From Engineer To Award-Winning Remodeler | Rob Stephenson
Send us a text What happens when you lose everything in 2008—and still choose to pay everyone back? Rob Stephenson rebuilt not just a business, but a reputation that now wins national NARI COTY awards. Summary: Rob Stephenson, founder of Stephenson Construction, shares how leaving engineering, moonlighting in rental units, and surviving the 2008 collapse shaped his disciplined, integrity-first approach to design-build. We unpack his early pivots from art and engineering, learning the trades out of necessity, brand lessons from Target, and how a move to Atlanta unlocked new opportunity. Rob breaks down practical pricing, cash flow, licensing, and client selection—plus a DIY cautionary tale involving a wet metal roof, no tie-off, and a painful lesson learned. 🎥 Watch the full episode on YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/@TheSmallBusinessSafari 💡 GOLD NUGGETS • How growing up in Philadelphia sparked his love for home projects • Art vs. engineering at Tuskegee — and the early career pivots that followed • Learning every trade through rental-unit trial by fire • Building the first spec home, licensing insights, and partnership lessons • The 2008 crash: overleverage, failure, and choosing integrity over shortcuts • Moving to Atlanta and how Target taught him branding discipline • Building a design-build team that wins national COTY awards • Story proof: why case studies beat sales pitches • Cash flow, pricing, and client fit — practical rules that keep you alive • Quickfire picks: E-Myth for Contractors, basements, and service pet peeves • DIY disaster: the wet metal roof and the importance of safety tie-offs 🔗 Guest Links • Website: https://www.stephensonconstructionllc.com • NARI Directory: Search “Stephenson Construction” on NARI.org https://www.linkedin.com/in/rsstephenson/ 🌍 Follow The Small Business Safari • Instagram | @smallbusinesssafaripodcast • LinkedIn | https://www.linkedin.com/in/chrislalomia/ • Website | https://chrislalomia.com From the Zoo to Wild is a book for entrepreneurs passionate about home services, looking to move away from corporate jobs. Chris Lalomia, a former executive, shares his path, discoveries, and tools to succeed as a small business owner in home improvement retail. The book provides the mindset, habits, leadership style, and customer-oriented processes necessary to succeed as a small business owner in home services.
From "The Small Business Safari"
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