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GBA Podcast
Geoprofessional Business Association
65 episodes
14 hours ago
Welcome to the GBA Podcast, where we present information and expertise from geoprofessionals around the globe to provide you with wisdom and insight to help in your pursuit of knowledge.   GBA was founded over 50 years ago to serve geotechnical, environmental, and other geoprofessionals by giving them proven tools to achieve business success by confronting risk and optimizing performance.
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All content for GBA Podcast is the property of Geoprofessional Business Association 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.
Welcome to the GBA Podcast, where we present information and expertise from geoprofessionals around the globe to provide you with wisdom and insight to help in your pursuit of knowledge.   GBA was founded over 50 years ago to serve geotechnical, environmental, and other geoprofessionals by giving them proven tools to achieve business success by confronting risk and optimizing performance.
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Business
Education,
News,
Business News
Episodes (20/65)
GBA Podcast
First Word - November 2025

Summary

On the first of each month, GBA Executive Director Joel Carson provides an inside look at the latest GBA member resources, events, and news. These short and information-packed videos will make you and your firm smarter, stronger, and more successful!

Links to resources referenced in this video:

  • 2026 Annual Conference Info and Registration

  • Woodward L. Vogt Project Excellence Award

  • New Publication: Some General Guidelines for Geotechnical Specifications

  • NEWSlog Archive

  • NEWSlog Signup

  • GeoHeroes podcast episode with guest Joel Carson

  • GeoHeroes podcast episode with guest Guy Marcozzi

  • 2025 Fall Leadership Summit

Show more...
1 day ago
9 minutes 10 seconds

GBA Podcast
GeoHeroes - Guy Marcozzi

GeoHeroes - Guy Marcozzi

About This Episode
In this episode Ryan White, PE, GE, F.ASCE, turns the tables in this interview of GeoHeroes host Guy Marcozzi, PE, D.GE, LEED AP BD+C, former GBA president, who shares his journey from suburban Delaware kid to geotechnical engineering CEO. Guy reveals the surprising truth behind most successful careers: there was no grand plan. From collecting payments on his childhood paper route to leading Duffield Associates, Inc. as CEO, Guy's path was shaped by persistence, listening, and seizing opportunities as they arose. He reflects on launching the GeoHeroes podcast, what he's learned from interviewing industry legends, and why not having everything figured out might be the best career advice of all.

About Our Guest
Guy Marcozzi, PE, D.GE, LEED AP BD+C, is a GBA past-president and an experienced CEO, President and Board Member with a demonstrated history of working in the engineering, science and data technology industries and in leadership for various boards of ESOP, non-profit, professional and business organizations.

Our Host
Ryan White, PE, GE, F.ASCE, is a principal geotechnical engineer at Apex in Portland and the geotechnical engineering group manager. Ryan has over 28 years of geotechnical engineering experience leading groups, teams and managing projects. He has managed projects throughout Oregon, Washington, California, Arizona, New Mexico, Texas, New Jersey, North Carolina and Florida. He has experience with commercial and municipal development, design for low- to mid-rise buildings, bridge foundations, roads, landslide evaluation and stabilization, retaining wall design and construction, solar energy and land development. Ryan is the current chair of GBA's multimedia delivery committee and one of the committee's founding members. Ryan helped develop the GBA Podcast as part of class 4 of the Emerging Leaders.

Show Notes

Introduction

  • Special "tables turned" episode with Guy Marcozzi being interviewed by podcast producer Ryan White
  • Guy: Retired consulting engineer living in Rehoboth Beach, Delaware
  • Career spanned structural and geotechnical engineering
  • Married to wife Tina for 37 years
  • Three children, all engineers but none in geoprofessions

Early Life and Education

  • Grew up in post-war suburban Delaware, 10 miles outside Wilmington
  • Childhood characterized by unstructured outdoor play with kids of all ages
  • One of four children in working-class family
  • Father was contractor, mother stay-at-home mom
  • Could only participate in organized sports within biking distance
  • Paper route at age 12 taught lessons about persistence and collecting payment
  • Started working construction with father's crew at age 14
  • Good but not great student - performed well in math and science without trying hard
  • First-generation college student
  • Attended University of Delaware (less than 10 miles from home)
  • Never moved far - now lives 82 miles south in Rehoboth Beach

Career Path

  • Started career as structural engineer
  • Transitioned to geotechnical engineering
  • Former CEO of Duffield Associates, Inc.
  • Former president of Geoprofessional Business Association (GBA)
  • Admits: "I never really had a plan"
  • Always focused on whatever opportunity was in front of him

Leadership

  • Core trait: Reliability - "I've always been the person that wants to do what I say I'm gonna do"
  • Innate driver to complete project assignments and commitments
  • Early career: Very task-driven and outcome-focused
  • Key transition: Understanding "what got you here won't get you there"
  • Realized scaling comes from other people and how you interface with them
  • Development of empathy as leadership superpower:
    • Looking at situations from other people's perspectives
    • Understanding clients have bosses too - they're judged on their hiring decisions
    • If you deliver well, they look good; if you're late or over budget, it's a demerit against them
    • "It was like a social contract - you've honored me by picking us to do this and now it's my obligation to help you be successful"
  • Success formula with clients: No surprises, stay on budget, stay on time
  • Leading teams through empathy:
    • Recognizing people at different life stages (new parents, getting married, going through divorce, relocating)
    • Noticed people getting married were distracted for 6 months leading up - "that was cool, you're getting married, it's a big deal"
    • Early mindset: "I don't care if you get married, you have to get this job done" - admits this wasn't the right approach
    • Better approach: See who you're interacting with and understand where they're coming from
    • Working better as a team leads to scaling and leverage
  • Actively developed these capabilities in last half of career
  • Philosophy: Make your client look good to their boss, and it bodes well for you

The Geoprofessional Landscape

  • Current state: Many fundamentals remain unchanged (still driving SPT samplers despite technology advances)
  • Change happens slowly but profession is starting to rapidly change
  • Future vision - Two key areas:
    • Data as a service
    • High-level client consulting:
      • Being the "client psychologist" - understanding real deeper needs beyond immediate requests
      • Providing higher value consultation at strategic level
  • Data sharing challenges
  • Why geoprofessionals are well-suited for this evolution
  • Skills developed in geoprofession translate well

Life Advice

  • "Don't get too upset if you don't have the grand plan"
  • Stay focused on what's in front of you
  • Do well at what you're doing
  • Keep your eyes open for other opportunities
  • Take advantage of opportunities as they arise

Speed Round

  • Favorite Book: Sapiens by Yuval Noah Harari
  • Optimism index: 5 out of 5; GBA helps push necessary changes. Caveat: "We need to recognize that change and make it happen"
  • Proudest accomplishments:
    • Structures he designed (as structural engineer) that he can still point to today
    • Success at Duffield Associates/McKim & Creed and bonds with leadership team
  • What he'd change:
    • Would have emphasized people/relationships earlier in career
    • Less outcome-focused, more people-focused from the start
  • Advice for young professionals:
    • Get involved in organizations outside your company throughout your career
    • Learn leadership in volunteer/non-hierarchical settings
    • Build diverse networks for learning (not selling)
    • Don't worry about having a grand plan - focus on what's in front of you and stay open to opportunities

Final Thoughts

  • Expresses gratitude to all podcast guests for taking the risk
  • Appreciates that people shared their stories despite uncertainty about how it would be received
  • Selection of season one interviewees "wasn't random" but based on who was available
  • Final message to listeners: Thanks core audience for sticking with the podcast

Calls-to-action:

  • Visit the GBA Website at https://www.geoprofessional.org for other training resources and reference materials and/or to become a member.
  • Visit https://www.gbapodcast.com for future podcast episodes
  • Contact us at info@geoprofessional.org with any podcast-related questions or comments

Subscribe

  • Subscribe to the GBA Podcast https://www.gbapodcast.com/subscribe

This episode was produced by the following GBA Members:

  • Ryan White, PE, GE – Principal Geotechnical Engineer/Apex
Show more...
1 week ago
57 minutes 17 seconds

GBA Podcast
GeoHeroes - Joel Carson

GeoHeroes - Joel Carson

About This Episode
In this episode Guy Marcozzi interviews Joel Carson, Executive Director of the Geoprofessional Business Association (GBA) about his inspiring journey from driller's helper to industry leader. Joel shares how childhood relocations with his Bechtel engineer father—including walking through BART tunnels under construction—shaped his resilience and adaptability. Discover his unconventional path through 25+ years of consulting, the spontaneous "maybe" that changed his career trajectory, and why he believes geoprofessionals make the world better every single day. Packed with leadership insights, honest reflections on the roads not taken, and a passionate vision for the profession's future, this conversation reveals what it truly means to lead with purpose.

About Our Guest
Joel Carson is the Executive Director of the Geoprofessional Business Association (GBA), where he has championed business success for geoprofessionals for over a decade. With 25+ years of consulting experience, his career spans from driller's helper to division manager overseeing 20 offices across 10 states at Kleinfelder. Born into an engineering family, Joel developed early appreciation for infrastructure. His entrepreneurial spirit led him to launch new practice areas and manage national accounts. A passionate industry advocate, Joel believes geoprofessionals make the world better every single day through their commitment to human health and safety.

Our Host
Guy Marcozzi, PE, D.GE, LEED AP BD+C, is a GBA past-president and an experienced CEO, President and Board Member with a demonstrated history of working in the engineering, science and data technology industries and in leadership for various boards of ESOP, non-profit, professional and business organizations.

Show Notes

Introduction

  • Joel Carson, Executive Director of the Geoprofessional Business Association (GBA)
  • Has led GBA for 10+ years
  • Previously a geoprofessional consultant for 25+ years

Early Life and Education

  • Born in San Francisco, California (mother was fourth-generation San Franciscan)
  • Father worked for Bechtel Corporation on major infrastructure projects
  • Early memory: walking through BART tunnel construction with his father
  • Grew up with five siblings (Wayne, Brad, Jill, Carol, and Mary)
  • Family relocated every 3-4 years to small towns across the U.S. (Rock Springs WY, Crystal City MO, Delta UT)
  • Moving frequently taught him to adapt to new situations and overcome challenges
  • Attended University of Utah, chose civil engineering (initially focused on transportation)
  • Originally wanted to be a city engineer in a small town

Career Path

  • First job: found via index card on corkboard at University of Utah engineering department
  • Started as driller's helper on the back of a drill rig (late 1980s, during Underground Storage Tank Act)
  • Progressed through: field work → lab work → project management → national account management
  • Discovered entrepreneurial side: wrote business plan to start environmental practice in Boise office
  • Moved family to Boise, Idaho to launch new department
  • Managed national account for Albertsons across Western U.S.
  • 22+ years with Kleinfelder, progressing through leadership roles:
    • Washington state operations manager (Seattle area)
    • Regional manager (Omaha, Nebraska - 4 states)
    • Division manager (20 offices across 10 states)
  • Needed change every 3-4 years to stay engaged throughout career
  • Told CEO "I want your job" - led to strategic career guidance
  • Spontaneously said "maybe" during board meeting discussion - changed career trajectory
  • Applied for GBA Executive Director role alongside 69 other candidates

Leadership

  • Greatest satisfaction came from leading people, not completing projects
  • Views helping others reach their full potential as "the biggest gift"
  • Communication is the most critical competency for geoprofessionals (written and verbal)
  • Used "Endurance: Shackleton's Incredible Voyage" for year-long leadership study with team
  • Key mentor: the person who wrote that first job posting index card
    • Worked together at multiple companies
    • Provided opportunities and support throughout early career

