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EP 37 · 2022-11-21 · 1:38:16

How Payzant Home Hardware Built Atlantic Canada's Largest Independent Building Supply Fleet — and Why They Cap Commercial at 15%

Three-generation building supply story: how Payzant Home Hardware grew from a 1964 Sackville basement to 300 staff and a new Fall River fulfilment centre while keeping local-family culture intact.

The story, written up — a sharp read with every fact on the record. Or skip straight to the moments that matter, as clips.
Read the article ▸▶ Watch the 15 clips ▸Read the transcriptOpen on YouTube ↗
// CHAPTERS — TAP TO JUMP THE PLAYER
0:00Founding story: John Payzant, 1964Andrew traces the business from his father John's farm upbringing in Bishopville, his job at Ted Blackburn's shopping centre in Lower Sackville, and the 1964 purchase of the hardware division — financed by selling the family home and a loan from his grandfather.7:40Family succession & university vs. real-world learningMatthew describes being actively steered away from the family business, his Commerce degree at Dalhousie, and his return after realising he missed customer-facing work. Andrew parallels the experience: left Mount Allison after 3 years, started full-time at the business in the early 80s. Both reflect on what university actually teaches — time management and critical thinking, not industry-specific knowledge.16:40People, service & the value of knowledgeable staffDiscussion of how workforce experience is the real competitive moat: contractors rely on sales staff who know materials and won't steer them wrong. Andrew articulates the duck analogy — customers see smooth delivery; staff scramble invisibly behind it. Payzant's ability to say 'yes' throughout COVID on lead times is used as the proof case.30:00Vision statement, culture & the small-family-big-company paradoxAndrew explains the 'most desired supplier' vision statement and why the metrics that matter are customer preference, not store count. He contrasts local decision-making speed against national chains (Kent, Home Depot). Locations and employee counts are listed. The 2022 Nova Scotia Home Builders Association 'Industry Supporter of the Year' award is cited as informal validation.50:00COVID lumber volatility & supply-chain strategyMatthew was responsible for purchasing during the lumber price spike-and-crash. Andrew explains the multi-variable nature of lumber pricing (spruce budworm, fuel, mill fires, Florida hurricanes). Payzant's strategy: partner with customers to forecast need, keep availability as job one, accept some margin loss to stay in stock. Lead times example: 187-day windows becoming 17-day windows.1:05:00Six customer segments & the 15% commercial capAndrew's six customer types — retail, small contractor, large contractor, owner-builder, installed sales, ICI commercial — each require different inventory, service speed and truck types. Andrew explains the deliberate 15% cap on commercial to protect the residential and retail base, and why the shift in Halifax housing starts (75% single-family 30 years ago to roughly 30% today) is forcing a rethink. Home Hardware cooperative buying power vs. Kent is also explained.1:21:40Fall River fulfilment centre: the next decade betAndrew reveals the 18-acre Fall River property purchase and a 60,000 sq ft heated fulfilment centre under construction, targeting summer 2023 opening. Rationale: existing yards maxed out, COVID proved the need for deeper inventory, Halifax growth over the next decade demands it. Primary fleet centralises there; local store trucks handle emergency and small-job deliveries.
// THE INTRO

Daniel Arsenault sits with Andrew Payzant (CEO, owner) and nephew Matthew Payzant (General Manager) to trace the business from John Payzant's 1964 purchase of a Ted Blackburn hardware section — bankrolled by selling the family home — through Andrew's 46-year career and Matthew's Commerce-to-order-desk entry, up to today's eight-store, 300-employee operation. The conversation covers family-business succession philosophy (actively discouraging nepotism), the vision of becoming the 'most desired' supplier in Atlantic Canada, COVID-era lumber volatility and the costs of being long on inventory, the six customer-type model used to prevent commercial projects from crowding out residential and retail, and the newly acquired 18-acre Fall River site where a 60,000 sq ft fulfilment centre is under construction. A frank window into the operational and cultural mechanics of the dominant regional independent building supplier.

