# Production is a Force

#### Production Is a Tornado

I remember working on a job site, filling nail holes with a coworker. We were on the same wall, so I jumped in at the other end, thinking we could meet in the middle and get it done twice as fast.

He stopped me cold. "Why are you starting there? Go somewhere else."

That's the wrong mindset. He saw his work as a single lane: start at A, finish at B, and keep others out. However, the reality is that **production doesn't look like that**.

In the field, production is a force of nature. It's a tornado.

A high-performing crew doesn’t scatter—one in the kitchen, one in a bedroom, another in the hallway. They move together, like a single body. They descend on a single room, working in sync, and don't move on until the task is done.

It's fast, it’s forceful, and it leaves nothing untouched in its path. That’s how a team can crush tasks that would usually drag on all day. By focusing their combined energy, they can complete time-consuming tasks—such as caulking and filling holes—in under an hour.

That's the power of production: A single small crew can prep four new houses in a day and even prime two others on top of that. This isn't just about speed; it's about **focus**, **efficiency**, and the overwhelming force that comes from a team working as **one**.
