and Lean Construction Shepherd with ConstructionACHEsolutions. 12 Old Dawgs - too many to name, but we will... Boone White, ICM (Innovative Construction Management)Brian Chiles JE Dunn ConstructionDenver Watters, Pointcore ConstructionEmerson Dority, Turner Construction CompanyJames Gable, Adolfson & Peterson ConstructionJames Glass, Turner Construction CompanyJeff Reilly, Mill Creek ResidentialJordan Leytem, CoBuild ConstructionLR Weeden, Robins & Morton Manny Hoyo, SkanskaMike Chiles JE Dunn ConstructionSam Sinclair, Henson Robinson CompanyPlus, Justin, Jason, and Joe snuck in at the end.
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    55 m
  • Farm Boy Flow with a Bit of Grit with Boone White (Episode 89)
    Oct 2 2025
    In this no-bullshido episode, Adam Hoots chops it up with Mississippi's own Boone White, a farm-raised boy, Christ‑follower, husband, dad of three, and unapologetic agitator for change. He is a General Superintendent with ICM Construction in Oxford, Mississippi. Boone traces his path from the old "yell‑and‑cuss" era to a worker-first approach powered by Last Planner, Takt, and disciplined make-ready planning. From Houston to Mississippi, he breaks down how humility and curiosity, not just grit, unlock flow, safety, and calmer, more predictable jobs. The duo tackles integrating CPM/Takt/Last Planner, empowering trades to innovate, training the next wave of supers, and focusing on the real constraint: human-centered leadership. KEY TAKEAWAYS: Grit isn't a strategy; when paired with humility and curiosity, we can design a better workflow.CPM, Takt, and Last Planner can (and should) work together to plan for flow.The top constraint is leadership capacity: developing people, not just schedules.Celebrate field-driven improvements—innovation snowballs when it's recognized.Safer, cleaner, clearer sites = respect for people and better project outcomes. KEY QUOTES: "Grit gets you started; humility and curiosity get you flow.""When trades own the plan, safety and predictability show up.""CPM, Takt, and Last Planner aren't rivals—they're instruments in the same orchestra.""Clean, calm, and clear is what respect for people looks like in the field." RESOURCE LINKS MENTIONED: The Lean Builder | www.theleanbuilder.com | Blog, book, resources, and a hub for the lean construction community.LCI – Lean Construction Institute | www.leanconstruction.org | Training, events, and thought leadership.Outbuild | www.outbuild.com | Scheduling platform aligning Last Planner, CPM, and Takt. "The Goal: A Process of Ongoing Improvement" & "It's Not Luck: Marketing, Production, and The Theory of Constraints" — Eliyahu Goldratt | Theory of Constraints fundamentals."Radical Candor: Be a Kick-Ass Boss without Losing Your Humanity" — Kim Scott | Care personally, challenge directly."Bottleneck Rules: How to Get More Done (When Working Harder Isn't Working" — Clarke Ching | Practical focus on constraints. GUESTS FEATURED IN THIS EPISODE: Adam Hoots | LinkedIn | Podcast host for Hoots on the Ground and Lean Construction Shepherd with ConstructionACHEsolutions.Boone White | LinkedIn | General Superintendent with ICM Construction and an advocate for Lean Construction and worker-first leadership. ABOUT HOOTS ON THE GROUND PODCAST: The Lean Builder's absolutely, positively NO Bullshido podcast. Join host Adam Hoots and his guests as they dig deep into the topics that matter most to those in the field. With stories from the trenches, lessons learned, and plenty of laughter, this podcast is for the men and women doing the hands-on work of construction.
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    1 h y 11 m
  • The Selfish Servant with Jesse "Chuy" Hernandez (Episode 88)
    Sep 5 2025
    In this no-bullshido episode of Hoots on the Ground, host Adam Hoots reconnects with Jesse "Chuy" Hernandez—the plumber's son turned foreman, GC leader, consultant, author, and unapologetic "selfish servant." Jesse shares his journey from apprentice to industry thought leader, tying sobriety, service, and Lean thinking together. He breaks down his three leadership lessons—zoom level, time horizon, and lingo—and shows how those same gaps cause project failures. Adam and Jesse also tackle problem-solving, the power of listening with eyes and ears, the myth of the "indispensable superintendent," and why sometimes the fastest fix is deciding something isn't a problem. They preview the upcoming LCI Congress, scheduled for October 20-24, 2025, in Arlington, Texas, including Jesse's "Sweat Equity Improvement" workshop, and close with his next mission: training for a full Ironman to prove ordinary people can do extraordinary things. Key takeaways include: · Leadership maturity evolves through zoom level, time horizon, and lingo — meet people where they are, not where you want them to be. · The fastest way to solve a problem? Decide it's not a problem — and focus on the ones that truly matter. · Lean isn't about efficiency—it's about building people's problem-solving capabilities through improving work. · Listening with your eyes and ears is the highest-leverage technology in construction; forget the dashboards, pay attention to people. RESOURCE LINKS MENTIONED IN THIS EPISODE: · The Lean Builder | https://theleanbuilder.com/ | Blog, book, resources, and a hub for the lean construction community. · LCI – Lean Construction Institute | https://leanconstruction.org/ | Training, events, and thought leadership in Lean Construction. · LCI Congress 2025 | https://congress.leanconstruction.org/ | Annual gathering of lean-minded builders and leaders in Arlington, TX. · "Becoming the Promise You Are Intended to Be" by Jesse Hernandez | https://www.depthbuilder.com/books | Inspiring lessons on leadership, service, and growth. · "Lean in Love" by Jesse Hernandez and Jennifer Lacy | https://www.depthbuilder.com/books | Exploring Lean principles through the lens of human connection. · "Learnings and Missteps" Podcast, Hosted by Jesse Hernandez | https://www.learningsandmissteps.com/ | Featuring stories from the trades and beyond. · "Brace Me: The Lean Framework for Love and Leadership" by Sam Sinclair | https://www.amazon.com/BRACE-ME-Lean-Framework-Leadership/dp/B0FJJPJ34F | A superintendent's perspective on building, resilience, and leadership. GUESTS FEATURED IN THIS EPISODE: · Adam Hoots | LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/adamhoots/ | Podcast host for Hoots on the Ground and Lean Construction Shepherd with ConstructionACHEsolutions. · Jesse "Chewy" Hernandez | LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/jessedepthbuilder/ | Author, Speaker, Consultant, and Advocate for Human-Centered Leadership and Lean Construction. ABOUT HOOTS ON THE GROUND PODCAST:The Lean Builder's absolutely, positively NO Bullshido podcast. Join host Adam Hoots and his guests as they dig deep into topics that matter most to those in the field. With stories from the trenches, lessons learned, and plenty of laughter, this podcast is for the men and women doing the hands-on work of construction.
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    1 h y 7 m