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Business Services


Role-player



How to find the right employee for the job

By Matt McClellan


Smart Business Northern California | June 2008

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Roland Strick Jr.<BR /> owner, Service by Medallion
Roland Strick Jr.
owner, Service by Medallion

Roland Strick Jr. wants to make every moment count. The second-generation owner of Service by Medallion is growing his company at a steady pace, from $18.5 million in 2006 to $20 million in 2007, and he projects his building maintenance company will hit $25 million in revenue by 2009.

However, the company’s consistent growth, environmental initiatives and constantly changing industry are too much for one guy to keep up with on his own.

“You sit for four hours in a conference, and so many things can transpire in those four hours,” he says.

To keep it all straight, Strick relies on his management team to stay up to date on issues concerning his 600-plus employees.

Smart Business spoke with Strick about how to build a capable management team and how to find the right role for an employee.

Q. How do you build a strong management team?

Whether you’re a pro football team or a company, you’re always trying to produce the best team. The way that I do that is (by staying) in tune. Our industry is very unique; people that come from the outside don’t usually succeed or last, so I really try to stay in tune with industry people.

I court people. I build relationships. I feel out people and try to figure out who would be the right fit. Depending on what we’re trying to accomplish is where I go.

I look at running a company like being the quarterback of a football team. You’re leading, but everyone has their roles. You have to have everyone on the same page and feeling accountable for their roles.

I surround myself with people who are going to be better than me at that role. If I’m the quarterback, it doesn’t make sense for me to go play line-man. I try to find people for the right roles.

Q. How do you decide who will be the best fit for a role?

You move people. ‘Hey, you’re not really a running back, you’re a receiver, let’s get you out to receiver.’ It’s just trying to find the right fit.

The way I go about that is just intuition. It’s just picking people’s brains, talking to people in the industry or vendors.

Most of our company is organic in the sense that we have built these people. In the early stages, we didn’t have the budget to bring on the people we have today.

Now, with the growth, we’ve been having and at the level we’re working at, I’ve been able to hire some higher-level people and bring them in from the outside. But, for the most part, it’s teaching (employees) the business from scratch.

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