| THR
Enterprises is top performer for second straight
year
by Heather
B. Hayes
Virginia Business
May 2005
All building projects have their
share of challenges, but Terry H. Robinson, president
of THR Enterprises, says that his company’s contract
to build a 24,000-square-foot welcome center for the
Jamestown National Historic Park ranks as one of its
toughest assignments.
The site is in an eagle nesting ground,
so workers can’t perform any exterior work between
November and July when the eagles are building their
nests and hatching their chicks. And when employees
can work, archeologists have the right to stop construction
to inspect any potential historic finds. Meanwhile,
the company is up against a hard deadline: early 2007,
just in time for the observance of the 400th anniversary
of the Jamestown settlement. “That is clearly
the No. 1 challenge for this year and next,” Robinson
says. “We don’t have a lot of room for
delays or problems, but failure is not an option. I
mean, President Bush and the Queen of England have
been invited for the opening.”
The need to keep the Jamestown project
on schedule is just one of the reasons why, after two
years of being Virginia’s fastest-growing company,
THR Enterprises is ready for a bit of a breather. (THR,
by the way, are Robinson’s initials.) The design-build
firm focuses on providing construction and renovation
for federal government clients. The company has performed
phenomenally since becoming a federal contractor in
1999 under the 8(a) Small Business Administration program
for small disadvantaged businesses.
Its revenue has grown from just
over $200,000 in its first year to nearly $20 million
in 2004. Along the way, it has consistently beaten
larger construction companies for major contracts with
the U.S. Air Force, Navy and the National Park Service.
Besides the Jamestown project, the
company’s wins last year included a nearly $6
million design-build contract for a marina at Langley
Air Force Base. THR Enterprises also was one of a handful
of contractors to win the Navy Demo Multiple Award
Contract (MAC), a special type of contract that gives
the company the right to compete with the other contract
winners in the future for the agency’s demolition
jobs and which, at this point, has an unlimited dollar
value. Another highlight for the company was its flooring
division, which took in a record $1.2 million in gross
revenue.
Robinson expects revenue to continue
to grow this year but at slower pace. After the blistering
growth of the past few years, he’s content to
put more emphasis on fine-tuning the company’s
service quality, employee skills and client relationships. “There
is definitely a danger that comes with growing too
fast,” says Robinson, whose initial intent in
starting the company was to buy, renovate and sell
undervalued or distressed properties. “Quality
can go to pieces if you don’t watch, so we definitely
don’t want to get to the point where we’re
growing so fast that we are unable to respond effectively
to a customer’s needs.”
To meet this goal, THR Enterprises,
which has 53 employees, recently signed a mentor-protégé arrangement
with Centex Inc., a Fortune 500 construction firm based
in Dallas. “I’m looking to strengthen our
field superintendents even more than they already are,
provide them with more technical skills and really
sharpen the tools, so to speak, on how to do a project
in a timely fashion and take care of the customer,” Robinson
says.
Centex will provide THR Enterprises with a variety of educational opportunities,
including skill-level training in a classroom-type setting as well as on-the-job
training. The two firms are already seeking joint opportunities, and Robinson
says that THR Enterprises is negotiating for a three-year deal that will allow
it to perform floor work on existing and future Centex contracts.
David Birtwhistle, vice president
for Centex, says that his company chose to work with
THR Enterprises, in part, because of its reputation
for quality work and strong focus on customer service. “We
thought that their reputation for the work that they
had performed was quite strong,” he says. “We
found a number of satisfied customers.”
And even with its stellar performance,
THR Enterprises remains clearly eager to better itself,
Birtwhistle states. “That sincerity to grow is
very much there, and we expect they’ll grab all
of the rings that we have to offer such that both companies
will benefit.”
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