UTAH STATE EDITION
A Supplement to:
®
January 5 2020 Vol. IV • No. 1
“The Nation’s Best Read Construction Newspaper… Founded in 1957.” Your Utah Connection – Debbie Hansen – 1-702-239-0348 – dhansen@cegltd.com
Goodfellow Builds Rock Structures From Ground Up
“We have to do a good job — do it right for the customer so we have a next job to go to,” said Ryan Goodfellow, owner of Rock Structures.
By Lori Lovely CEG CORRESPONDENT
When California native Ryan Goodfellow moved to Utah in 1994, he gained experience working for an excavation company, but three short years later, he founded his own: Rock Structures Utility & Excavating. “At the other company, I had to sell the job, schedule the job, do the job, build the job and collect payment,” Goodfellow recalled. Since he was already finding his own jobs, he decided he might as well do it for his own company, so the 21-year-old started the business in March 1997.
Service
The Ups and Downs of Business Goodfellow made a 10-month rental-purchase deal with a local Cat dealer on an excavator and the business was on its way. At the 10-year mark, Rock Structures had 43 employees, 25 tractors, 13 crew vehicles and three semis. “But the economy tanked,” he reminisced, “and the company went down to three of us with three tractors.” Those three kept working for their core customers — digging basements for new foundations, backfilling around houses, doing residential grading and building rock walls. They stayed busy through 2010 and
by the following year, the company started growing again. Today, the Kaysville, Utah, business has eight tractors, three crew vehicles and one truck. Goodfellow wants to keep the business this size, and keep jobs close — within a 40-mile range. Loyalty Equals Success Of those on Rock Structures’ short employee list, one has worked “on and off” since 1998, for a total of about 15 years, one has been there for 16 years, a couple guys have worked there for six years and Goodfellow has “some new guys.”
Other businesses can’t keep their guys busy, he said — but he does. Knowing that his employees have families and responsibilities, he strives to take care of them like family. He tries to establish a family relationship with his employees. “I treat my guys like family … like I want to be treated.” For example, he lets them use the tractor for personal work at home and he buys lunch a couple times a month. “It’s nice to have guys who have been with you for a while because you get to the point where you can almost read each other’s see ROCK page 4
Specializing in New, Used & Rebuilt Replacement Parts
• Undercarriage Parts • Field Service • Equipment Sales • Attachments • Full Service Shop • Hydraulic Cylinder Repair • New and Used Parts • Track Repair • Teeth & Edges We Buy Salvage Equipment Alternative to the dealer for all makes & models
Utah Track & Welding Service & Sales
801-972-8939
6382 West 2100 South, Salt Lake City, Utah 84128 • www.utahtrackandwelding.com • sam@utahtrackandwelding.com
Sales