The Geoprofessional Landscape

Changes Over Time:

  • Technology dramatically improved efficiency (hand-drawn plans → digital tools)
  • Manual data collection → remote sensing and automation
  • AI emerging as potential next disruptor
  • Industry consolidation from small firms to mega firms

Core Competencies (Then and Now):

  • Communication skills remain most important
  • Communication doesn't come naturally to many engineers - requires intentional development

Future Opportunities:

  • Climate change (multiple aspects)
  • Urbanization and population consolidation
  • Eroding infrastructure (U.S. receives poor grades)
  • Increasing energy demands

Optimism Level:

  • Highly bullish on the profession
  • "There will always be a need for the geoprofessions"
  • Wherever there's soil, rock, water, and air - geoprofessionals are needed

Life Advice

  • Core message: Recognize the value and honor of the geoprofessional profession
  • "Every day you go home from work, the world is a little better place because a geoprofessional was working that day"
  • Work directly impacts human health and safety for current and future generations
  • Focus on developing communication skills continuously
  • Embrace discomfort and new challenges
  • Pursue operational experience beyond technical expertise

Speed Round

  • Favorite Book: Good to Great by Jim Collins; Endurance: Shackleton's Incredible Voyage
  • Optimism index: 5 out of 5 (extremely optimistic); Geoprofessionals are critical to society and always will be
  • Proudest accomplishments: Leading and developing people to reach their full potential
  • What he'd change: Wondered about starting a consulting firm focused on green building, chose family stability instead
  • Advice for young professionals: Recognize the impacts you have, this is an honorable profession critical to human health and safety; Your daily work makes the world better for current and future generations

Final Thoughts

  • Joel expressed gratitude for being part of the GeoHeroes podcast series
  • Called for Season 2 to continue elevating geoprofessionals' stories
  • Emphasized importance of celebrating the people doing geoprofessional work every day

Calls-to-action:

  • Visit the GBA Website at https://www.geoprofessional.org for other training resources and reference materials and/or to become a member.
  • Visit https://www.gbapodcast.com for future podcast episodes
  • Contact us at info@geoprofessional.org with any podcast-related questions or comments

Subscribe

  • Subscribe to the GBA Podcast https://www.gbapodcast.com/subscribe

This episode was produced by the following GBA Members:

  • Ryan White, PE, GE – Principal Geotechnical Engineer/Apex
Show more...
3 weeks ago
43 minutes 53 seconds

GBA Podcast
First Word - October 2025

Summary

On the first of each month, GBA Executive Director Joel Carson provides an inside look at the latest GBA member resources, events, and news. These short and information-packed videos will make you and your firm smarter, stronger, and more successful!

Links to resources referenced in this video:

  • New Business Brief: Using AI & Automation to Solve Geoprofessional Workforce Challenges (Crystal Ball Workshop)

  • New Business Brief: Insurance Coverage for AI-Related Risks

  • 2025 Photo Contest Winners

  • GeoHeroes podcast episode with guest Dan Schaefer

  • GeoHeroes podcast episode with guest Steve Wendland

  • GBA Case History podcast: Case History #110

  • Early Professional Class Graduates

  • Early Professional Class Nominations

  • 2025 Fall Leadership Summit Details and Registration

  • 2026 Annual Conference Information

Show more...
1 month ago
7 minutes 58 seconds

GBA Podcast
GeoHeroes - Steve Wendland

GeoHeroes - Steve Wendland

About This Episode
In this episode Guy Marcozzi interviews Steve Wendland, PE, PG, BC.GE of Bedrock GeoConsult about his journey from dirt-eating toddler to geotechnical expert perfectly embodies the phrase "you are what you eat." Raised in a blue-collar Kansas City family, Steve transformed childhood fascination with soil into a 40-year engineering career spanning international power projects across the world. After navigating corporate management roles at Black & Veatch and Kleinfelder—and discovering they weren't his calling—Steve found success as a self-employed consultant specializing in legal claims and contractor services. He shares candid insights about industry commoditization, the critical importance of communication skills, and why the technical career path offers a rewarding alternative to traditional management tracks for geoprofessionals.

About Our Guest
Steve Wendland, PE, PG, BC.GE, started Bedrock GeoConsult in 2022 to provide expert geotechnical engineering and engineering geology consulting services in the central USA. He helps contractors, owners, legal counsel, and design teams overcome concerns with geotechnical aspects of their projects by providing third-party peer reviews, independent guidance, construction engineering support services, and expert evaluations. He also conducts geotechnical forensic analyses of structures that have been impacted by expansive clay, soft foundation bearing materials, groundwater, or poor construction. These forensic analyses include a variety of failed retaining walls, cut slopes, embankments, foundations, and floor slabs. Previously, he was the national Director of Geotechnical Engineering for Kleinfelder.

Our Host
Guy Marcozzi, PE, D.GE, LEED AP BD+C, is a GBA past-president and an experienced CEO, President and Board Member with a demonstrated history of working in the engineering, science and data technology industries and in leadership for various boards of ESOP, non-profit, professional and business organizations.

Show Notes

Introduction

  • Steve Wendland, geotechnical engineer and owner of Bedrock GeoConsult
  • Self-employed for 3 years, providing geotechnical services to general contractors
  • Expert geotechnical work for legal claims
  • Lives in Kansas City with wife Molly (married 35 years), two daughters, grandchildren

Early Life and Education

  • Grew up in blue-collar Kansas City suburb, youngest of four children
  • Parents were Depression-era children who emphasized hard work and self-reliance
  • Father: factory worker whose education ended at age 10 due to Depression
  • Mother: school lunch lady at public schools Steve attended
  • Early interests: Lego building, creating cities in backyard "dirt pile" (later learned it was loess soil)
  • First job: Age 14 in school cafeteria, working before school started daily
  • High school: Worked 3 years at Dairy Queen, played baseball and basketball
  • College guidance: Math teacher told him "you're going to be an engineer" and attend University of Missouri at Rolla
  • Bachelor's degree: Geological engineering, University of Missouri at Rolla (1986)
  • Master's degree: Civil/geotechnical engineering, University of Texas at Austin
  • Key college decision: Joined Sigma Chi fraternity (calls it "one of the best decisions I ever made")

Career Path

  • Black & Veatch (11 years): Power division, geotechnical work for power plants and transmission lines
    • Extensive international travel (Thailand, Guatemala, Argentina, Turkey, Pakistan, Taiwan)
    • Promoted to management in 1996 (found it stressful and unsuitable)
  • Geosystems Engineering (1999-2002): Engineering manager, became partner
    • First exposure to ASFE/GBA
    • Sold firm to Kleinfelder in 2002
  • Kleinfelder (2002-2006): Area manager for Kansas City operations (60 employees)
    • Left due to management stress and dislike of operational responsibilities
  • Small local firm (2006-2011): Opened Kansas City office, worked through Great Recession
  • Kleinfelder return (2011-2021): Technical roles only
    • Retaining wall practice leader (nationwide position)
    • National geotechnical director (overseeing 220 engineers)
  • Self-employed (2021-present): Bedrock GeoConsult

Leadership

  • Management philosophy: Discovered management roles didn't suit his temperament
  • Key insight: Technical career path is viable alternative to management track
  • Relationship building: Defended general contractor at meeting, leading to 20-year client relationship with JE Dunn Construction
  • Golden rule approach: Treat everyone well regardless of hierarchy position
  • Expertise development: Made himself indispensable by becoming technical expert in areas firms needed

The Geoprofessional Landscape

Changes Over Career:

  • Computerized drafting and word processing eliminated many drafters and typists
  • Internet, email, and global telecommunications revolutionized field communication
  • Firm consolidation - many great geotechnical firms from 30 years ago no longer exist

Constants That Remain:

  • Shear strength and effective stress fundamentals
  • Importance of treating people well (Golden Rule)
  • Critical need for strong communication skills

Future Opportunities:

  • Ground improvement technologies to reduce expensive deep foundation needs
  • General contractors hiring more engineers in-house
  • Transition from paper drawings to augmented/virtual reality for project visualization

Industry Concerns:

  • Continued commoditization and poor quality work damaging profession
  • Contractors don't trust geotechnical information (especially groundwater predictions)
  • Geotechnical engineers often not considered part of design team after report completion

Life Advice

Communication Skills (Highest priority):

  • Take formal training (Dale Carnegie courses)
  • Practice through presentations to professional societies
  • Both oral and written communication require deliberate development

Career Development:

  • Make yourself a technical expert in areas your firm needs
  • Don't assume management is the only path to success
  • Consider self-employment earlier if you have technical expertise

Professional Growth:

  • Learn from mistakes rather than avoiding them
  • Seek mentoring opportunities and provide mentoring to others
  • Stay engaged with design teams throughout project lifecycle

Speed Round

  • Favorite Book: Hyperion by Dan Simmons; Bible
  • Optimism index: 3 out of 5
  • Proudest accomplishments:
    • Mentoring younger engineers who still use lessons years later
    • Technical guidance that continues to benefit former colleagues
  • What he'd change:
    • Become self-employed sooner (considered it in 2010, should have done it by 2016)
    • Lesson learned: Good technical work creates opportunities even without aggressive business development
  • Advice for young professionals:
    • Focus on communication skills development
    • Build technical expertise proactively
    • Trust that opportunities will emerge for prepared professionals

Final Thoughts

  • Learning from mistakes: Essential in risky geotechnical work
  • Importance of quality: Poor work continues to damage entire industry reputation
  • Value of persistence: Bosses who chose to teach rather than fire after mistakes
  • GBA connection: Became involved through Joel Carson when Kleinfelder needed representation after Carson became GBA executive director

Key Takeaway:

Technical excellence combined with strong communication skills provides foundation for successful geotechnical career, whether in management or technical track.

Calls-to-action:

  • Visit the GBA Website at https://www.geoprofessional.org for other training resources and reference materials and/or to become a member.
  • Visit https://www.gbapodcast.com for future podcast episodes
  • Contact us at info@geoprofessional.org with any podcast-related questions or comments

Subscribe

  • Subscribe to the GBA Podcast https://www.gbapodcast.com/subscribe

This episode was produced by the following GBA Members:

  • Ryan White, PE, GE – Principal Geotechnical Engineer/Apex
Show more...
1 month ago
47 minutes 55 seconds

GBA Podcast
GeoHeroes - Dan Schaefer

GeoHeroes - Dan Schaefer

About This Episode
In this episode Guy Marcozzi interviews Dan Schaefer, PE, Vice President of Operations at Froehling & Robertson, Inc. who shares his remarkable 35-year journey that started as a construction-obsessed kid reading "Mike Mulligan and The Steam Shovel." Schaefer discusses how early mentorship shaped his career, his evolution from a demanding manager to an empathetic leader, and his optimistic vision for tackling the geoprofession's workforce crisis. He advocates for embracing technology while expanding beyond traditional hiring practices, emphasizing that not every role requires an engineering degree. This episode is packed with practical advice on finding mentors, managing complexity, and maintaining perspective throughout a demanding but rewarding career.

About Our Guest
Dan Schaefer, PE, has more than 30 years of experience specializing in geotechnical engineering, construction inspection and materials testing, and environmental consulting. In addition to his branch management duties, he continues to serve as a senior engineer on a wide variety of site development, building, and transportation projects with particular emphasis in foundation, retaining wall, pavement and slope design. Dan is actively involved with the Geoprofessional Business Association (GBA) and has been a member of the GBA CoMET Business Committee for more than 15 years, and is currently serving as GBA's President-elect.

