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EP 35 · 2022-10-24 · 1:28:12

How Two Newfoundlanders Built Atlantic Canada's Virtual Heavy Equipment Marketplace | Eastern Frontier

Eastern Frontier co-founders John Adams and Harold Druken explain how a two-Newfoundlander startup built a virtual, relationship-first heavy-equipment brokerage covering all four Atlantic provinces in 18 months.

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// CHAPTERS — TAP TO JUMP THE PLAYER
0:00Sponsor: Pizant Building ProductsOpening sponsor read for Pizant Building Products, HRM-based building supplies.0:30Introducing Eastern Frontier and the guestsHost Dan introduces John Adams and Harold Druken, co-founders of Eastern Frontier, Atlantic Canada's one-stop shop for buying, selling, sourcing and evaluating heavy construction equipment.3:20John Adams: background and how the partnership formedJohn recounts moving from construction project management on nickel mines to auction-house sales director for Eastern Canada, then recruiting Harold as a Newfoundland sales rep. The name 'Eastern Frontier' and its layered logo design are discussed.8:50Harold Druken: from demolition to pro hockey to salesHarold traces his path from demolition and homebuilding (15-20 houses) to industrial/commercial sales with Kent Building Supplies, and then the pro-hockey career (drafted 36th overall, played for the Canucks, Leafs, Hurricanes). The 'pro athletes die twice' identity-loss transition into construction is candidly discussed.12:20Team structure and the relationship-first philosophyEight-person team breakdown: Nicole Buffett (EA), Rich Pike (social/web), and four province-based sales specialists. Harold explains why they recruit 'long in the tooth' industry veterans over young top-sellers, and why they don't treat customers as numbers.17:30Technology, the phone call, and blending old-school with digitalDiscussion of the 'old-fashioned handshake meets technology' tagline. The dying art of the phone call is debated. Social-media dependency critique. How Eastern Frontier covers all channels (call, text, email, hard copy) to reach every generation of contractor.26:00Price transparency: the honest valuation modelJohn explains their Sandhills-powered valuation tool and the practice of giving every seller and buyer a realistic market price upfront — even if that means delivering bad news. 'If you need 90 and it's worth 50, you've got the wrong people.'31:50Revenue mix, global reach, and the virtual consignment model80% Atlantic Canada, 20% global (Egypt, Puerto Rico, US). The Sandhills 'Auction Time' weekly platform, how 28 calls in five minutes confirmed product-market fit, and the virtual/agency model where equipment stays in sellers' yards.39:10Auction mechanics, online bidding, and deal flexibilityHow online auctions work weekly through Auction Time, the ability to sell before auction day, seller flexibility on timeline, and buyer transparency on transportation costs.46:30Supply chain, COVID tailwinds, and market intelligenceMicrochip shortage doubled used-equipment demand. COVID pushed buyers online, educating them without Eastern Frontier having to. Seasonal demand patterns (snow equipment in autumn, paving in spring). Hurricane Fiona anticipated equipment demand discussed.56:50Provincial markets and Nova Scotia construction boomNova Scotia booming (46 cranes visible), Newfoundland in relative downturn, PEI farming under cost pressure. Buyers concentrated where work is. Eastern Frontier rolling with provincial economic cycles.1:03:30Sales advice, Monday meetings, and leadership cultureSales advice: be present, be honest, knock on the door. Weekly motivational Monday meetings with guest speakers (Jay Harrison, NHLPA). Eastern Frontier removes barriers so reps can focus on selling. Co-founder division of labour: Harold boots-on-ground sales, John associations and operations.1:17:30Partnership dynamics, sports analogies, and community ambitionsThe argument-as-strength thesis in co-founder relationships. Brian Burke 'dance with the girl that brought you' focus advice. Community-giving ambitions beyond equipment sales. Harold's hockey stories (Pat Quinn, Paul Maurice, Joe Thornton).1:24:40Wrap-up and sponsor readsMutual praise, call to action (easternfrontier.ca), Cook Insurance and FCA Surety sponsor reads.
// THE INTRO

