June 2009 Vol. 236 No. 6

Features

Michels Corporation: Making History For 50 Years

Jeff Griffin, Contributing Editor

The Michels Corporation is celebrating its 50th year in business in 2009, marking its evolution from a small contractor specializing in gas pipeline construction to one of North America’s largest, multi-division utility contractors.

Michels’ employees, customers, suppliers and friends will meet at the company’s headquarters in Brownsville, WI in late June to share many stories about the company’s rich history and steady growth, the wide range of projects completed and memories of the late Dale Michels, its founder and driving force until his death in 1998.

Dale Michels was working as a pipeline welder when he conceived the idea to start his own pipeline company to serve growing demand for gas distribution infrastructure. He approached his brother-in-law, Ted Koenigs, and Ted’s business partner, Jim Michel, to join in the new venture, and soon thereafter Michels Pipeline Construction was in business.

Michels’ original plan was to take advantage of the need to build new gas distribution infrastructure, and when that was complete, to look for a new challenge.

“In the beginning, Ted and Jim thought they were just making a silent investment in the new business,” said Brian Johnson, Michels Corp. executive vice president. “But they were wrong.”

The young company quickly developed a reputation for doing every job right, on time and within budget, and customers came to Dale with projects, often difficult ones that others were reluctant to attempt.

Acceptable Risks

“My father was a risk taker, always looking for opportunities, and he was never afraid to take on challenging jobs,” said Michels President Pat Michels. “He would ask himself and others in the company, ‘How is the best way to do this? Is there a way to do it that no one else has tried before?’ He took jobs no one else wanted because he had confidence in himself and his people.”

An often-told story by Mary Ausloos, Dale’s only secretary and present corporate office manager, illustrates the point: “One time Dale was talking to a customer on the telephone and I heard him say, ‘Sure, we can do that, we can do that.’ I bet he said it a dozen times. Then he hung up the phone, and said, “Now, we have to figure out a way to do this.’ And, of course, he did.”

Longtime employees of Michels say Dale had an intense interest in every element of a job from planning, through construction, and to completion. As the company grew, Dale developed and maintained relationships with employees and customers that resulted in strong, long-lasting loyalties.

“One thing that stood out was Dale’s can-do, no-fear attitude and never-ending drive to complete every job,” said Johnson, who joined Michels in 1981. “Dale became my mentor when I transferred to the home office in Brownsville in 1987, and every day I witnessed his can-do attitude. I saw it every day. It’s the dedication and commitment to service that Michels’ customers continue to receive today.”

As the Michels organization has grown, it has continued to serve the pipeline industry. Its expertise has expanded the company’s capabilities to include a much broader market than most utility contractors as it is active in telecommunications, tunneling, electrical power systems, wind energy, aggregate materials, paving, stone mining, and environmental services. Michels has adapted to the changing needs of its clients and taken advantage of new technologies such as pipeline rehabilitation and horizontal directional drilling.

New Markets

In 1963, telecommunications was the first new market addition for the pipeline company.

“Telecommunications was a natural outgrowth of Michels’ gas distribution construction business,” Johnson said. “Wisconsin telephone companies knew of Dale and asked him if he could do buried cable construction. The key was that Dale never said no to a customer.”

Sewer, water and tunneling were added in 1970, and seven years later water construction was expanded to include construction of rural water mains, laterals and services throughout the Northern Plains states.

In 1976, Michels began producing crushed aggregates and supplying road construction and building materials for projects throughout eastern Wisconsin.

Aggregates might seem a departure from Michels’ utility base, but Johnson said they are a natural fit.

“Aggregate materials and mining were an early complementary business for Dale Michels,” explained Johnson. “He grew up in a geologically rich area, surrounded by an abundance of quarries and sand and gravel pits. It was further complemented by his knowledge and utilization of heavy construction equipment and the demand for crushed aggregates in utility and general construction. What started as two gravel pits for a sewer project has catapulted Michels into being the largest aggregate producer in Wisconsin. With aggregates came road construction and paving; vertical integrations of the aggregate mining business.”

In 1983 – 20 years after completion of its first telephone project – Michels become one of the nation’s first contractors to install fiber optic communications cable which ultimately led to the information highway that has changed how the world communicates. To speed installation of cable along railroad right-of-way, Michels designed and built cable plows mounted on rail cars.

In 1988, Michels was one of the first contractors to recognize the potential of the new technology of horizontal directional drilling (HDD). In 1996, Michels designed and built a 1.5 million-pound pullback HDD unit, the Hercules – 1200, at the time the largest machine of its kind. Today Michels is one of the country’s largest directional drilling contractors.

Family

It is significant that while large multinational corporations swallow up successful privately-owned companies, Michels remains in the ownership of the founder’s family.

“There have certainly been times when Michels has been approached by the roll-ups and other suitors hoping we would sell or become part of something larger,” said Johnson. “But quite some time ago, we reached a size of ‘critical mass’ where we looked at ourselves and those would-be suitors and said, ‘Who should be buying whom?’ We reached the point where the Michels family is committed to passing this on to the next generation of the Michels family.”