Our Host
Guy Marcozzi, PE, D.GE, LEED AP BD+C, is a GBA past-president and an experienced CEO, President and Board Member with a demonstrated history of working in the engineering, science and data technology industries and in leadership for various boards of ESOP, non-profit, professional and business organizations.

Show Notes

Introduction

  • Dan Schaefer, VP of Operations at Froehling & Robertson
  • Based in Raleigh Durham Chapel Hill area, North Carolina
  • 35 years with F&R

Early Life and Education

  • Grew up in Rochester, New York
  • Loved outdoor activities: biking, camping, boating, canoeing, sailing, fishing
  • Childhood fascination with construction books: "Who Built The Highway?", "Mike Mulligan and The Steam Shovel"
  • High school jobs: dishwasher/server at Italian restaurant, wilderness camp counselor
  • Camp counselor at canoe tripping camp in Algonquin Park, Canada
  • Originally planned to be math teacher
  • Dad's client suggested civil engineering - combined math, outdoors, and building interests

Career Path

  • Summer job as engineering technician at Empire Soils in Rochester during junior year
  • Hired full-time at Empire Soils headquarters in Groton, NY after graduation
  • Spent 5 formative years learning under mentors Bent Thomsen and Charlie Gaynor
  • Moved to North Carolina in 1990 following girlfriend (economic reasons too)
  • Interviewed with 3 firms, received 3 offers, chose Froehling & Robertson
  • 35 years at F&R progressing from field work to VP of Operations
  • Early exposure to ASFE/GBA through Empire Soils membership

Leadership

  • Initially modeled tough, direct management style after mentor Charlie Gaynor
  • Turning point: employee feedback "You'll get more out of me if you don't push me so hard"
  • Learned to adapt management style to individual motivations
  • Focus on mentorship, leading by example, and "client building through office operation building"
  • High employee retention as validation of leadership approach
  • Philosophy: Help people focus on one task at a time to manage overwhelming workloads

The Geoprofessional Landscape

  • Biggest industry challenge: workforce development and staffing shortages
  • Technology has revolutionized data transfer from field to office/clients
  • Core competencies remain critical: problem-solving, engineering judgment, human communication
  • Future requires embracing technology AND non-traditional staffing approaches
  • Questions whether all project roles require engineering degrees
  • Industry has consistently shown resilience and adaptability through disruptions
  • 10-year outlook: similar fundamental work with advanced AI and more diverse workforce

Life Advice

  • Proactively find mentors if organization doesn't provide them
  • Attach yourself to people you respect and can learn from
  • Stay humble and seek continuous learning
  • Get out of comfort zone but "explore the margins" rather than jumping recklessly
  • Focus on immediate priorities - "can't do two things well at the same time"
  • Put aside noise and concentrate on current task

Speed Round

  • Favorite Book: A Short History of Nearly Everything by Bill Bryson
  • Optimism index: 4 out of 5 (very optimistic about industry future)
  • Biggest Professional Impact: Client building through training and mentoring people
  • What he'd change: Get more formal training in people management earlier in career
  • Advice for young professionals: Find someone you respect and can learn from, attach yourself to them

Final Thoughts

  • GBA involvement has been a career highlight
  • Importance of having fun along the way in your career
  • Balance working hard with enjoying the challenging times

Calls-to-action:

  • Visit the GBA Website at https://www.geoprofessional.org for other training resources and reference materials and/or to become a member.
  • Visit https://www.gbapodcast.com for future podcast episodes
  • Contact us at info@geoprofessional.org with any podcast-related questions or comments

Subscribe

  • Subscribe to the GBA Podcast https://www.gbapodcast.com/subscribe

This episode was produced by the following GBA Members:

  • Ryan White, PE, GE – Principal Geotechnical Engineer/Apex
Show more...
1 month ago
39 minutes 30 seconds

GBA Podcast
#110 - Case History - Suspiciously Variable Test Results? Take a Closer Look...

GBA Case History Series – Case History #110 - Suspiciously variable test results? Take a closer look... the sooner the better

Summary

The public-school district (the “District”) retained the Member Firm to perform geotechnical-engineering studies for several buildings at two sites. The Member Firm’s geotechnical reports both contained identical recommendations for “select” fill to be used in constructing the building pads for the schools.

The District retained different design teams for the two schools and the Project Specifications for the two schools, not surprisingly, differed significantly. Neither were completely consistent with the recommendations that the Member Firm provided in their geotechnical-engineering report.

A field representative testing compaction of the building pad fill identified inconsistencies and discovered onsite mixing of native soil with import material, a clear violation of the geotechnical recommendations. The earthwork sub-contractor was forced to remove and replace the structural fill for nearly all of completed pads which triggered a legal dispute. The Member Firm avoided losses emphasizing the importance of field representatives that knew project specifications, observed daily field activities closely, and communicated with project management to identify construction defects and potential risks.

Our Hosts:

  • Elizabeth Brown, PE - Principal Geotechnical Engineer/JLT Consultants

Elizabeth is the Principal Geotechnical Engineer at JLT Consultants in Boise, Idaho. Elizabeth has performed and/or assisted with numerous geotechnical investigations throughout Idaho, Oregon, Washington, and Wyoming managing projects, providing geotechnical design, project quality control, cost and value engineering, and evaluating geotechnical constructability issues.

  • Abi Corbett – Project Consultant/SME.

Abi is a Project Consultant at SME experienced in managing a variety of steel, concrete, coatings, and nondestructive testing projects. She specializes in managing projects related to DOT fabrication quality assurance reviews but also supports project managers throughout SME’s various service groups.

Lessons Learned:

  • Project Risk Is Inversely Proportional to Project Size and Complexity, and Budget
  • Trust Your Gut
  • If You See Something, Say Something
  • Half a Loaf Isn’t Always Better than None
  • Protect Yourself. Don’t Rely on Others
  • Words Matter
  • Opposing Legal Counsel Is an Advocate.
  • Claims Are a Business Issue

Calls-to-action:

  • Download Case History #110
  • Visit the following link to access all of GBA’s Case Histories: https://www.geoprofessional.org/gba-case-histories/
  • An account is required to download the individual Case Histories, which are free for GBA Member Firms.
  • Visit the GBA Website at https://www.geoprofessional.org for other training resources and reference materials and/or to become a member.
  • Visit https://www.gbapodcast.com for future Podcast Episodes
  • Contact us at info@geoprofessional.org with any podcast-related questions or comments

Subscribe

  • Subscribe to the GBA Podcast https://www.gbapodcast.com/subscribe

This episode was produced by the following GBA Members:

  • Abi Corbett – Project Consultant/SME.
  • Elizabeth Brown, PE - Principal Geotechnical Engineer/JLT Consultants
  • Ryan White, PE, GE – Principal Geotechnical Engineer/Apex Companies, LLC
Show more...
2 months ago
33 minutes 14 seconds

GBA Podcast
GeoHeroes - Rich Johnson

GeoHeroes - Rich Johnson

About This Episode
In this episode Guy Marcozzi interviews Rich Johnson, PG, CEG, CHG, former CEO of BSK Associates about his unconventional journey from competitive swimmer to geoprofessional leader. Johnson discusses his accidental discovery of geology, rise through the ranks by embracing every challenge, and transformation of a founder-driven firm into a systematized business. He offers candid insights on leadership, the changing work ethic of younger professionals, and concerns about over-reliance on technology. Johnson emphasizes the critical importance of investing personal time in career development, building professional relationships, and maintaining foundational knowledge. His practical advice centers on going beyond expectations and leveraging organizations like GBA for career advancement.

About Our Guest
Rich Johnson, PG, CEG, CHG, served as CEO of BSK Associates for 16 years (2006-2022), transforming the California-based consulting engineering firm into a premier employee-owned company with nearly 200 staff members. Under his leadership, BSK achieved "Great Place to Work" certification and became a 100% Employee Stock Ownership Plan company.

Johnson's path began when he discovered geology at Chico State University. He started his professional career as a laboratory technician and progressed through project management and leadership roles, distinguished by his advocacy for business systems and employee development.

Now serving as Principal Geologist, Johnson focuses on mentorship and risk management. A licensed Professional Geologist with over four decades of experience, he advocates for foundational learning and professional organization involvement.

Our Host
Guy Marcozzi, PE, D.GE, LEED AP BD+C, is a GBA past-president and an experienced CEO, President and Board Member with a demonstrated history of working in the engineering, science and data technology industries and in leadership for various boards of ESOP, non-profit, professional and business organizations.

Show Notes

Introduction

  • Former CEO of BSK Associates (California-based geotech firm)
  • Now retired and "living the life"
  • Does part-time board work

Early Life and Education

  • Grew up in Walnut Creek, California (East Bay)
  • Childhood spent in walnut orchards with lots of outdoor exploration
  • Competitive swimmer age 6-18 at community pool
  • Worked as lifeguard and swim instructor
  • Eventually grew to dislike swimming from overexposure
  • Attended parochial school through 6th grade (reading at 8th grade level)
  • Transitioned to public school for junior high
  • Started college as PE (physical education) major at Chico State
  • Discovered geology through required general studies class
  • Two uncles were geologists - influenced his interest
  • Changed major to geology, graduated with bachelor's degree

Career Path

  • Entered job market during oil industry bust
  • Got first job as lab technician through pool connection (Forest Service contact)
  • Started at small geotech firm doing engineering geology
  • Learned from mentors who explained context and importance of work
  • Progressed from lab tech to field work to project management
  • Left first firm when owner became problematic expert witness
  • Brief stint at Dames and Moore (13 months in Fresno)
  • Joined BSK Associates doing environmental and engineering geology
  • Became Sacramento branch manager when previous manager left
  • Pushed for better project management software and tools
  • Rose through ranks: branch manager → environmental services director → board member → CEO (2006)
  • Became licensed professional geologist

Leadership

  • Key CEO skills: listening, big picture thinking, empathy, interest in people
  • Don't overreact to daily setbacks
  • Transformed BSK from founder-driven to systematized business
  • Implemented tools, processes, employee development programs
  • Achieved "best places to work" recognition
  • Company became 100% employee-owned (ESOP)
  • Made tough decisions removing underperforming leadership
  • Learned importance of relationships in winning work

The Geoprofessional Landscape

What's Changed:

  • Less willingness to put in extra time for career development
  • Employees expect to be "spoon-fed" rather than self-directed learning
  • People want promotions too fast without doing foundational work
  • 40-hour work week mentality vs. professional development mindset

What's Stayed the Same:

  • Love for technical aspects and problem-solving
  • Basic exploration tools remain rudimentary but necessary
  • Risk management focus continues
  • Engineers still love engineering

Future Outlook:

  • Mega-firms getting bigger but may spawn specialized smaller firms
  • Technology will be a tool, not a replacement
  • Concern about over-reliance on computer outputs without understanding fundamentals
  • AI may create "black box" approach - warns against this
  • Profession remains necessary due to climate change and infrastructure needs

Life Advice

  • Invest your own time in career development
  • Put in extra hour every day working on yourself and profession
  • "You're a professional. You learn in your time. You come and do in our time"
  • Don't skip foundational experiences like soils lab work
  • Form relationships and build your network
  • Get involved with professional organizations like GBA
  • Take on challenges and volunteer for assignments

Speed Round

  • Favorite Book: Bible
  • Optimism index: 4 out of 5
  • Biggest Impact: Transforming BSK into professional business with systems and employee development while maintaining company culture
  • What he'd change:
    • Wouldn't hold onto problem employees so long
    • Wouldn't react so quickly to complaints without investigation
  • Advice for young professionals:
    • Put in extra time beyond 40 hours
    • Easy to be extraordinary - just work one extra hour per day on yourself
    • Get involved with GBA if possible

Final Thoughts

  • Work on yourself continuously
  • GBA involvement pays dividends
  • Get involved and invest in professional organizations
  • Success comes from going above and beyond standard expectations

Calls-to-action:

  • Visit the GBA Website at https://www.geoprofessional.org for other training resources and reference materials and/or to become a member.
  • Visit https://www.gbapodcast.com for future podcast episodes
  • Contact us at info@geoprofessional.org with any podcast-related questions or comments

Subscribe

  • Subscribe to the GBA Podcast https://www.gbapodcast.com/subscribe

This episode was produced by the following GBA Members:

  • Ryan White, PE, GE – Principal Geotechnical Engineer/Apex
Show more...
2 months ago
36 minutes 54 seconds

GBA Podcast
#107 - Case History - Engage Human Resources Professionals Early On!