// THE LESSONS
See all 12 lessons ▸
Put your family name on the business — the personal stake forces accountability and provides extra incentive to make it work.
call it what it is Building Products you know we put your name on it you'll be proud of it
▶ Clip5:14
Actively discourage family members from joining the business — only people who want to be there and are right for the business add value; obligation hires destroy culture.
do do something do anything else yeah you know just figure out what you want
▶ Clip9:14
University's most transferable lessons for business owners are time management and prioritisation, not domain knowledge — recognise this early to avoid over-investing in formal education.
the two biggest things that I learned in University were time management and prioritization
▶ Clip19:36
The competitive moat for a building supplier is knowledgeable staff — contractors pay a trust premium for a person who can be handed a problem and never followed up on.
they don't have to go back they know that okay that's done I can move on to my next thing
▶ Clip42:42
Shield customers from the scramble: the supplier's job is a smooth surface, not a transparent one — contractors need the answer 'yes', not the backstory of how it happened.
the contractor doesn't necessarily have to see the scrambling behind the scenes
43:34
Lumber pricing is governed by too many independent variables to predict — spruce budworm, fuel, mill fires, hurricanes. Resist the urge to speculate; treat availability as job one and margin as secondary.
it's everything from the spruce Bud worm is killing forests to the price of fuel for trucks to Lumber Mills burning down to hurricanes in Florida
▶ Clip47:49
Cap commercial work as a percentage of total revenue — large ICI projects consume fleet and people in lumpy bursts; left uncapped they starve the residential base that built the business.
I don't want that to be more than 15 of My overall business
▶ Clip1:01:30
Track six customer types, not two — retail vs. contractor misses the fact that small renovators, large new-home builders, owner-builders, installed-sales and ICI each need different service models and inventory.
we've always done it with six different customer types so we track it daily weekly monthly
▶ Clip57:15
Halifax housing starts shifted from ~75% single-family (30 years ago) to ~30% today — building suppliers who haven't adjusted their fleet, staffing and product mix to multi-unit are behind the market.
30 years ago it was about 75 percent were single-family homes it's it's like 30 are single-family
▶ Clip1:05:34
Independent dealers gain national buying power through a cooperative like Home Hardware — the aggregated volume of 1,100 stores gives price leverage that a regional chain with 50 locations cannot match.
if you look at the buying power that we have and the influence we have with suppliers it's vastly vastly greater than Kent
▶ Clip1:17:37
Centralise your primary delivery fleet to a single fulfilment hub to maximise truck utilisation and enable deeper inventory — but retain local store vehicles for emergency and small-job runs.
our primary Fleet will all be centered in our Fall River fulfillment center
1:26:36
When a competitor closes a location, move immediately to secure the lease — opportunistic real-estate plays are how independent operators expand market footprint without building from scratch.
we took ownership of that lease playing chess
1:21:19
// CLIPS FROM THIS EPISODE
Story · 2:23
so dad was looking at and thinking oh man you know I'm thinking five dollars a week
Story · 5:09
so Dad decided okay I'm gonna do this now and remember him telling me
Story · 6:44
but in order to buy the business he had no money to speak of
Story · 8:57
family business so my dad uh is the middle child
Framework · 19:33
the two biggest things that I learned in University I learned them in the first year
Hot take · 21:15
one of the courses I was taking they had this textbook about how Lumber was sold in Nova Scotia
Framework · 26:24
I'm already planning okay seven years from now when that person retires what am I going to do
Framework · 31:09
I think one thing that sets us apart from pretty much all of our major competition
Hot take · 33:26
we're big but we're not this big massive ship that takes forever to turn
Framework · 47:21
Lumber plywood OSB has always historically had Peaks and valleys
Emotional · 50:46
so poor Matthew was um you know we were selling Lumber for 15 to 20 percent under our cost
Story · 53:06
I could show a newsletter where a lead time was 187 days a year and a half ago and now it's 17 days
Framework · 1:01:21
I had always had a cap and originally it was just mentally but then I actually had it on paper
Hot take · 1:05:09
30 years ago it was about 75 percent were single-family homes
Hot take · 1:16:38
dad said one time that his best business decision was joining Home Hardware in 1971
All 12 lessons from this episode, on one page.
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// FEATURED BUSINESSES
Payzant Building Products Ltd.

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

Full dossier · 2 projects ▸
Kent Building Supplies

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

Full dossier · 2 projects ▸
// FACT-CHECKED ✓ web-verified, with sources
✓ VERIFIED
Halifax housing starts have shifted from approximately 75% single-family (30 years ago) to approximately 30% single-family today.
Current data confirms Halifax HRM new construction is dominated by multi-unit residential (purpose-built rental, mid-rise condo). In 2024 there were only 817 single-unit starts versus significantly higher multi-unit volumes. The directional claim (large majority shift from single-family to multi-uni…
SOURCE ▸
✓ VERIFIED
Home Hardware cooperative aggregates buying power across approximately 1,100 stores, giving independent dealers price leverage exceeding that of regional chains with ~50 locations.
Home Hardware's store count is confirmed at approximately 1,100 across Canada. Kent Building Supplies has 48 locations. The relative buying-power comparison is directionally sound.
SOURCE ▸
// COMPANIES & ORGS ✓ verified
Payzant Building Products Ltd.Andrew PayzantMatthew PayzantHome Hardware Stores LimitedKent Building SuppliesPayzant Fall River Fulfilment Centre and Truss Plant
// PROJECTS NAMED
Payzant Fall River Fulfilment Centre and Truss Plant
SOURCE: podscope · public episode data · dlZpmZbUMyo