Welcome to “If Walls Could Talk” where Walls & Ceilings magazine is out to discover just that.
Listen as W&C talks with influencers in the industry who are making an impact. We are helping educate and entertain the wall and ceiling industry as only W&C can do. What brought these people to the industry? What’s in store for the contractor? And “If Walls Could Talk,” what stories would they tell? Find out all of this and more on each episode.
Tom Harris, of Tom Harris PUR Consulting LLC, returns for another discussion with W&C.
Harris says contractors are missing an opportunity with insulation, spray foam, air barriers, WRBs, weatherstripping, caulking and more because it’s all about improving or maintaining the performance of the building envelope.
Ongoing supply issues facing contractors may be further complicated by human rights violations in China, warns Trent Cotney, partner at Adams and Reese.
WC Legal Insights Analyst Trent Cotney, of Adams and Reese, breaks down what roofing contractors need to know about having remote workers. Cotney also breaks down what roofers need to know about collections in the post-pandemic economy during this episode
In this episode of “Dear Anna,” Art Unlimited CEO Anna Anderson shares not one, but three ideas contractors can use to make sure their campaigns are firing on all cylinders and meeting goals.
How can contractors transmit their tool data with Nuron? Michael Neidow, executive vice president of Tool Services and Software at Hilti, tells us its really quite simple. It’s as simple as plugging your tool battery into charge. Sound too good to be true? Hear it from Neidow himself in this short podcast.
In this podcast, Trent Cotney of Adams and Reese gives a few brief tips on what contractors should know about arbitration as well as what to keep in mind if buying or selling a contracting company.
In this Legal Insights episode, Trent Cotney of Adams and Reese shares why the new independent contractor rule will impact the construction industry, some important dates to know and what contractors can do now to prepare.