Bob Hildebranski is a licensed professional civil engineer with over 35 years of "in the dirt" construction and civil engineering experience. The show discusses tools, strategies and tactics that civil and construction engineers, technicians and project managers who work in the heavy civil and site development industry can use in their everyday work.
All content for The Construction Engineering Show is the property of Bob Hildebranski, PE and is served directly from their servers
with no modification, redirects, or rehosting. The podcast is not affiliated with or endorsed by Podjoint in any way.
Bob Hildebranski is a licensed professional civil engineer with over 35 years of "in the dirt" construction and civil engineering experience. The show discusses tools, strategies and tactics that civil and construction engineers, technicians and project managers who work in the heavy civil and site development industry can use in their everyday work.
Episode 21 - How many times do we find ourselves on-site, or in the field office, where we see something that we think could be improved? It could be a process that our team uses, or a manner that we communicate, or it could be something that we noticed on-site during operations that, if tweaked, could improve a work element. As listener Patrick asked "When is it worth it to take initiative?"
In this episode of The Construction Engineering Show, I dive into the question. I think that we should always be looking for opportunities where improvements could be made. But, we need to always be ready for a negative response for various reasons that we may or may not have thought about.
Keep the questions coming - I enjoy hearing from you!
LinkedIn: Bob Hildebranski, PE
Website: Hildebranski.com
Contact Page Link
The Construction Engineering Show
Bob Hildebranski is a licensed professional civil engineer with over 35 years of "in the dirt" construction and civil engineering experience. The show discusses tools, strategies and tactics that civil and construction engineers, technicians and project managers who work in the heavy civil and site development industry can use in their everyday work.