TRIAD Proven Process

Date: March 9, 2020

What is the TRIAD Proven Process?

Essentially, it’s a codification of the way we’ve been able to develop loyal clients who continue to partner with us for over 20 years.  To figure this out, we simply sat down and wrote down the traits of clients and projects that we saw as successful and the traits of clients and projects where the partnership was unsuccessful, or even worse, where the relationships failed!  Through this analysis, we identified trends in both directions.

Proven Process Diagram v19.04.jpg

Verify Alignment

This is a tricky first step.  Every relationship, be it a romantic, a friendship, or professional requires a leap of faith.  And often, the best partnerships develop out of unlikely pairings.  So, how do you ferret out if a potential client or project aligns with your core values, mission, vision, etc.?  In many companies, this results in formalized “go/no go” processes, detailed research, and often, a watering down of getting to know an organization and its people.  So, we think you need to do some dating first.  We expect that our associates, and certainly our leadership, are engaged in their communities.  This includes volunteering, engaging in civic organizations, serving on boards, joining professional organizations, and other community activities.  We understand that every individual has different time constraints, monetary capacity, and wherewithal.  So, we are not strict in defining how much activity our employees should partake in.  But we expect them to be passionate and to be connected.  This process authentically bonds our employees to folks through shared experiences.  Those folks, in turn, introduce us to others who they think we should know.  The result is a network of individuals with shared interests, experiences, and aspirations… a strong base to start a relationship with.  This process is not fast, but it’s essential to building lasting and loyal partnerships.  As these folks come to us with potential projects, we utilize a shorthand tool to quickly and loosely analyze how the project aligns with our core values, core focus, and marketing plan.  However, at the end of the day, we allow the final decision to be made by the individual who is making the sale.  If we’ve done our job to align our employees with who we are, there can be no stronger tool than that employee’s instinct.

Identify Challenges and Stakeholders

Now that we’ve built a strong base of shared values and there is a project, we need to understand the vision, the potential pitfalls, and who they may affect.  This is vital.  The main unifying characteristic to every client that we have retained over the years is that there has been a challenge on their project of some kind and we have faced that challenge head-on WITH them.  This builds trust.  This builds confidence.   This builds loyalty.  AND, when we say WITH them we mean with ALL those who the challenge or difficulty might effect.  Every voice, no matter their experience or expertise is important and valued.  In fact, sometimes those with the least experience on a particular topic have the best insight as they are not encumbered with a certain way of looking at things that can come with expertise.  We respect all opinions and maintain a posture of learning throughout our process.

Build Engagement Process

Once the vision, challenges, and stakeholders are identified, a process needs to be developed to ensure all of the right voices are heard.  Each challenge and each audience requires a different, custom-built method.   For instance, the challenges of an urban adaptive re-use project likely are different than the challenges of a new building on an empty rural site.  Similarly, the process must be tailored and adapted to the identified audience of stakeholders.  Sometimes the project requires a single stakeholder to make decisions.  Sometimes a project requires a committee.  Sometimes a project requires the voices of an entire community.  It is crucial that the process is developed to allow for all voices to be heard, to foster deliberation within the constraints of the project realities, to manage and make clear expectations, and to establish a definitive decision-making process.   Without this, the process will fall apart and the team will forever spin its wheels.

Hear, Listen, and Document

The first step of solving a challenge is to truly listen to those that the challenge effects.  This means active listening, asking probing questions, clarifying answers, and recording it all.  Client and project challenges can be complex and hard to articulate.  It is our job to ask the right questions and facilitate a way for stakeholders to communicate what it is they need to say.  It is also critical that we document this a way that it can forever be referenced until the challenge is resolved and in case the challenge ever returns.

Analyze and Develop Solutions

You may be asking yourself, “Isn’t your company called TRIAD Architects?  When do you start designing things?”  The answer is at this step!  At TRIAD, we do not believe in putting pen to paper until we have spent time understanding what our clients are trying to achieve.  It is not until the vision, all challenges, and all project constraints have been identified, and all voices have been heard that we can even begin to design a single thing.  To start earlier than this would be inauthentic.  This seems simple but it really makes us different.   Important to note, it doesn’t mean that we’re just going to “give the client what they want.”  We still believe in challenging ourselves and our clients to think about things in different ways and to consider unique and thought-provoking ideas.  We just don’t do this in a vacuum or in an echo chamber of our own ego.  It doesn’t seem like a novel idea, but it is.  We listen, then we apply our design expertise to provide potential solutions.