Recorded pre-Hurricane Fiona (September 23, 2022) and published October 24, 2022, this 88-minute episode features John Adams and Harold Druken, co-founders of Eastern Frontier — Atlantic Canada's virtual buy/sell/source/evaluate marketplace for heavy construction, forestry, mining, and transportation equipment. The conversation covers the pair's origin stories (John from auction-house sales management, Harold from demolition/homebuilding and a pro-hockey career with the Vancouver Canucks and others), how they conceived and named Eastern Frontier, their team of eight specialists, the Sandhills/Market Book/Auction Time platform partnership that generated 28 phone calls in five minutes on its first listing, their philosophy of radical price transparency and customer-first deal-making, the mechanics of their virtual consignment model (equipment stays in sellers' yards), global reach (Egypt, Puerto Rico), COVID and microchip supply-chain tailwinds, and long-term community ambitions. The episode is a classic Atlantic Canada founder-journey story with strong construction-industry specificity: equipment valuation anchors, seasonal demand patterns, and the case against being a 'jack of all trades.'

// THE LESSONS
See all 12 lessons ▸
Build a virtual consignment model so sellers keep using equipment while it sells, eliminating the need for physical auction yards.
the yard the equipment stays in the yards of the owners they can use it
39:30
Give buyers and sellers a frank market-data valuation upfront; refusing to validate unrealistic prices builds more trust than agreeing.
if you need 90 you've got the wrong people because it's 50 000 and 90 is not going to go
▶ Clip25:21
Partner with a global listing platform (Sandhills/Auction Time) before you have brand recognition — the reach amplification is immediate and measurable.
we listed this truck and in a matter of five minutes we had like 28 phone calls
32:26
Hire sales people who know the equipment from industry experience, not polished salespeople who need to learn the product.
we're looking for people that understand the business… they're not young we don't mind the youth but these guys know the equipment
13:14
Keep ownership commission-side only; buyers sourcing through you pay nothing until purchase — this removes friction and builds inbound referrals.
if you're looking for something that doesn't cost you a dime to pick us up and use this
48:25
Stay within your specialist lanes — adding service categories too early dilutes credibility with buyers who expect deep expertise.
you can be master of none the jack of all trades… we stick to that as much as we can
29:22
In Atlantic Canada, the handshake and phone call still close deals that digital channels open — don't let technology replace human presence.
the art of the phone call is kind of dying… when you have that relationship all those problems seem a little smaller
18:53
Disclose defects proactively in listings; experienced buyers expect wear and will trust an honest seller more than a polished pitch.
you expose the badge and normally you come to a common ground… used equipment they expect stuff to be wrong
47:25
Track seasonal demand cycles (snow equipment in autumn, paving gear in spring) and front-run sellers before the seasonal spike.
now loaders and plow trucks are hot whereas asphalt spreaders are starting to slow down
53:59
COVID and chip-shortage supply disruptions proved that regional used-equipment markets can grow self-sufficiently when new-equipment imports stall.
you couldn't get new equipment so all of a sudden people are basically getting what they can
42:30
Divide co-founder roles by genuine strength: one externally relationship-focused (associations, brand), one internally operations-focused — and hold that division.
Harold is boots underground, Johnny handles the upper business — banks, lawyers, all that stuff
1:11:20
Older heavy-equipment buyers in Atlantic Canada distrust email; field presence and phone calls still command premium trust over digital-only outreach.
be first in, see the guy face to face — there's something really special about that
1:13:33
// CLIPS FROM THIS EPISODE
All 12 lessons from this episode, on one page.
Sent to your inbox. The receipts included.
// FEATURED BUSINESSES
Eastern Frontier Auctions

Heavy construction and industrial equipment auction house and brokerage that runs online no-reserve au…

Full dossier ▸
Kent Building Supplies

Atlantic Canada's largest home-improvement and building-supply retail chain, operating big-box and war…

Full dossier · 2 projects ▸
Payzant Building Products Ltd.

Family-owned, multi-generational Atlantic Canada building-materials and home-improvement retailer oper…

Full dossier · 2 projects ▸
// FACT-CHECKED ✓ web-verified, with sources
✓ VERIFIED
Harold Druken was drafted 36th overall (second round) by the Vancouver Canucks in the 1997 NHL Entry Draft.
SOURCE ▸
✓ VERIFIED
The microchip shortage (2021-2022) drove a significant surge in used construction equipment demand as buyers could not source new equipment.
SOURCE ▸
// COMPANIES & ORGS ✓ verified
Eastern Frontier AuctionsHarold DrukenJohn AdamsSandhills GlobalMarketBookAuctionTimeCap Equip FinancingPayzant Building ProductsKent Building SuppliesJay Harrison
SOURCE: podscope · public episode data · YnYjV3gzIOU