GBA Case History Series – Case History #107 - Engage Human Resources Professionals Early On!

Summary

An employee who suffers from anxiety and panic disorder performs poorly and misses several days of work. Despite receiving compassion and getting several counseling sessions from the supervisor, the firm terminates her employment. In return, she sues them with alleged violations of the Family and Medical Leave Act (FMLA) and the Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA).

Our Hosts:

  • Elizabeth Brown, PE - Principal Geotechnical Engineer/JLT Consultants

Elizabeth is the Principal Geotechnical Engineer at JLT Consultants in Boise, Idaho. Elizabeth has performed and/or assisted with numerous geotechnical investigations throughout Idaho, Oregon, Washington, and Wyoming managing projects, providing geotechnical design, project quality control, cost and value engineering, and evaluating geotechnical constructability issues.

  • Abi Corbett – Project Consultant/SME.

Abi is a Project Consultant at SME experienced in managing a variety of steel, concrete, coatings, and nondestructive testing projects. She specializes in managing projects related to DOT fabrication quality assurance reviews but also supports project managers throughout SME’s various service groups.

Lessons Learned:

  • Managers Must Be Trained in Human- Resources (HR) Issues
  • Implied References to “Qualified Conditions” under FMLA and ADA Must Be Taken Seriously
  • Documentation Must Be Accurate, Complete, and Consistent
  • Engage the Subject-Matter Expert
  • Explore Accommodations, If Reasonable
  • Employment-Practices-Liability (EPL) Insurance Can Be an Important Safety Net
  • Trust but Verify
  • Supervisors Need Training
  • Tolerance Is a Virtue, But…

Calls-to-action:

  • Download Case History #107
  • Visit the following link to access all of GBA’s Case Histories: https://www.geoprofessional.org/gba-case-histories/
  • An account is required to download the individual Case Histories, which are free for GBA Member Firms.
  • Visit the GBA Website at https://www.geoprofessional.org for other training resources and reference materials and/or to become a member.
  • Visit https://www.gbapodcast.com for future Podcast Episodes
  • Contact us at info@geoprofessional.org with any podcast-related questions or comments

Subscribe

  • Subscribe to the GBA Podcast https://www.gbapodcast.com/subscribe

This episode was produced by the following GBA Members:

  • Abi Corbett – Project Consultant/SME.
  • Elizabeth Brown, PE - Principal Geotechnical Engineer/JLT Consultants
  • Ryan White, PE, GE – Principal Geotechnical Engineer/Apex Companies, LLC
Show more...
2 months ago
22 minutes 47 seconds

GBA Podcast
GeoHeroes - Matt Moler

GeoHeroes - Matt Moler

About This Episode
In this episode Guy Marcozzi interviews Matt Moler, PE, Vice President and a Region Director for S&ME and former GBA president. Matt shares his unexpected journey from golf course superintendent aspirations to geotechnical leadership, revealing how early construction work with his father shaped his approach to efficiency and strategic thinking. Discover his philosophy on team dynamics, the irreplaceable value of client relationships, and why he hand-delivered reports to build trust. Matt offers candid insights on industry evolution, the role of technology, and his optimistic vision for geoprofessionals. This episode is essential listening for anyone seeking authentic leadership wisdom and career guidance rooted in genuine passion and human connection.

About Our Guest
Matt Moler, PE, is a husband, father of three, a Professional Engineer, and a Regional Director for S&ME. He currently lives in Greensboro, NC. With engineering licenses in North Carolina, Virginia, and West Virginia, it has allowed Matt to work on projects all over the place, and he loves the variety. Specifically, Matt's experience has been in geotechnical site investigations, construction materials testing services, Special Inspections, and forensic engineering. When he has time, he loves to mountain bike and other outdoor activities with family and friends (fishing, hiking, and camping).

Our Host
Guy Marcozzi, PE, D.GE, LEED AP BD+C, is a GBA past-president and an experienced CEO, President and Board Member with a demonstrated history of working in the engineering, science and data technology industries and in leadership for various boards of ESOP, non-profit, professional and business organizations.

Show Notes

Introduction

  • Matt Moler, Regional Director of Operations at S&ME
  • Covers offices in North Carolina and Florida
  • Former GBA President (just completed past-president term)
  • Based in Greensboro, North Carolina

Early Life and Education

  • Grew up in Charlestown, West Virginia (Jefferson County) Moved there at age 2
  • Above-average student; math and science came easier
  • High school class of ~350-400 students
  • Worked various jobs: father's construction business, CVS, golf course maintenance
  • Father was residential contractor - taught efficiency and thinking ahead
  • Originally planned to study agronomy/horticulture to become golf course superintendent
  • Changed to engineering after realizing golf course work meant weekends with little time off

College Experience

  • Attended West Virginia University for undergraduate civil engineering
  • Went to Virginia Tech for master's in geotechnical engineering
  • Worked with industry legends: Mike Duncan, Dr. Brandon, Dr. Phils, Jim Mitchell
  • Thesis on water-filled tubes for flood mitigation with large-scale testing
  • Completed oral defense (described as "one of the more stressful events")

Career Path

  • Met wife Jamie in grad school, married within a year
  • Started at S&ME same day Jamie started her master's program in Greensboro
  • Been with S&ME for 23 years
  • Early "positive derailment": placed on construction materials testing project for 3 years
  • Learned from coworkers, design teams, and contractors
  • Gained insight into consulting relationships and field implementation challenges
  • Progressed incrementally: individual contributor → small group manager → regional roles → service line leader → current position

Key Early Lesson

  • Initially excited about delivering reports as the main value
  • Started hand-delivering reports and explaining findings to clients
  • Realized relationships and personal connections were the real value

Leadership

  • Philosophy: Don't give quick answers - encourage inquisitiveness
  • Ask team members to bring problems AND potential solutions
  • Believes in breaking out of "status quo" thinking
  • Emphasizes clearly articulating vision and goals for teams
  • Focus on finding the right people ("the who's") rather than trying to solve everything alone
  • Values face-to-face client interactions and relationship building

Team Philosophy

  • "The power of a team is so much stronger than anything I can bring to the table"
  • Teams function best when aligned with clear understanding of roles
  • Synergy creates efficiency that surpasses individual capabilities

The Geoprofessional Landscape

What Hasn't Changed (23 years in industry)

  • Core interpersonal skills remain essential
  • Human-to-human client interaction irreplaceable
  • Trust and relationship building still fundamental

What Has Changed

  • Better use of technology (CPT, geophysical tools)
  • Improved data handling and management
  • Evolution from paper reports → scanned PDFs → digital data systems
  • Better subsurface condition understanding through data

Future Vision

  • Data sharing between firms (like other countries)
  • Leveraging AI and big data to make professionals better, not replace them
  • Enhanced role in data interpretation vs. just collection
  • Maintaining human connections while using better tools
  • Focus on providing value: time savings, cost reduction, resilience

Life Advice

For New Professionals

  • Align passion with career - don't just chase money
  • Find work that energizes you and makes you excited to start each day
  • Get involved in professional associations (especially GBA)
  • Look for committee work and leadership opportunities

Professional Development

  • Association involvement provides broader industry perspective
  • Prevents "myopic" view from working at single firm
  • Relationships and learning often outweigh what you contribute
  • GBA experience: "get two, three, sometimes tenfold back"

Mentorship Approach

  • Encourage fresh thinking over providing quick answers
  • Be open to adapting yourself, not just expecting others to adapt
  • Listen and be receptive to new ideas
  • Help break people out of "this is how we've always done it" mindset

Speed Round

  • Favorite Book: How To Win Friends and Influence People by Dale Carnegie, Unbroken" by Laura Hildebrand
  • Optimism index: 5/5, Natural optimist in life and work
  • Biggest Impact: Recognizing team power over individual capability
  • What he'd change: Be more present in the moment instead of always thinking ahead
  • Advice for young professionals: Find your passion and align it with career, fulfillment comes from genuine interest, not just financial rewards

Final Thoughts

  • Encourages association involvement for anyone not currently engaged
  • Look for engagement outside normal day-to-day work

Calls-to-action:

  • Visit the GBA Website at https://www.geoprofessional.org for other training resources and reference materials and/or to become a member.
  • Visit https://www.gbapodcast.com for future podcast episodes
  • Contact us at info@geoprofessional.org with any podcast-related questions or comments

Subscribe

  • Subscribe to the GBA Podcast https://www.gbapodcast.com/subscribe

This episode was produced by the following GBA Members:

  • Ryan White, PE, GE – Principal Geotechnical Engineer/Apex
Show more...
2 months ago
42 minutes 44 seconds

GBA Podcast
GeoHeroes - Ken Johnston

GeoHeroes - Ken Johnston

About This Episode
In this episode Guy Marcozzi interviews Ken Johnston, F.GBA, retired CEO of GZA and former GBA president, who shares his remarkable journey from shoeshine boy to industry leader. Despite his success, Ken humbly calls himself "just a lucky guy who had the opportunity." In this candid conversation, he reveals how outworking the competition, building lasting relationships, and finding passion over paychecks shaped his 42-year career. Ken discusses the evolution of the geoprofessional industry, the unique culture of trust within GBA, and his battle with cancer that influenced his retirement. His advice to young professionals: find your passion first, work hard, and the money will follow.

About Our Guest
Ken Johnston, F.GBA, is the retired Chief Administrative Officer of GZA GeoEnvironmental, Inc. and former president of the Geoprofessional Business Association (GBA, 2020-21). A native of Quincy, Massachusetts, Johnston graduated from Norwich University with a business degree and from New Hampshire College with an MBA. He had a distinguished 42-year career that uniquely blended unusually strong entrepreneurial skills with geoprofessional leadership.

In Johnston's 25-year plus relationship with GZA, he also served as Director of Risk Management, Director of Real Estate, and District Office Manager. His diverse experience includes working under every CEO in GZA's history and witnessing the firm's evolution from a small environmental and geotechnical company to the 700+ person multi-disciplinary firm it is today. Since retiring in 2024, he has served as a consultant to the firm, handling GZA’s real estate and accounts receivable issues. Between his GZA roles, he successfully built and operated businesses in mini-storage consulting and packaging distribution.

Our Host
Guy Marcozzi, PE, D.GE, LEED AP BD+C, is a GBA past-president and an experienced CEO, President and Board Member with a demonstrated history of working in the engineering, science and data technology industries and in leadership for various boards of ESOP, non-profit, professional and business organizations.