Communicate Solutions

Now the time comes for us to shine.  We have spent the time doing our due diligence to understand our clients, the challenges they face, the constraints and realities of the project (IE budget, schedule, code, etc.), and time to communicate what we’ve designed.  This can be both exciting and foreboding.  We are very often able to find solutions that are elegant and solve multiple client/project challenges.  In fact, we have those cases on every project.  However, we also often have harsh realities to communicate.  Sometimes our clients can’t afford what they want.  Sometimes code restricts us from designing something in a certain way.  But this is where the process starts all over again.  We have faced challenges with our clients and have developed solutions for those challenges.  But, as is often the case, this can result in the identification of new hidden or latent challenges.  So, the process continues.

Without fail, when we follow this process, we develop authentic, long-lasting relationships filled with loyalty, trust, and respect.  Also, without fail, when, in the past, we have shortchanged the process or skipped steps, we get tripped up and succeed on luck alone or, worse yet, fail.  So, as we move our firm into its third decade of success, we build on these lessons and have identified a recipe for continued success.  From here, we will only continue to build and get better!

Written by Brent Foley



Stewardship with Jack Storey

Date: July 24, 2018

Author: Jack Storey, Executive Director
Employer: FUEL (Franklinton Urban Empowerment Lab)

“Caring for a community is tough; convincing others to care about their community is tougher.”

 When asked to write this blog post, I stumbled for a little bit. I work in Community Development, an “industry” that is defined by being a steward of places. How then, to accurately represent that in short form, and without rambling too intensely? I’ve decided to write it about personal responsibility, and not career-based responsibility. In these precarious times, I thought it might be more prudent to extol the values of individual community development.

People often ask me what I do for a living. I mostly respond with some version of “I try to empower folks in specific geographies to stand up for themselves; provide from themselves and their families; and to feel engaged in their citizenship.” Of course, my day to day is more about building affordable housing and providing specific programming for residents to help them achieve the loftier statement above, but that’s the boring stuff. The bottom line is this: caring for a community is tough; convincing others to care about their community is tougher.

I believe it is crucial for individuals to begin acting as stewards of their communities. You don’t have to build housing, but you should attend neighborhood meetings, host BBQs, or offer to lend your neighbor your lawn mower. It sounds easy, but even I stumble to fully live that kind of existence on a daily basis. It takes true effort, and with so many words, I hope you’ll find the inspiration to put that effort in for the sake of your community’s wellbeing.

You could start a block watch program if you don’t already have one; there are countless examples online.  I could ramble on, citing great examples, but I’ll keep it short and sweet by asking you to do one thing: Get to know at least FIVE of your neighbors. I don’t mean get to know their faces from the inside of your car as you politely wave while driving past them. Get out of your comfort zone, walk over, and knock on the door. Introduce yourself, ask them a few easy questions about themselves, and finally: Invite them to dinner at your home. It’s easy and it changes the world. Your world.  I can tell you that putting in the effort to get to know and befriend my neighbors has given me many gifts, and it is a constant reminder that the world – even though it seems to be constantly on fire – provides some amazing good just outside your front door.


Stewardship with Jami Goldstein

Date: April 2, 2018

Author: Jami Goldstein, Vice President Marketing, Communications & Events
Employer: Greater Columbus Arts Council

“Stewardship and being a conscientious public servant go hand in hand. I do not believe you can successfully have one without the other.”

“Architecture is inhabited sculpture.” Constantin Brancusi

I love this quote. It goes right to the heart of stewardship: Do not think of the actions of your life, or your creations, as stand-alone entities, in a vacuum, existing only in the now.  Each action we take creates ripples in the world, in the present and into the future. Each creation is an opportunity to make someone else’s life better, and to be a testament to caring about the future of our society and our planet.

Stewardship, as defined by Webster’s Dictionary, is: “the conducting, supervising, or managing of something; especiallythe careful and responsible management of something entrusted to one's care.” Our founding fathers understood this when they wrote in the Preamble to the Constitution of the United States that its purpose was to “…insure domestic Tranquility, provide for the common defense, promote the general Welfare, and secure the Blessings of Liberty to ourselves and our Posterity…”.  The last part, “and our posterity,” is forgotten, or worse ignored, far too often these days. 

Sadly, I believe our culture has become married not to conscientious stewardship but to immediate gratification. Society, it seems, has come to a place where if our own immediate needs are met, and those of our family, or business, we don’t really care what the repercussions are for the future. My hope for the future is the young people coming of age today, who are becoming more vocal with their disagreement of this behavior.

I have spent most of my 25-year professional career in public service.  I am fortunate to work in the arts, a first love, and I am passionate about the impact I see, regularly and first-hand, that the arts have on the lives of people in our community.  To me stewardship and being a conscientious public servant go hand in hand.  I do not believe you can successfully have one without the other.  My sense of the weight of responsibility of good stewardship is strong, and being a public servant is an important part of my identity.

