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Tips for Starting Up Your Own Prefab Business

Oct. 9, 2016
Contractors need to be willing to devote adequate planning, space, quality control and personnel to a new prefab business
Bruce Phillips, founder, Electrical Prefab Systems, Chandler, Ariz., told NECA attendees on Day 2 that they must be 100% dedicated to quality control in their prefab shops. Electricians in the field will quickly lose confidence if the shop puts out poorly constructed prefab electrical systems.

Bruce Phillips, the founder of the 10-year-old Electrical Prefab Systems, Chandler, Ariz. became a believer in prefabricated electrical systems when he first started working in the electrical field decades ago, and he parlayed that interest into a business that supplies other electrical contractors with prefab products. He shared some of what he learned about prefab products with other electrical contractors during a technical seminar on Day 2 of the 2016 NECA Annual Convention.

Phillips said contractors need to be willing to devote adequate planning, space, quality control and personnel to a new prefab business — and get buy-in from electricians in the field — for it to provide the expected cost savings and installation process improvements.  Field buy-in is critical, he said, and if electricians lose confidence in the prefab systems produced in the shop, they will do the work themselves on the job-site. “You need quality control during every step of the process,” Phillips said.

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