| Published
June 17, 2008 |
Volume
16, Number 6
|
Vision, Humor, and Family Propel Robert
Gray and Firm to Success
By Nicole Zaro Stahl
NETWORK Editor
For the past 22 years, July 4 has had a special resonance for Bob Gray.
That’s the anniversary of the day he formally severed the ties to a
comfortable position in the corporate world and struck off to launch
Robert Gray & Associates, a Hacienda firm specializing in utility
consulting and design. “It was my own personal Independence Day,” he
says with a chuckle that reflects his characteristic wry humor.
Also characteristic is the fact that the move was as carefully
deliberated as it was inspired by a sound vision. “I had been with
another company, Rosendin Electric, since 1970, doing a similar kind of
work. Some people suggested that I get into the design end of the
business. After prayer and much discussion with my wife--and anybody
else willing to talk--we made the change.”
The “Point People”
Gray & Associates designs and engineers the power, telephone,
cable, and street light systems for new development projects. The work
is both intricate and critically important, requiring expertise in a
mix of disciplines--utilities, civil engineering, construction, and the
regulatory environment. From his long tenure in the industry, Gray saw
how he could streamline the process for developers by aggregating and
integrating the disparate systems in a single-source approach.
“During the design and
engineering phases, we become the point people for our clients so they
don’t have to deal with the utilities and other entities
independently,” he explains. “Our staff is made up of people with a
variety of backgrounds. Because they bring different perspectives to a
project, we are able to do a lot of brainstorming in-house, and a lot
of cross-checking.” The organization obviously thrives on this kind of
collaboration. “Someone is always coming up with a better idea,” he
enthuses.
Recognition of individual employees’ strengths and talents has a lot to
do with why the firm has done so well. “I have been lucky and
successful surrounding myself with really good people,” he remarks,
adding, “I’m incredibly proud of the men and women working for us. They
are very hard working, with a good sense of humor—and very little
turnover. You couldn’t be with a better bunch.”
Several other figures have provided a source of inspiration,
professional and personal, over the course of his life. First and
foremost was his uncle, Al Vermeer, a professional cartoonist, “the
smartest, most interesting person to be around,” Gray relates. “He
studied world events and was talking about Viet Nam back in the 1950s.
He was a great intellect and had a wonderful, funny outlook on life.”
Gray’s former employer, Louis Rosendin, was another strong influence.
“He was a very good business leader, and probably one of the best money
men I’ve ever been around. He treated me very well as an employee—but I
also made him a lot of money,” he points out with a laugh. Also high on
the list of people he admires is Hacienda developer Joe Callahan, with
whom Gray worked as the business park was being developed. Gray singles
out Callahan’s vision and enthusiasm for special praise. “A lot of what
you see around Pleasanton—not just on the north end but also
downtown--was Joe’s doing,” he confides.
Gray’s concern for the human dimension of the workplace is evident
across multiple fronts. “One of the reasons we’ve done well is our
hands-on involvement. Our people spend a lot of ‘windshield time,’
getting out in the field and being onsite. A project involves not just
drawings and files, but real people and real development. On each
project we take a sense of ownership and do things the right way for
the client, saving time and money as best we can. As regulated as our
world is today, this is not an easy task.”
To offset some of the stress, the firm has a family-friendly
orientation that encourages flex-time and gives employees rotating
three-day weekends. Several engineers work remotely, whether from a
home office in Pleasanton or at the north end of the Sacramento valley.
“With today’s electronics, we don’t miss a beat. It’s like the person
was just five feet away,” Gray comments.
A Family-Centric
Orientation
Even though the extended weekends come at the cost of a longer work day
from Monday through Thursday, Gray relishes the extra time it gives him
and his wife Leilani to retreat to their vacation home in the Upper
Delta. “This is our sanctuary,” he says. “We go up there, throw a
fishing rod in the water or take out the boat, and forget about the
concerns of life.” They are often joined by their four grandchildren,
who range in age from 19 to almost two. “She speaks water, the little
one,” he comments, and when he mentions later that Leilani grew up in
Malibu and misses the ocean, the genetic link becomes clear.
Gray met his wife on her first day on campus at San Francisco State,
and they continue to enjoy and inspire each other after two children
and 43 years of marriage. Instead of being the exception they are the
norm among their friends, most of whom appear to share their secret to
longevity as a couple: “Pick the right person to begin with, and then
work on the relationship,” he advises. A sense of the
give-and-take in their household emerges when he talks about another
hobby, wood-working. “My wife will let me have any power tool I want as
long as I make something,” he quips.
In 1965, while still newlyweds, Gray and his wife bought a house and
settled in Pleasanton, lured by the then-more-affordable real estate
prices. Both their children--son John, who is unmarried and living in
Lake County, and daughter Teri, who indulges her love of horses from a
home on the Delta--were raised here. Ten years ago, after becoming
empty-nesters, the couple decided to move to Brentwood, where they
built a new home in a development for seniors. They love the friendly,
welcoming posture of the neighborhood. “If anyone is hungry or lonely
out there, it’s their own fault,” Gray teases. They also love the
physical environment, the ponds and wildlife that punctuate their
golf-course view. “It’s a wonderful place to live, a lot like
Pleasanton was in the 1960s, a small town that is growing like crazy,
but also well run.”
Not a golfer (Leilani “dabbles”), Gray also enjoys the model railroad
he built in one of the bedrooms, obviously a labor of love. “This one
is probably the 12th or 13th I’ve had over my lifetime and was about
eight years in the making,” he says. “It’s my own domain, but it’s here
to share with the grandkids.”
Although Gray and his wife live in a senior community, they are hardly
ready to dial down their active lifestyle. The firm, which “is enjoying
incredible growth right now,” just moved into its third Hacienda
office, with a custom floorplan and more space than before. He might
spend a few hours less in the office, but he’s often out in the field
on projects. “Leilani and I are fairly youthful and active senior
citizens,” he remarks, and to prove his point he references the name on
her wave-runner, Grammy’s Hot Rod. “I see an ongoing course in the
future--no plans for retirement are imminent.”
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