Why did I choose public service? Is there a sense of selflessness that is important to me?  I must believe, regardless of whether I’m processing a bill or connecting an artist with a paid opportunity, that my work has a larger purpose, and that the work of my organization has a positive impact on people and our community. I don’t believe I could look at myself in the mirror otherwise.


Stewardship with Shannon G. Hardin

Date: February 26, 2018

Author: Shannon G. Hardin, Columbus City Council President
Employer: The City of Columbus

“Stewardship doesn't occur in a vacuum. Being an impactful steward comes with the incessant imperative to partner.”

I joke that my public service can be viewed as selfish. I have a big family that stretches across town. Most of my family is working class. They live in Southfield, King Lincoln, Driving Park, and other neighborhoods which for years existed without clear avenues for upward mobility. My nephew, Christian, will grow up black in Southfield. My work as a steward for this city is to ensure he grows up in a community that looks at him with love and admiration rather than fear. That stewardship means pushing Columbus to become a place where race and zip code don't determine the fate of our young folks. There is no single policy lever to address all of the environmental stressors which pile onto our young people's shoulders. Affordable housing, access to healthcare, good-paying jobs, meaningful education, & safe streets form the ladder rungs to the middle class. I want the best for my nephew and, I believe, if we flatten obstacles for folks like him (i.e. boys and young men of color), we lift all of Columbus.

Now the "we" I mentioned in that previous paragraph wasn't the royal we nor was it meant to refer only to Columbus City Council. The aforementioned "we" refers to the Columbus community. Stewardship doesn't occur in a vacuum. Being an impactful steward comes with the incessant imperative to partner. No matter what any strong mayor tells you, great cities are built through collective stewardship. Collective stewardship means recognizing that the success of your family is tied to the success of families across Columbus. Collective stewardship is rooted in shared priorities and a desire to see every neighborhood in Columbus thrive.

As a young elected leader, my eyes are set on Columbus. I'm not seeking to serve anywhere other than right here. I'm comfortable knowing that my stewardship and focus will stay laser-focused on the plight of folks struggling in Columbus. My commitment is and will continue to be the welfare of this city. My commitment is to my family and to families across our city. I don't have all the answers. But with good partners, I'm confident that all of us can lead Columbus into an even brighter future.

 


Stewardship with Jason McGee

Date: July 22, 2018

Author: Jason McGee, Instructor, Eastland-Fairfield Career and Technical School

“The curriculum demands that they are taught a technical proficiency in architecture. I make a conscious effort to supplement this by asking the students to consider their social responsibility as designers.”

Teaching [is] Stewardship

Merriam-Webster defines stewardship as “the careful and responsible management of something entrusted to one's care”.  As the instructor of the Architecture and Construction Management Program, I am entrusted to guide tomorrow’s architects and designers. My first responsibility is to the students, followed by the parents, school district, alumni, and the architectural community. 

I believe the notion of ownership goes hand-in-hand with that of stewardship. I am not the owner of my program as a piece of property. However, I have full ownership of the results, good or bad, while the program is entrusted to my care. This is a task both undeniably daunting and unimaginably rewarding.

The students entering the program are already interested in creating the spaces they inhabit. The curriculum demands that they are taught a technical proficiency in architecture. I make a conscious effort to supplement this by asking the students to consider their social responsibility as designers. The best example of this is reflected in the students’ senior projects; like a thesis, they research and design a final project of their choosing. 

A project I am particularly proud to share that exhibits social responsibility was designed by Kendra Soler. She wanted her senior project to be on the site of Eastland mall, a location near her home that she witnessed degrade over time. Her first instinct was: “I’ll bring back the mall” but she quickly realized that the area didn’t need a mall at all. It needed resources to empower the disenfranchised members of the community. She posited that domestic violence and single-mother households were one of the most devastating problems facing the community.  Her final proposal was a women’s shelter that became a neighborhood-wide intervention to begin the healing process.

While the final project was powerful and successful, the most rewarding days occurred during the design process. On several occasions I overheard Kendra and her classmates passionately discussing design and the issues they were addressing in their projects. It’s gratifying to hear these conversations happen spontaneously and without my participation.

Due to the generous support from the community, I feel a reciprocal obligation to the profession to curate creative, socially aware, young professionals. We will soon entrust my students to carefully and responsibly guide the profession of architecture. From where I stand, the future looks bright.

You can view more of our work on Instagram, Twitter, and Facebook.  If you would like to get involved with us, please reach out to me: jmcgee@efcts.us.