Show Notes

Introduction

  • Ken Johnston, retired CEO of GZA GeoEnvironmental
  • Prefers "just a lucky guy who had the opportunity" over "GeoHero"
  • Past president of Geoprofessional Business Association (GBA)

Early Life and Education

  • Grew up in Quincy, Massachusetts (home of Dunkin' Donuts, Howard Johnson's, two presidents)
  • Average student, more interested in sports than academics
  • Father was Navy fighter pilot
  • Attended Norwich University - nation's oldest private military school, birthplace of ROTC
  • Business major with computer science minor
  • Key influence: Professor Frank Vanecek pushed him to take math with engineering students

Career Path

  • First jobs: Shoeshine boy, mail boy at General Mills
  • Met Bruce Lambrecht at General Mills - key entrepreneurial mentor
  • Financial management training program at Sanders Associates (first Norwich student accepted)
  • Philosophy: "I wasn't gonna outsmart 'em, I had to outwork 'em"
  • Three separate stints at GZA (earned nickname "Hatrick")
  • Entrepreneurial ventures between GZA stints:
    • Mini storage consulting business with Bruce Lambrecht
    • Packaging distribution nationwide
  • Final return to GZA in 2007, worked way up to CEO
  • 25+ total years at GZA

Leadership

  • Worked under every CEO in GZA's history
  • Leadership philosophy: Find passionate, knowledgeable people to lead different areas
  • Witnessed GZA's evolution from geotechnical firm to multi-disciplinary (environmental, ecology, water, construction management)
  • GBA involvement starting 2008, became president (2020-21)
    • Calls GBA "single best thing" he got involved in during 42-year career

The Geoprofessional Landscape

Changes Over Time:

  • Less "ungodly hours" and weekend work
  • Smarter work practices, remote capabilities, better work-life balance
  • Technology evolution from IBM punch cards to modern systems

Constants:

  • Quality of people - "salt of the earth" with passion for their work
  • Remarkable loyalty - colleagues with 35-50 years of service
  • Industry professionals see work as "way of life" like doctors, not just a job
  • Humility - "no one's trying to be in hall of fame," just doing good work

Technology Impact:

  • Both blessing and curse
  • Can't get away from cell phones/email

Life Advice

  • Career: Find passion first, don't chase money initially - "money will follow if you work hard"
  • Relationships: Stay connected with people - "I meet people and remain friendly with them forever"
  • Work approach: Outwork the competition when you can't outsmart them
  • Balance: Don't take work too seriously - cost some friendships by being too rigid

Speed Round

  • Favorite Book: A Cruel and Shocking Act by Philip Shenon, Good to Great by Jim Collins, The Advantage by Patrick Lencioni, One Second After by William R. Forstchen
  • Optimism index: 4 out of 5 - "don't have time to be negative"
  • Proudest accomplishments:
    • Family (son is West Point grad/Black Hawk pilot, talented daughter)
    • $300,000+ raised for cancer research through 36 years of Pan Mass Challenge bike rides
    • Career at GZA
  • What he'd change: Would have been lighter, less serious at work
  • Advice for young professionals: Find passion, work hard, don't worry about money initially

Final Thoughts

  • Honored to be invited on podcast
  • Praised Guy's presidency and Joel's leadership at GBA
  • Playful rivalry with Leo Titus
  • Grateful for career opportunities and relationships formed

Calls-to-action:

  • Visit the GBA Website at https://www.geoprofessional.org for other training resources and reference materials and/or to become a member.
  • Visit https://www.gbapodcast.com for future podcast episodes
  • Contact us at info@geoprofessional.org with any podcast-related questions or comments

Subscribe

  • Subscribe to the GBA Podcast https://www.gbapodcast.com/subscribe

This episode was produced by the following GBA Members:

  • Ryan White, PE, GE – Principal Geotechnical Engineer/Apex
Show more...
3 months ago
38 minutes 3 seconds

GBA Podcast
GeoHeroes - Tom and Grace Blackburn

GeoHeroes - Tom and Grace Blackburn

About This Episode
In this episode Guy Marcozzi interviews Tom Blackburn, PE, GE, F.GBA, F.ASCE, F.ACEC and Grace Blackburn founders of Blackburn Consulting). Their remarkable journey began when they met volunteering at Special Olympics in Dallas, leading to a 26-year partnership in both marriage and business. After Tom was unexpectedly terminated from his previous firm, they launched Blackburn Consulting with three young children, focusing on public works and community impact. The Blackburns share insights on industry changes, the importance of people skills in an AI-driven future, and their philosophy of "good work for good people." Their story exemplifies how shared values and complementary skills can create lasting success in the geotechnical profession.

About Our Guest
Grace Blackburn, co-founded Blackburn Consulting in 1998. She serves on Blackburn’s Board of Directors and oversees the company’s administrative functions. She strives for excellence both personally and professionally. Grace actively volunteers in professional and community organizations. As a founding member and past state chair of ACEC’s Prevailing Wage Law Committee, Grace has worked with the Department of Industrial Relations (DIR) and Department of Labor Standards and Research (DLSR) to clarify laws, regulations, and letters of determination regarding prevailing wage laws. She serves through a local ministry by cooking and feeding the less fortunate. In the last few years, Grace semi-retired to spend more time with her grandbaby and volunteer in her community.

Tom Blackburn, PE, GE, F.GBA, F.ASCE, F.ACEC, Blackburn Consulting’s founder and President, provides strong leadership not only for the company, but also for professional and local communities. In recognition of his contributions to the industry, Tom was made a Fellow of American Society of Civil Engineers (ASCE), the American Council of Engineering Companies (ACEC), and the Geoprofessional Business Association (GBA). Tom served in Local, State, and National leadership roles in each organization. He exemplifies a solid work ethic and integrity. Tom specializes in forensics and complex engineering projects. Licensed in California and Nevada, his 30 plus year track record and close relationships with clients and employees tell the story. He has served as a consultant and expert on hundreds of public works, residential, and commercial projects.

Tom’s technical expertise includes: deep foundations, landslides, expansive clay, earth pressures, settling soils, surface and subsurface drainage, ground vibrations, seismicity, liquefaction, codes, and construction practices.

He has worked on: dams, canals, penstocks, levees, bridges, pavements, concrete slabs, deep and shallow foundations, ground improvement, retaining walls, anchors, and structures.

Our Host
Guy Marcozzi, PE, D.GE, LEED AP BD+C, is a GBA past-president and an experienced CEO, President and Board Member with a demonstrated history of working in the engineering, science and data technology industries and in leadership for various boards of ESOP, non-profit, professional and business organizations.

Show Notes

Introduction

  • First GeoHeroes episode featuring a couple
  • Tom & Grace Blackburn, founders of Blackburn Consulting (26 years)
  • Based in California
  • Both active in GBA (Tom - former president, Grace - active in committees)

Early Life and Education

Tom Blackburn:

  • Grew up in St. Louis, Missouri on 12 acres
  • Father was iron worker who started own steel erection firm
  • First in family to attend college (along with sister)
  • University of Missouri at Rolla (now Missouri S&T)
  • Discovered passion for geotechnical engineering junior year
  • Mentored by Professor Norbert Schmidt

Grace Blackburn:

  • Grew up in Stockton, California
  • Father died when she was 8, raised by Japanese mother
  • Mother's motto: "Remember you're of the samurai. Don't bring shame on your family"
  • CalPoly San Luis Obispo - Industrial Engineering degree
  • High school counselor encouraged engineering career
  • Won scholarship from Arco

Career Path

Early Careers:

  • Tom: Alpha Testing in Dallas-Fort Worth (materials & geotechnical engineering)
  • Grace: Arco Oil & Gas management training program (7-8 positions in 7 years)
  • Met volunteering at Special Olympics in Dallas

Formation of Blackburn Consulting (1998):

  • Tom was terminated from Anderson Geotechnical after 10 years as president/part owner
  • Grace encouraged him to start their own firm
  • Launched with 3 young children at home
  • Focused exclusively on public works (not private development)
  • Started as 2-person operation

Leadership

Business Philosophy:

  • Quality over quantity - "willing to turn work down"
  • Community engagement (worked on school bond issues)
  • "Good work for good people"
  • Employee and community impact focused

Management Approach:

  • Grace handled administrative, financial, legal, marketing functions
  • Tom focused on technical work and business development
  • Family-centered approach (brought kids to GBA conferences)
  • Emphasis on treating people with dignity and respect

The Geoprofessional Landscape

Changes Observed:

  • Private equity and larger firms entering the market
  • Shift from medium-sized firms to profit-focused operations
  • Advanced tools for exploration and analysis
  • Decline in writing skills among new graduates

Future Disruptions:

  • AI and machine learning as major disruptors
  • Comparison to Industrial Revolution impact on manufacturing
  • Machines will handle white collar tasks (soil recognition, foundation recommendations)
  • Data management becoming crucial differentiator

What Stays the Same:

  • People skills remain essential
  • Need for creative, out-of-the-box thinking
  • Fundamental soil mechanics understanding still required
  • Importance of relationships and treating people well

Life Advice

Key Principles:

  • Perseverance through hardships - "we don't learn from the easy things"
  • No ceiling on personal potential - "it's up to you"
  • Develop strong people skills in digital world
  • Think creatively and look for better solutions
  • Treat people with dignity and respect
  • Build genuine relationships, not just phone interactions

For New Professionals:

  • Focus on soft skills and people interaction
  • Don't rely solely on computers - understand the output
  • Improve writing skills
  • Embrace challenges as learning opportunities

Speed Round

  • Favorite Book: Grace - Bible Tom - Stephen Covey
  • Optimism index: 5 out of 5 - natural optimists
  • Biggest impact:
  • Both: Their firm and its positive impact on employees/community
  • Tom: Montecito debris flow project for Caltrans
  • Grace: First $6M Caltrans contract management
  • What Would You Change: Both: Would change nothing - hardships were necessary for growth
  • Advice for New Professionals:
  • Persevere through difficulties
  • Develop people skills
  • Think out of the box
  • Treat others with dignity and respect

Final Thoughts

On Being GeoHeroes:

  • Tom: "Hard work and perseverance" - wants to be a role model
  • Grace: Focus on making things better and helping people
  • Both emphasize impact on others' lives over personal recognition

On GBA Community:

  • Incredible support when starting their firm
  • "Some of the best people on earth"
  • Offered financial and administrative assistance
  • Encouraged them to start their own business

On Teamwork:

  • Success depends on employees, clients, and professional relationships
  • Family approach to business and life
  • Importance of working with others and building lasting relationships

Calls-to-action:

  • Visit the GBA Website at https://www.geoprofessional.org for other training resources and reference materials and/or to become a member.
  • Visit https://www.gbapodcast.com for future podcast episodes
  • Contact us at info@geoprofessional.org with any podcast-related questions or comments

Subscribe

  • Subscribe to the GBA Podcast https://www.gbapodcast.com/subscribe

This episode was produced by the following GBA Members:

  • Ryan White, PE, GE – Principal Geotechnical Engineer/Apex
Show more...
3 months ago
44 minutes 46 seconds

GBA Podcast
GeoHeroes - Leo Titus

GeoHeroes - Leo Titus

About This Episode
In this episode Guy Marcozzi interviews Leo J. Titus, Jr., PE, F.GBA, COO of Engineering Consulting Services (ECS), about resilience, leadership, and giving back to the geotechnical community. Leo shares his remarkable journey from a teenager working at a racetrack to leading a 2,800-person engineering firm, while navigating profound personal challenges including his deployment to the Pentagon on 9/11 as part of the Fairfax County Urban Search and Rescue team and the tragic loss of his wife to cancer. Leo reveals how these experiences shaped his people-first leadership philosophy and passion for mentoring the next generation. Packed with career wisdom, this episode offers invaluable insights on professional growth, the importance of industry involvement, and finding perspective through life's toughest moments.

