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From the Jobsite to the Boardroom: Buildstone Collective’s Impact on Custom Builders

From the Jobsite to the Boardroom: Buildstone Collective’s Impact on Custom Builders
Photo: Unsplash.com

By: Alex Garner

A Decision That Changed Everything

Zach Rogers was sitting in a college business class when the professor asked, “How many of you want to start your own business one day?” Zach raised his hand. No one else did. That moment told him everything he needed to know. “I realized I was in the wrong room,” he says. “I didn’t want to work for someone else. I wanted to build something of my own.”

So, he dropped out.

He walked away from the traditional path, took a job with a local construction company, and started learning how business really works — on muddy jobsites, not whiteboards.

An Unexpected Start to a New Kind of System

The construction company’s owner was struggling to get work, so Zach offered to help. He had no background in marketing. But they needed jobs, and no one was calling. He ran into walls. Made mistakes. But after months of trial and error, something clicked. The phones started ringing again. Word spread.

Then one day, someone called him and said, “I heard you helped my friend. What do you charge?” Caught off guard, Zach replied, “Five hundred bucks.” That was his first sale. He quit his job shortly after and began building what would eventually become Buildstone Collective.

Narrowing the Focus: Why Custom Home Builders Were the Right Fit

In the beginning, Zach worked with any contractor who needed help — remodelers, roofers, general trades. The results were fine, but something was missing. “We realized we were trying to be too many things to too many people,” Zach explains. “But with custom home builders, the results were better — and the problems we were solving were bigger.”

That realization led to a pivotal shift.

Five years ago, Zach committed to working only with custom home builders. Buildstone Collective would stop offering generalist services and start building systems tailored to help builders win higher-quality clients, more consistent work, and better margins — all without depending on unpredictable referrals.

From the Jobsite to the Boardroom: Buildstone Collective’s Impact on Custom Builders

Photo: Unsplash.com

A Vow That Cuts Through the Noise

Today, Buildstone’s core offer is straightforward: if they don’t help a builder secure 3 to 10+ custom home builds in a year, they don’t get paid. That kind of assurance stands out in a space crowded with vague “lead generation” services and outsourced solutions that rarely produce real revenue.

One standout example: Steve B. in Minneapolis. He had a respected name and a solid crew, but growth had plateaued. Referrals were slowing. His team was losing time on conversations that went nowhere.

After partnering with Buildstone, Steve installed a full-funnel system that qualified for land ownership, timeline, and budget. Within a year, he closed 15 new full custom homes and saw a significant reduction in wasted calls. His team stayed at full capacity — year-round.

Control, Not Volume: A System That Works the Way Builders Do

Zach’s philosophy is simple: most builders don’t need more leads. They need better conversations — ones with serious buyers who understand the process and are ready to move. “We don’t flood inboxes,” he says. “We help builders have the right ten conversations, not the wrong hundred.”

The Buildstone Collective system includes local ads written in the builder’s voice, pre-qualification surveys to filter out poor fits, and a trained internal booking team that follows up within minutes. All activity is tracked inside a custom CRM — giving builders full visibility without forcing them to learn a new toolset.

Not an Agency — A Strategic Partner

Buildstone isn’t a digital agency, and Zach makes that distinction clear. “Builders are tired of agencies that overpromise, disappear after 30 days, and leave them chasing junk leads,” he says. “That’s not what we are. We’re a partner. A strategist. Someone who understands how this business actually works.”

Every part of Buildstone’s system is built and managed in-house — from ad creation and funnel design to follow-up and reporting. There are no white-label providers, no subcontracted processes. For the builder, that means fewer meetings, fewer surprises, and a system that runs in the background while they focus on the work.

Buildstone’s Mission: Empower Builders With a Real Growth Framework

As Buildstone Collective continues to grow, Zach’s focus hasn’t changed. The company isn’t selling hacks or gimmicks. It’s giving serious builders the structure to scale with stability and confidence — without getting burned by another empty promise.

“This isn’t about tricks,” Zach says. “It’s about control. Builders already run great companies. We just give them the system to grow in a way that’s predictable and real.”

To learn more about Buildstone Collective and explore availability in your market, visit buildstonecollective.com.

 

Disclaimer: The content is for informational purposes only and should not be construed as professional business advice. Readers are encouraged to consult with a qualified business strategist or consultant for guidance tailored to their specific needs.

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