In 1997, Michels expanded into the electrical market with the acquisition of Superior Electric Co., which began a series of acquisitions of selected companies to expand the company’s service and operations to a national level. Key acquisitions include Pilchuck Contractors (1999), Data-Tel Communication Services (2000), Gelco Services (2004), and PCC Construction Co. and its affiliates (2005). New services also were established in the company, including Michels Drilled Foundations (2003) and Michels Wind Energy (2005), and names of several operating divisions were changed to more accurately identify their services.

To accurately reflect the scope of its business and place in the industry, Michels Pipeline Construction changed its name to the Michels Corporation in 2001.

By 2008, Michels Corp. included 14 divisions operating from company headquarters in Brownsville, WI and 14 regional locations in the U.S. and Canada. The same year, Michels Corp. ranked 64th in Engineering News Record magazine’s Top 400 U.S. Contractors and 172nd of the largest construction firms in the world.

Brian Johnson terms Michels’ 50th anniversary a celebration of endurance, pride and success for everyone at Michels.

“For a business that has grown from one man’s simple idea to become a small Wisconsin gas distribution contractor, and then evolves into a leading North American utility contractor is a remarkable accomplishment,” said Johnson. “And that accomplishment is the result of some incredible people and very loyal, satisfied customers over the last five decades.”

Teamwork

With many milestones in its 50-year history, perhaps one of the most important occurred shortly after the company was started. Dale Michels was seriously injured while the young company was working on one of its first large projects. Without their leader, the crew didn’t waver and completed the job.

“That the new company survived Dale’s injury is a major event in Michels history,” said Johnson. “The way our employees went forward without Dale’s presence, completed the job, and carried the company forward, speaks volumes about the team members that Dale chose and the character of employees who have taken the company to where it is today.”

Indeed, the Michels family credits its employees – now numbering more than 4,000 – with a large part of the company’s success. Almost 75% of the employees have been with the company more than 10 years.

“A good company attracts good people,” said Johnson. “We need to provide a quality workplace, a great place to work, one with challenging opportunities, state-of-the-art facilities with the right technology and tools and modern equipment, and a pay structure that rewards performance and exhibits the company’s core values.”

What about the future?

“Change,” said Johnson. “Five to six years ago, we weren’t in businesses that today represents as much as the total volume of our business then. We know that if we don’t change, we’re standing still and going nowhere. We understand that we can take our skills and apply them to a world of opportunity. Some ideas for the future are still in the planning stage and some have yet to be discovered. We need to be adaptable; we need to think of new ways to do old things; we need to advance the technology of our businesses, we need to embrace change. We still subscribe to the belief that we can do whatever we put our hearts and minds to. We have safely stayed vertical to our business.

“My vision is that the next generation at Michels will build on what we too have created – just as Dale Michels created it for us. The next generation has a wonderful opportunity before them.”

Pat Michels agrees. “I hope that Michels will continue as a family-owned operation–that the next generation can carry on and then the generation after that and so forth. I think that with the right training and the right guidance, we can move forward with that plan and work to ensure Michels goes on to celebrate 100 years in the construction business.” Michels family members currently active in the company are Ruth Michels, chief executive officer; Pat Michels, president, and vice presidents Tim Michels, Kevin Michels and Steve Michels.

For more information: http://www.michels.us/michels-us/

Michels Operating Divisions

  • Michels Pipeline Construction: Cross-country oil and natural gas pipeline construction, maintenance and repair; gathering systems; compressor and pumping stations; metering and regulator stations; storage facilities; and water and steam lines.
  • Michels Pipe Services: CCTV pipeline inspection, pipe cleaning, CIPP lining and point repair, pipebursting, grouting, sliplining and structural repair.
  • Michels Tunneling: Tunneling and microtunneling for all types of utilities in virtually any type of soil conditions.
  • Michels Directional Crossings: Land and marine horizontal directional drilling services through most types of soil conditions to install product up to 60 inches in diameter.
  • Michels Communications: Aerial and underground telecommunications construction including cable pulling and blowing, cable splicing, testing and cutover of copper, coaxial and fiber optic cables for residential and businesses in urban and rural locations.
  • Michels Materials: Highway construction services and supplier of crushed aggregates from multiple quarries, sand and gravel for highway and road construction.
  • Michels Power: Electrical infrastructure construction, including new construction and rebuilds of aerial and underground transmission and distribution lines, substations, inside commercial wiring services and emergency disaster response.
  • Mi-Tech Services Inc: Design services for aerial and underground telecommunications cable systems, including copper, fiber optic systems and installation of underground conduit.
  • Pilchuck Contractors Inc.: Serving the western United States with turnkey capabilities for dry utility construction projects, using open-cut and trenchless construction.
  • Pilchuck Diversified Services: Fiber optic cable, conduit, and inner duct installation for urban, suburban and long-haul projects.
  • Anderson Bros. & Johnson: Miners of the only deep red granite in North America used for multiple building uses, including monuments, building stone, countertops, tiles and crushed stone for road and building construction.
  • Fond du Lac Stone: Specialized manufacturer of building stone products, landscaping, walls and cut limestone for mantels, hearths and sills.
  • Michels Paving: Paving services for public and private projects, including highways, airports, parking lots and other purposes;
  • Michels Wind Energy: Offers all services required for construction of wind farms, including access roads, turbine erection and wiring, building substations and overhead and underground transmission systems.

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