About Our Guest
Leo J. Titus, Jr., PE, F.GBA is Chief Operating Officer of ECS, Ltd. a national geotechnical, environmental, materials testing and facilities engineering firm. A graduate of Clarkson University, he has been an active leader in industry organizations including serving as president of GBA in 2022-2023, chairman of ASTM E36 committee from 2016 to 2021, and two terms as president of WACEL. Mr. Titus has been an active member of the community and was a member of Fairfax County's Urban Search and Rescue team for eleven years, being deployed to the Pentagon on September 11, 2001; as well as being a top fundraiser, along with his family, for the Susan G. Komen Foundation, raising over $350,000 since the passing of his first wife in 2003.

Our Host
Guy Marcozzi, PE, D.GE, LEED AP BD+C, is a GBA past-president and an experienced CEO, President and Board Member with a demonstrated history of working in the engineering, science and data technology industries and in leadership for various boards of ESOP, non-profit, professional and business organizations.

Show Notes

Introduction

  • Leo Titus, Chief Operating Officer of Engineering Consulting Services (ECS)
  • Lives and works in Northern Virginia
  • ECS: 2,800 employees, 100 locations nationwide

Early Life and Education

  • Born in Western New York, grew up in Saratoga Springs, New York
  • Worked summers at horse racing track as teenager in concessions/bar support
  • Learned valuable life lessons about how people treat each other
  • Witnessed gambling addiction, which taught him moderation
  • B/B+ student through high school and early college
  • Initially pursued mechanical engineering, inspired by 2001: A Space Odyssey
  • Switched to civil engineering after struggling with dynamics class
  • Graduated from Clarkson University in 1991 during recession

Career Path

  • Started at PSI doing geotechnical materials testing services
  • Became branch manager in Worcester, Massachusetts at age 23 with minimal experience
  • Moved to ECS as project engineer to focus on learning engineering
  • Progressed through roles: project engineer → department manager → office manager → Mid-Atlantic president (2007-2021) → COO
  • Company grew from 12-13 people in 1988 to current size

Leadership

  • Early management success based on listening to both upper management and field workers
  • Served as mediator/buffer between different organizational levels
  • Life-changing experiences shaped leadership philosophy
  • These experiences provided perspective on what's truly important
  • Believes in learning from both positive and negative management examples

The Geoprofessional Landscape & Life Advice

  • Fundamentals of geotechnical engineering remain unchanged
  • Technology and communication tools have evolved significantly
  • Sees AI as helpful tool, not disruptive force
  • Believes relationships with clients and employees are fundamental to success
  • Basic client expectations: timely delivery, good communication
  • Optimistic about profession's future despite challenges like technical talent shortage

Life Advice

  • Get actively involved in professional organizations like GBA
  • Don't just attend meetings - serve on committees and be engaged
  • Ask more questions to better understand clients and employees
  • Focus on building relationships and communication skills
  • Bring outside involvement back to benefit your company

Speed Round

  • Favorite Book: David McCullough's historical works (Johnstown Flood, Great Bridge, Panama Canal, Wright Brothers)
  • Optimism index: 5 out of 5
  • Advice for newcomers: Get involved in professional organizations
  • Biggest impact: Teaching and mentoring, especially inspiring students to enter geotechnical engineering
  • Regrets: None, but would ask more questions to learn about employees and clients

Final Thoughts

  • Actively participate in professional associations
  • Your involvement will help improve the entire industry

Calls-to-action:

  • Visit the GBA Website at https://www.geoprofessional.org for other training resources and reference materials and/or to become a member.
  • Visit https://www.gbapodcast.com for future podcast episodes
  • Contact us at info@geoprofessional.org with any podcast-related questions or comments

Subscribe

  • Subscribe to the GBA Podcast https://www.gbapodcast.com/subscribe

This episode was produced by the following GBA Members:

  • Ryan White, PE, GE – Principal Geotechnical Engineer/Apex
Show more...
4 months ago
42 minutes 14 seconds

GBA Podcast
GeoHeroes - Jesse Kropelnicki

GeoHeroes - Jesse Kropelnicki

About This Episode
In this episode Guy Marcozzi interviews Jesse Kropelnicki, PE, about his remarkable journey from humble beginnings to leading a 1,900-person engineering firm. After starting in civil engineering, he built a successful triathlon coaching business, working with 30+ professional IRONMAN champions before returning to engineering in 2018. Under his leadership, Verdantas grew from 415 to 1,900 employees in just 2.5 years. Jesse discusses the role of private equity in the geoprofessions, technology's evolutionary impact on the industry, and his people-first leadership philosophy. He emphasizes that culture and human characteristics—not just technical knowledge—will be the key differentiators for future engineering firms.

About Our Guest
Jesse Kropelnicki, PE, is the CEO of Verdantas, a private equity-backed professional services firm dedicated to addressing complex environmental, water, and energy transition challenges. Under his leadership, Verdantas has grown to over 90 offices with more than 1,860 staff, generating approximately $425M in revenue. Jesse is passionate about fostering a people-focused culture, driving collaboration and trust, advancing environmental stewardship, and being a champion of digital integration throughout the business. In 2002, Jesse founded what became one of the world's largest endurance sports coaching businesses, pioneering an engaging fully remote workforce model. Over 16 years, he published a nutrition book with Random House in 2017, completed two acquisitions, taught dozens of coaching clinics for USA Triathlon, and coached top professional IRONMAN athletes who achieved more than 30 wins.

Our Host
Guy Marcozzi, PE, D.GE, LEED AP BD+C, is a GBA past-president and an experienced CEO, President and Board Member with a demonstrated history of working in the engineering, science and data technology industries and in leadership for various boards of ESOP, non-profit, professional and business organizations.

Show Notes

 "If you want to grow, if you want to move up in your career, if you want to grow as a human being, you've got to be uncomfortable all the time. And if you find yourself in a position, in a scenario where you're not uncomfortable and you want to be growing, then you've got to find your way into a new position."

Introduction

• Jesse's journey from steel worker's son to CEO

Early Life and Education

• Grew up in New York with steel worker father and musician mother
• Worked with father from age 8-9 through college - learned work ethic
• Attended Northeastern University for civil engineering (structural focus)
• Completed co-ops at Kiewit Construction (Big Dig project) and Parsons Brinckerhoff
• Earned master's in structural engineering while working full-time

Career Path

• Started in hydropower structural engineering at Parsons Brinckerhoff
• Developed passion for triathlon racing
• Built coaching business as side hustle, eventually went full-time
• Grew coaching business to 85 staff, 100% remote (pre-COVID)
• Coached 30+ professional IRONMAN champions over 10 years
• Returned to engineering in 2018 at WSP power group
• Joined Verdantas as COO when company had 415 people
• Promoted to CEO after one year
• Led growth from 415 to 1,900 people in 2.5 years

Leadership

• Learned leadership through coaching world-class athletes under pressure
• Key qualities: authenticity, passion, energy - difficult to teach
• Focus on people-first, empathetic approach
• Athletes served as "reverse mentors"
• Importance of alignment between management and private equity partners
• Building trust and creating differentiated workplace culture
• Supporting staff holistically and emotionally

The Geoprofessional Landscape & Life Advice

• Private Equity Trends: A/E space attractive due to stable, dependable growth over decades
• Technology Disruption: Evolution, not revolution - been happening for 30 years
• Key Technologies: AI, digital twins, asset management
• Data Strategy: De-siloing data sources, creating data fabric with taxonomy
• Future Workforce: Same number of people but different composition - more programmers, data analysts
• Differentiators: Culture and human characteristics will replace knowledge as key differentiator
• Demographics: Challenges will work themselves out through technology and workforce composition changes

Speed Round

• Favorite Book: CEO Next Door by Elena Botelho, Kim Powell, Tahl Raz
• Optimism Index: 5/5 - must be chief optimist as CEO
• Biggest Impact: Coaching professional athletes through high-pressure situations
• Legacy: Wants to be remembered as authentic, fair, logical person who helps others be their best
• Regrets: No major regrets - uses framework of choosing paths that challenge and introduce you to amazing people
• Career Advice: Stay uncomfortable to keep growing - "no pain, no gain"

Final Thoughts

• Emphasized importance of authenticity and people-focused approach in professional services
• Open to connecting with listeners on LinkedIn
• Enjoyed sharing insights about leadership and industry trends

Calls-to-action:

  • Visit the GBA Website at https://www.geoprofessional.org for other training resources and reference materials and/or to become a member.
  • Visit https://www.gbapodcast.com for future podcast episodes
  • Contact us at info@geoprofessional.org with any podcast-related questions or comments

Subscribe

  • Subscribe to the GBA Podcast https://www.gbapodcast.com/subscribe

This episode was produced by the following GBA Members:

  • Ryan White, PE, GE – Principal Geotechnical Engineer/Apex
Show more...
4 months ago
34 minutes 42 seconds

GBA Podcast
A Look Into the Crystal Ball Workshop

A Look Into the Crystal Ball Workshop

The geoprofessional industry is at a crossroads. With a shrinking workforce, increasing retirements, and fewer students entering geoscience and engineering fields, firms are struggling to meet rising service demands. At the same time, automation and artificial intelligence (AI) are transforming industries worldwide, presenting a generational opportunity for geoprofessionals to increase efficiency, productivity, and service quality.

To address this critical challenge, GBA’s 2025 Crystal Ball Workshop (CBW), to be held June 24-25 in Kansas City (Olathe), Kansas, will explore how emerging technologies can help firms bridge workforce gaps and sustain business growth.

CBW Focus: Addressing the impacts of the shrinking geoprofessional workforce, and high demand for services, with automation and artificial intelligence (AI).

CBW Objective: Provide a launchpad for sustained industry-wide action, offering:

  • Findings and insights about AI and other automation capabilities and trends.
  • Actionable recommendations to address issues related to the shrinking geoprofessional
  • Workforce, and high demand for services, using AI and other automation technologies.

Key Topics Include:

  • The Workforce Crisis – Understanding labor shortages and increased service demands.
  • Emerging Technologies – Exploring AI and automation applications in geoprofessions.
  • Opportunities – Leveraging technology to enhance efficiency and improve decision-making.
  • Challenges – Overcoming barriers to technology adoption.

Prep Questions

1. Where are you or your organization spending the most time on repetitive tasks?

Think data entry, scheduling, reporting, approvals; anything recurring and rules-based.

2. What processes do you or your organization follow that require multiple handoffs or approvals?

Are there common errors or inconsistencies in your workflows?

3. What systems do you or your organization use that don’t talk to each other?

Which decisions rely on delayed, incomplete, or missing data?

4. In what tasks do you or your organization underutilize valuable talent for low-value work?

Tasks that pull skilled employees away from what they do best.

5. How do we monetize our technology use? What related changes in our business model are needed?

6. What part of automation and AI will require greater human interaction and skill?

7. What changes are needed in academic curriculums to better prepare students for their geoprofessional careers in the age of AI and other automation?

8. What barriers do you, your organization, and our profession have that may inhibit the adoption and implementation of AI and other automation in our work?

Biases, myths, fears?

9. How can we overcome barriers (real or perceived) and facilitate our adoption and implementation of AI and other automation technologies to address our shrinking workforce issues?

