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Jesse Elkins: The Henry Ford of the Cannabis Industry

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Manage episode 291844110 series 2879847
コンテンツは David Mantey によって提供されます。エピソード、グラフィック、ポッドキャストの説明を含むすべてのポッドキャスト コンテンツは、David Mantey またはそのポッドキャスト プラットフォーム パートナーによって直接アップロードされ、提供されます。誰かがあなたの著作権で保護された作品をあなたの許可なく使用していると思われる場合は、ここで概説されているプロセスに従うことができますhttps://ja.player.fm/legal

This week, Jesse Elkins, founder of Grow Industries, discusses how he became one of the most sought-after designers of cannabis cultivation and manufacturing facilities.

Much of Elkins' story is being at the right place at the right time. When he graduated high school in Washington State, he enrolled in refrigeration school to become an HVAC professional. At the same time, the state legalized medical-use cannabis. A few of his friends started small home grows, and he helped them off with HVAC as side jobs. However, he soon began receiving referrals, and the side job snowballed into a business. In 2007, he founded ClimaGrow, a company that specialized solely on climate control for indoor cannabis gardens.

By 2015, the company grew to more than 20 employees. In 2014, when the recreational cannabis market was legalized, Elkins was perfectly positioned as the only expert in the market. He landed every job, and his business transformed from a basement grow specialist to managing industrial grows.

In 2016, Elkins founded Grow Industries. While ClimaGrow focused on climate control, Elkins wanted to design and build the entire cultivation factory. He landed some of the biggest names in the state and went on to create some of the most envied facilities in the state, including operations at Wonderbrett and Bountiful Farms.

After 20 years in the business, Elkins has seen many changes as the industry has evolved and fine-tuned his approach to facility design. Elkins wants to be the Henry Ford of the cannabis industry. While Ford didn't invent the car, he essentially created modern manufacturing and put out a better product faster, using automation.

Four years ago, nearly half of his business was retrofitting new buildings designed and built incorrectly. The jobs included complete tear-outs at dozens of facilities, mounting up to much wasted time and money because fledgling companies hired mechanical engineers without industry experience.

The other half of Elkins' business was retrofitting old buildings to suit cannabis operations. With old buildings come a legacy of problems. Elkins recalls one client who purchased an old shop from around the 1930s. His calculations were correct, and the dehumidification set, but during the last few weeks of flower, the facility experienced huge humidity spikes, and Elkins was flummoxed. He discovered that the slab under the building was only two inches thick. Side note: The slab should be six inches thick, at minimum four inches. As a result of the shotty slab, the facility pulled groundwater through the concrete and ruining the grow.

Elkins says that it is always better to build a facility from the ground up, but he understands that sometimes you have to make an old building work. For any retrofit, he advises ripping the building down to the studs, sealing the concrete floor and sanitizing the entire facility -- it's impossible to know the contaminants, insects and mold that remain from the previous owner.

While Elkins started in Washington, he now lives in Arizona. He has built facilities from Washington to Boston and around the country, including 18 months in California.

Last week, Grow Industries was acquired by GCorp, a small management and consulting services company owned by the Gilder family in New York. Elkins says the acquisition will help him grow the business by taking day-to-day business operations off of his plate. He also plans to work on cannabis-industry-specific new product development.

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139 つのエピソード

Artwork
iconシェア
 
Manage episode 291844110 series 2879847
コンテンツは David Mantey によって提供されます。エピソード、グラフィック、ポッドキャストの説明を含むすべてのポッドキャスト コンテンツは、David Mantey またはそのポッドキャスト プラットフォーム パートナーによって直接アップロードされ、提供されます。誰かがあなたの著作権で保護された作品をあなたの許可なく使用していると思われる場合は、ここで概説されているプロセスに従うことができますhttps://ja.player.fm/legal

This week, Jesse Elkins, founder of Grow Industries, discusses how he became one of the most sought-after designers of cannabis cultivation and manufacturing facilities.

Much of Elkins' story is being at the right place at the right time. When he graduated high school in Washington State, he enrolled in refrigeration school to become an HVAC professional. At the same time, the state legalized medical-use cannabis. A few of his friends started small home grows, and he helped them off with HVAC as side jobs. However, he soon began receiving referrals, and the side job snowballed into a business. In 2007, he founded ClimaGrow, a company that specialized solely on climate control for indoor cannabis gardens.

By 2015, the company grew to more than 20 employees. In 2014, when the recreational cannabis market was legalized, Elkins was perfectly positioned as the only expert in the market. He landed every job, and his business transformed from a basement grow specialist to managing industrial grows.

In 2016, Elkins founded Grow Industries. While ClimaGrow focused on climate control, Elkins wanted to design and build the entire cultivation factory. He landed some of the biggest names in the state and went on to create some of the most envied facilities in the state, including operations at Wonderbrett and Bountiful Farms.

After 20 years in the business, Elkins has seen many changes as the industry has evolved and fine-tuned his approach to facility design. Elkins wants to be the Henry Ford of the cannabis industry. While Ford didn't invent the car, he essentially created modern manufacturing and put out a better product faster, using automation.

Four years ago, nearly half of his business was retrofitting new buildings designed and built incorrectly. The jobs included complete tear-outs at dozens of facilities, mounting up to much wasted time and money because fledgling companies hired mechanical engineers without industry experience.

The other half of Elkins' business was retrofitting old buildings to suit cannabis operations. With old buildings come a legacy of problems. Elkins recalls one client who purchased an old shop from around the 1930s. His calculations were correct, and the dehumidification set, but during the last few weeks of flower, the facility experienced huge humidity spikes, and Elkins was flummoxed. He discovered that the slab under the building was only two inches thick. Side note: The slab should be six inches thick, at minimum four inches. As a result of the shotty slab, the facility pulled groundwater through the concrete and ruining the grow.

Elkins says that it is always better to build a facility from the ground up, but he understands that sometimes you have to make an old building work. For any retrofit, he advises ripping the building down to the studs, sealing the concrete floor and sanitizing the entire facility -- it's impossible to know the contaminants, insects and mold that remain from the previous owner.

While Elkins started in Washington, he now lives in Arizona. He has built facilities from Washington to Boston and around the country, including 18 months in California.

Last week, Grow Industries was acquired by GCorp, a small management and consulting services company owned by the Gilder family in New York. Elkins says the acquisition will help him grow the business by taking day-to-day business operations off of his plate. He also plans to work on cannabis-industry-specific new product development.

  continue reading

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