Mark Franzoso didn’t always see himself in the roofing business; it just happened that way when he took a job as a teenager installing siding and windows.
For Chuck Chapman, vice president of Central Roofing Company of Glendale, Ariz., a Tecta America Company, roofing wasn’t the career he envisioned while growing up.
I must agree with Randall Coe, Vice President of Marketing for Bosch’s North American Power Tools Division. Bosch is not just a hammer company anymore.
From her humble beginnings in the early 1980s when she sold the family cars to start a business, Sandra Sedillo-McGlothlin has not forgotten what allowed her to rise to the top as a Hispanic woman in the male-dominated roofing industry.
Bill Buehl has come a long way since he started in the roofing industry with a used truck and a gutter machine while he was a student in college. At the time, he had an eye on a career as a fireman.
Planning ahead for a challenging year was the central theme among contractors at the 2009 International Roofing Expo, which was held Feb. 3-5 at Mandalay Bay Convention Center in Las Vegas.
Greeted in the
morning by a panel of industry superstars at the keynote address and
complemented in the afternoon by nearly 400 companies showing off the newest
trends, the International Roofing Expo opened Tuesday at the Mandalay Bay
Convention Center with a
pledge for better times ahead.
Little did Robert Andrews know that earning a history
degree as an undergraduate and then going back to college to study urban
regional planning would be a catalyst to becoming a successful roofing
contractor.
One of the best bargains of the New Year from Roofing
Contractor will be
our State of the Industry report and survey that highlights our February 2009
issue.