GBA Resources

  • A Look Inside the Crystal Ball

  • The Future In-Focus: Big Data, Machine Learning, and Artificial Intelligence

  • Opportunities at the Climate Crisis and Infrastructure Nexus

Show more...
4 months ago
16 minutes 43 seconds

GBA Podcast
GeoHeroes - Rick Heckel

GeoHeroes - Rick Heckel

About This Episode
In this episode Guy Marcozzi interviews Rick Heckel, PE, D.GE, Chief Engineer at TTL, Inc. who shares his remarkable 40+ year journey. Rick "stumbled" into geotechnical engineering, building his career through persistence rather than natural talent, and navigating roles from branch manager to CEO to solo practitioner. Learn about his groundbreaking initiative to "Elevate the Geoprofession," find out why he believes engineers make undervalued leaders, and hear his uncompromising advice for career success. Rick's authentic storytelling and practical wisdom make this essential listening for professionals seeking both technical excellence and meaningful career impact.

Series Summary
In this podcast series Guy Marcozzi interviews past, present, and future leaders in the geoprofessional industry to explore their personal and career journeys. The goal is to understand what motivates these individuals and what insights they have for the future of the profession. The podcast examines the skills and qualities that have contributed to their success, as well as their perspectives on the challenges and opportunities facing the industry.

About Our Guest
Rick Heckel, PE, D.GE, Chief Engineer at TTL, Inc. is based in Nashville, TN. He has 40 years of geotechnical engineering experience working on projects with construction values exceeding $500MM. Rick is a licensed professional engineer in six states. He has been active in GBA for the last 20 years and served as the Chair for the Geotechnical Business Committee for 7 years. Rick is currently President of TNSAVE, which is a volunteer organization dedicated to training engineers, architects, contractors, and building officials to perform safety evaluations of structures following disasters such as earthquakes, tornadoes, and hurricanes. He is also an Adjunct Professor of Civil Engineering at Lipscomb University.

Our Host
Guy Marcozzi, PE, D.GE, LEED AP BD+C, is a GBA past-president and an experienced CEO, President and Board Member with a demonstrated history of working in the engineering, science and data technology industries and in leadership for various boards of ESOP, non-profit, professional and business organizations.

Show Notes

Introduction

• Chief Geotechnical Engineer at TTL
• Based in Nashville, Tennessee office
• Lives in Murfreesboro, Tennessee (35 miles away)

Early Life and Education

• Grew up in Louisville, Kentucky
• Played baseball and soccer
• Good student but had to work hard at engineering
• Strong in math, took calculus in high school
• Master's degree was the accredited degree (5-year program)
• Thesis on "time rate of settlement" using PL/1 programming
• Only one PC in entire civil engineering department at the time
• Self-taught computer skills
• Developed patience and tenacity through thesis challenges
• Summer jobs: Little league groundskeeper for 3 summers ($125/week)
• Umpired and refereed various sports

Career Path

• Graduated 1983 during severe economic recession
• Took 4 months to find job despite having master's degree
• First job: Utility company (family tradition - multiple generations worked there)
• 1984: Joined Law Engineering in Nashville
• Early projects: Dams, hospitals, various geotechnical work
• Opened branch office for Atlanta Testing & Engineering (later Core Property Sciences)
• Became CEO for 3 years: Financial distress → best year in company history → exit during 2008 crisis
• TTL as Chief Operating Officer (6 years)
• Solo practice: Ardent Geotechnical Consultants (6 years)
• GeoEngineers (3 years, until company withdrew from Nashville)
• Current: Returned to TTL as Chief Geotechnical Engineer

Leadership

• Engineers undervalued as managers and leaders
• Engineering is #1 profession among Fortune 500 CEOs
• COO role better fit than CEO (implementation vs. vision setting)
• Led GBA geotechnical committee for 15+ years
• Initiated "Elevate the Geoprofession" movement
• Philosophy: Fix ourselves first before criticizing others
• Believes in courage with business decisions (pricing, etc.)

The Geoprofessional Landscape & Life Advice

Current State:

• Profession experiencing uptick after period of decline
• Finally charging fees that reflect value provided
• Major challenge: Attracting college students to geotechnical

Technology & Tools:

• Desktop tools dramatically improved (historic aerials, online geological maps)
• AI will be a disruptor
• Still using 100-year-old standard penetration test (SPT)
• Need better field tools for data collection

Threats:

• Losing design work to geotechnical contractors
• Contractors have different risk profiles than consultants

Elevate the Geoprofession Initiative:

• Website: https://www.elevategeoprofessionalvalue.org/
• Voluntary accord to sign
• Focus on living professional values
• Hold colleagues to higher standards

Professional Advice:

• Work harder than everybody else
• Take every assignment offered
• Study previous similar projects before starting new work
• Read extensively (papers, books, technical literature)
• If starting over: Get geology minor or strong structures background

Speed Round

• Favorite Book: "Team of Rivals" by Doris Kearns Goodwin (about Lincoln's leadership)
• Optimism Index: 4 out of 5 (glass half full approach)
• Proudest Moment: Competitor asking him to mentor their employee
• Do Differently: Better preparation with geology or structures background
• Advice for New Professionals: Work harder than everybody else

Final Thoughts

• Goal to leave profession better than he found it
• Importance of mentoring young engineers
• Value of helping others advance their careers
• Belief that hard work and persistence trump natural talent

Calls-to-action:

  • Visit the GBA Website at https://www.geoprofessional.org for other training resources and reference materials and/or to become a member.
  • Visit https://www.gbapodcast.com for future Podcast Episodes
  • Contact us at info@geoprofessional.org with any podcast-related questions or comments

Subscribe

  • Subscribe to the GBA Podcast https://www.gbapodcast.com/subscribe

This episode was produced by the following GBA Members:

  • Ryan White, PE, GE – Principal Geotechnical Engineer/Apex
Show more...
5 months ago
38 minutes 49 seconds

GBA Podcast
GeoHeroes - David Lourie

GeoHeroes - David Lourie

About This Episode
In this episode Guy Marcozzi interviews David Lourie, PE, D.GE, F.GBA , CEO of Lourie Consultants where he discusses his journey in the geoprofession. Early interests in building and the space program led him to engineering. An ankle injury shifted his path from mechanical engineering and Navy ROTC to civil engineering. A soils class ignited his passion for geotechnical engineering. He worked at STS and the innovative McClellan Engineers before founding Lourie Consultants in New Orleans in 1992. He stresses client focus, technical quality, and service, advising professionals to be curious, give back, and work with class.

Series Summary
In this podcast series Guy Marcozzi interviews past, present, and future leaders in the geoprofessional industry to explore their personal and career journeys. The goal is to understand what motivates these individuals and what insights they have for the future of the profession. The podcast examines the skills and qualities that have contributed to their success, as well as their perspectives on the challenges and opportunities facing the industry.

About Our Guest
David Lourie, PE, D.GE, F.GBA is a respected consulting engineer specializing in geotechnical and geoenvironmental services. He is CEO of Lourie Consultants, the firm he founded in 1992 near New Orleans, Louisiana. His career began in 1979 with Soil Testing Services (STS). In 1981, he joined McClelland Engineers and advanced to become President of Fugro-McClelland (Southeast) in 1990. Mr. Lourie has extensive experience managing large-scale, high-profile engineering and construction projects and conducting forensic investigations. He has been an expert witness in multiple jurisdictions and an independent peer reviewer for major USACE projects. He actively shares his expertise as an Adjunct Professor at the University of New Orleans and contributes to the profession through technical and business publications and presentations. He has demonstrated exceptional leadership within the engineering profession, notably serving as the 39th National President of GBA (formerly ASFE).

Our Host
Guy Marcozzi, PE, D.GE, LEED AP BD+C, is a GBA past-president and an experienced CEO, President and Board Member with a demonstrated history of working in the engineering, science and data technology industries and in leadership for various boards of ESOP, non-profit, professional and business organizations.

Introduction

  • David Lourie introduction as geotechnical engineer and entrepreneur
  • Currently based in New Orleans, Louisiana
  • Long-standing relationship with host Guy

Early Life and Education

  • Childhood Geography: Born Chicago → Tampa (9 years) → Waterloo, Iowa → back to Chicago
  • Early Interests: Space program, sports, building models, taking things apart
  • Father's Influence: Engineering background, quality control work, taught responsibility through earning baseball glove and car payments
  • Lane Tech High School: 5,000-student all-male selective admission school in Chicago
    • Unique combination of trade classes (machine shop, welding) and college prep
    • Claims most PhD graduates of any US high school
  • High School Job: Gas station attendant - learned responsibility, customer service, fiscal accountability

Career Path

  • College Plans Derailed: Navy ROTC scholarship at Illinois Institute of Technology
  • Pivotal Injury: Baseball ankle injury ended Navy career and scholarship
  • Career Shift: Mechanical → Civil Engineering (fraternity advisor's suggestion)
  • Co-op Program: Alternated work/study semesters to pay for school
  • Graduate School: Master's degree with thesis on coal mine waste embankments in West Virginia
  • First Jobs:
    • Soil Testing Services (STS) in Chicago
    • Metropolitan Sanitary District - worked on Chicago's deep tunnel project
  • McClellan Engineers: Houston-based firm, pioneers in offshore soil mechanics
  • Louisiana Move: Volunteered to salvage struggling office in Lake Charles
  • Fugro Acquisition: Became youngest president in Fugro McClellan worldwide operations
  • Entrepreneurship: Founded Lourie Consultants in New Orleans (1992)
  • Major Projects: $500 million Superdome renovation

Leadership

  • Management Philosophy: Based on McClellan's culture of "lots of freedoms and holding them accountable"
  • Three-Legged Stool: People, technical, financial/business - identified strengths in business development and technical work
  • Client Focus: "Outstanding service and high caliber technical work" - not just lip service
  • Bram McClellan's Philosophy: "Do it right, do it right the first time, and do it with class"
  • Mentoring Approach: Organic, system-wide mentoring vs. formal programs

The Geoprofessional Landscape & Life Advice

  • Industry Changes: Erosion of advisor capacity, increased price pressure, less focus on human aspects
  • Technology Philosophy: Leverage technology for client benefit, not just internal efficiency
  • Future Optimism: Firms can differentiate through client focus and personalized service
  • Key Success Factors:
    • Client satisfaction drives profits, not the reverse
    • Alignment of operations with desired outcomes
    • Continued investment in people
    • Acceptance that failure is part of learning

Speed Round

  • Favorite Books:
    • [BOOK] The Nine Nations of North America by Joel Garreau
    • Food and wine books
    • [BOOK] Judgment in Geotechnical Engineering: The Professional Legacy of Ralph B. Peck
  • Optimism Index: 3-4 out of 5
    • Based on teaching experience at University of New Orleans
    • Sees passionate students entering the profession
  • Biggest Impact: Positive influence on colleagues, clients, ASCE involvement, teaching
  • What Would you Do Differently: Maybe "held my mouth more" early in career, but no major regrets
  • Life Philosophy: "People make the best decisions they can, given the information they have at the time"

Final Thoughts

  • Advice for New Professionals:
    • Remain intellectually curious
    • Give back to the profession and pay it forward
    • Have fun doing the work
    • Remember: if you build "on, in, or of the earth," you need geotechnical engineering
  • Key Quote: "Be the difference that makes a difference and hope to inspire before you expire"
  • Professional Motto: Engineering isn't a zero-sum game - "we can all win" by helping others

Calls-to-action:

  • Visit the GBA Website at https://www.geoprofessional.org for other training resources and reference materials and/or to become a member.
  • Visit https://www.gbapodcast.com for future Podcast Episodes
  • Contact us at info@geoprofessional.org with any podcast-related questions or comments

Subscribe

  • Subscribe to the GBA Podcast https://www.gbapodcast.com/subscribe

This episode was produced by the following GBA Members:

  • Ryan White, PE, GE – Principal Geotechnical Engineer/Apex
Show more...
5 months ago
55 minutes 27 seconds

GBA Podcast
GeoHeroes - Saiid Behboodi

GeoHeroes - Saiid Behboodi

About This Episode
In this episode Guy Marcozzi interviews Saiid Behboodi, PE, GE, F.GBA, Principal / Geotechnical Engineer at PBS Engineering and Environmental an Apex Company. Saiid's path was shaped by his cultural background and personal journey. His parents instilled a strong philosophy emphasizing education and being an "A student in society," which influenced his move to the US for civil engineering studies at UMass. Despite facing a language barrier, his solid high school background helped him excel. He chose civil engineering due to its high regard abroad, where civil engineers are seen as "heroes." A move to the West Coast led him into geotechnical engineering through serendipity -- a creative teaching approach helpped him secured his first job. A critical influence on his career and business acumen was his involvement with GBA, where he learned crucial knowledge in loss prevention and risk management, leading to a corporate role. Saiid's personal philosophy, rooted in his upbringing and professional journey, stresses continuous learning, mentorship, social skills, and giving back, emphasizing that relationship is key in business.

Series Summary
In this podcast series Guy Marcozzi will interview past, present, and future leaders in the geoprofessional industry to explore their personal and career journeys. The goal is to understand what motivates these individuals and what insights they have for the future of the profession. The podcast will examine the skills and qualities that have contributed to their success, as well as their perspectives on the challenges and opportunities facing the industry.

About Our Guest
Saiid Behboodi, PE, GE, F.GBA is a principal and geotechnical engineer at PBS Engineering and Envrionmental, an Apex company. Saiid was a vice president at Squire Associates before they were acquired by Kleinfelder. At Kleinfelder he served as a national loss prevention officer, NW transportation director and a member of the princiapl professional group. He is a GBA fellow and former President's award winner. With over 40 years of geotechnical engineeirng consulting experiene, Saiid continues to serve as QA/QC reviewer as part of the geotechnical group at PBS.

Our Host
Guy Marcozzi, PE, D.GE, LEED AP BD+C, is a GBA past-president and an experienced CEO, President and Board Member with a demonstrated history of working in the engineering, science and data technology industries and in leadership for various boards of ESOP, non-profit, professional and business organizations.

Discussion Topics:

Introduction

  • 00:00 Introduction and Welcome

Early Life and Education

  • 00:23 Saiid's Early Life and Education
  • 02:40 Challenges and Experiences in the US
  • 05:05 Move to the US
  • 06:24 Choosing Civil Engineering
  • 08:29 Journey to the West Coast

Career Path

  • 09:55 Career in Geotechnical Engineering
  • 17:17 Entrepreneurial Ventures
  • 20:16 Involvement with GBA
  • 21:53 An Unexpected Reward

The Geoprofessional Landscape & Life Advice

  • 23:40 The Geoprofession Today
  • 25:22 Risk Management and Loss Prevention
  • 26:49 Embracing Technological Changes
  • 30:12 Advice for Young Professionals
  • 33:30 Planning for Retirement

Speed Round

  • 35:22 Geo Hero Speed Round
  • [BOOK] Who Moved My Cheese by Spencer Johnson
  • [BOOK] Pushing up People by Art Williams
  • [BOOK] Three-Body Problem by Cixin Liu
  • [BOOK] Untethered Soul by Michael Singer
  • 36:21 Optimism index for the geoprofession
  • 36:57 Proudest professional achievement
  • 38:13 Career regrets
  • 39:32 Advice for someone entering the geoprofession

Final Thoughts

  • 45:24 Final Thoughts and Gratitude

Calls-to-action:

  • Visit the GBA Website at https://www.geoprofessional.org for other training resources and reference materials and/or to become a member.
  • Visit https://www.gbapodcast.com for future Podcast Episodes
  • Contact us at info@geoprofessional.org with any podcast-related questions or comments

Subscribe

  • Subscribe to the GBA Podcast https://www.gbapodcast.com/subscribe

This episode was produced by the following GBA Members:

  • Ryan White, PE, GE – Principal Geotechnical Engineer/PBS Engineering and Environmental LLC
Show more...
5 months ago
48 minutes 23 seconds

GBA Podcast
GeoHeroes - Laura Register

GeoHeroes - Laura Register

About This Episode
In this episode Guy Marcozzi interviews Laura Register, P.E., F.GBA, the National Director for Strategic Business Sectors at Terracon. Laura shares insights into her professional journey, starting with her childhood and early influences, including her father's engineering and entrepreneurial spirit. She recounts her experiences as a woman in a male-dominated engineering field, her career progression through various companies, and her current role at Terracon. Guy and Laura discuss the evolution of the geoprofessional industry, the value it offers, and advice for those entering the field, emphasizing the importance of company culture and mentorship.

Series Summary
In this podcast series Guy Marcozzi will interview past, present, and future leaders in the geoprofessional industry to explore their personal and career journeys. The goal is to understand what motivates these individuals and what insights they have for the future of the profession. The podcast will examine the skills and qualities that have contributed to their success, as well as their perspectives on the challenges and opportunities facing the industry.

About Our Guest
Laura Register, P.E., F.GBA is a passionate advocate and leader for advancing women in their professions. Notably , Laura is the Founder of AEC Power Women, a 300-member group dedicated to educating, showcasing, and connecting female leaders in Architecture, Engineering, and Construction (AEC). As the first female board member in the history of the Geoprofessional Business Association (GBA), Laura served as GBA's President in 2016-17 and was elected to the GBA Council of Fellows in 2018. She is proud to have co-founded Terracon's iWIL/Increasing Women in Leadership employee resource group.

Our Host
Guy Marcozzi, P.E., D.GE, LEED AP BD+C, is the current GBA president and an experienced CEO, President and Board Member with a demonstrated history of working in the engineering, science and data technology industries and in leadership for various boards of ESOP, non-profit, professional and business organizations.

Discussion Topics:

Introduction

  • 00:00 Introduction and Welcome
  • 00:12 Laura provides a brief professional introduction as the National Director for Strategic Business Sectors at Terracon
  • 00:40 Laura shares personal details about her life outside of work in Tennessee

Early Life and Education

  • 2:07 Discussion about Laura's childhood in Jacksonville, Florida
  • 05:10 Laura reflects on the positive aspects of having older siblings
  • 07:52 How her exploratory nature has continued into adulthood
  • 08:17 The path to the geoprofession influenced by being good at math and science,
  • 10:47 The decision to attend Vanderbilt University School of Engineering

Career Path

  • 12:28 Laura's experience as a woman in a mostly male engineering class
  • 15:17 Joining Law Engineering and finding a supportive community and opportunities in project management
  • 16:11 How rapid growth provided opportunities for younger engineers to manage clients and learn about risk management
  • 19:47 Re-entering corporate consulting and joining Terracon through connections made at GBA
  • 20:34 Laura's 10-year journey at Terracon and her current role as her dream job

Leadership

  • 21:35 Discussion on the keys to success in client-facing roles
  • 23:15 Importance of a focused approach and the idea that the profession is in the business of data and people
  • 24:15 Addressing the lack of a female role model by creating personal boards of directors
  • 25:51 The informal nature and impact of these personal boards of directors

The Geoprofessional Landscape

  • 26:45 Laura's perspective on the evolving geoprofession
  • 27:36 The geoprofession's involvement from start to finish in projects
  • 27:55 Positive changes in embracing diverse contributors beyond traditional engineers and scientists
  • 29:59 The challenge and opportunity of a shifting workforce and the role of technology and AI
  • 30:58 Laura's view on the core value proposition of geoprofessionals as being present from start to finish of projects

Speed Round

  • 32:19 Geo Hero Speed Round
  • [BOOK] The Checklist Manifesto by Atul Gawande
  • [BOOK] Radical Candor by Kim Scott
  • [BOOK] Fierce Conversations by Susan Scott
  • [BOOK] The Making of Another Major Motion Picture Masterpiece by Tom Hanks
  • [BOOK] Dracula Daily by Matt Kirkland
  • 36:21 Optimism index for the geoprofession
  • 36:57 Proudest professional achievement
  • 38:13 Career regrets
  • 39:32 Advice for someone entering the geoprofession

Final Thoughts

  • 42:51 "Take the vacation" to refresh and unplug

Calls-to-action:

  • Visit the GBA Website at https://www.geoprofessional.org for other training resources and reference materials and/or to become a member.
  • Visit https://www.gbapodcast.com for future Podcast Episodes
  • Contact us at info@geoprofessional.org with any podcast-related questions or comments

Subscribe

  • Subscribe to the GBA Podcast https://www.gbapodcast.com/subscribe

This episode was produced by the following GBA Members:

  • Ryan White, PE, GE – Principal Geotechnical Engineer/PBS Engineering and Environmental LLC
Show more...
6 months ago
44 minutes 48 seconds

GBA Podcast
#55 - Case History - Clients looking for the lowest cost have high expectations!

GBA Case History Series – Case History #55 - Clients looking for the lowest cost have high expectations!

Summary

An auto parts manufacturer hires a GBA member-firm to develop remediation recommendations for the contaminated area where underground storage tanks leaked. The client did not accept the recommendations of the consultant and pressed for a quicker alternative. When the contaminant was discovered in a larger area, the client accused the consultant of breach of conduct.

Our Hosts:

  • Elizabeth Brown, PE - National Practice Team Manager - Geotechnical/Atlas Technical Consultants

Elizabeth is the National Practice Team Manager - Geotechnical at Atlas Technical Consultants in Boise, Idaho. Elizabeth has performed and/or assisted with numerous geotechnical investigations throughout Idaho, Oregon, Washington, and Wyoming managing projects, providing geotechnical design, project quality control, cost and value engineering, and evaluating geotechnical constructability issues.

  • Abi Corbett – Project Consultant/SME.

Abi is a Project Consultant at SME experienced in managing a variety of steel, concrete, coatings, and nondestructive testing projects. She specializes in managing projects related to DOT fabrication quality assurance reviews but also supports project managers throughout SME’s various service groups.

Lessons Learned:

  • Clients' and client representatives' attitudes are important aspects of any effective go/no-go analysis.
  • When the principal client representative has little understanding of the situation, and refuses to spend the time required to gain essential education, a claims problem is almost guaranteed.
  • Strong communication is vital to successful projects and client relationships.
  • Contracts lay the foundation for a project's outcome so their review is essential.
  • Risk should be managed proactively and already having the right legal counsel on your team is extremely valuable.

Calls-to-action:

  • Download Case History #55
  • Visit the following link to access all of GBA’s Case Histories: https://www.geoprofessional.org/gba-case-histories/
  • An account is required to download the individual Case Histories, which are free for GBA Member Firms.
  • Visit the GBA Website at https://www.geoprofessional.org for other training resources and reference materials and/or to become a member.
  • Visit https://www.gbapodcast.com for future Podcast Episodes
  • Contact us at info@geoprofessional.org with any podcast-related questions or comments

Subscribe

  • Subscribe to the GBA Podcast https://www.gbapodcast.com/subscribe

This episode was produced by the following GBA Members:

  • Abi Corbett – Project Consultant/SME.
  • Elizabeth Brown, PE - National Practice Team Manager - Geotechnical/Atlas Technical Consultants
  • Ryan White, PE, GE – Principal Geotechnical Engineer/PBS Engineering and Environmental
Show more...
6 months ago
17 minutes 25 seconds

GBA Podcast
Welcome to the GBA Podcast, where we present information and expertise from geoprofessionals around the globe to provide you with wisdom and insight to help in your pursuit of knowledge.   GBA was founded over 50 years ago to serve geotechnical, environmental, and other geoprofessionals by giving them proven tools to achieve business success by confronting risk and optimizing performance.