Otto Baum Company, Inc.

Words: Kurt Baum

MCAA: Tell us about the history of your company.

Kurt Baum: Otto Baum, our company founder and namesake, emigrated from Germany in the 1920’s at age 21. Although his material possessions were few, he brought with him personality attributes and learned skills which would prove invaluable when put to use by him, his family, and our many business partners in the years following. Lead by Otto’s example, our passion for honesty, integrity, trust, motivation, discipline, faith, service, understanding, competitiveness, along with an expectation for continuous improvement have been and will remain the cornerstones of the Otto Baum Company brand.

We’ve been blessed with many generations of dedicated managers and field craftsman since then, focused on keeping those traditional core values prevalent in our daily operations.

MCAA: What do you think has been the key to your company’s success?

Kurt Baum
Kurt Baum

Baum: At Otto Baum Company, we understand our industry stakeholder’s (customers, investors, employees, vendors, suppliers, etc.) all share an ingrained desire to provide for the financial wellbeing of their families and themselves. Ultimately, that’s why we invest our time and talent (and some of us our treasure) at work. To fulfill our quest to be the best providers we can by meeting or exceeding our financial goals, and thus “succeeding” at our chosen profession.

By clarifying and communicating our company’s vision of “success” and attempting to employ individuals who also share in this vision, we experience the greatest chance of being viewed as “mutually successful”. Eighty plus years now and we’re still here.

MCAA: What advice would you offer a budding mason contractor?

Baum: Determine what you excel at and how it can provide value. Define your process, communicate it to your employees, and continuously improve on your shared strengths. Once established, focus on maintaining a sterling reputation as your greatest selling tool. Make them want, not tolerate.
Never forget, it’s the customer who decides how they will spend their construction dollars.

MCAA: What do you feel is the masonry industry’s biggest challenge in the future?

Baum: It’s reasonable to expect highly competitive building systems which offer similar performance attributes at reduced installation costs will continue to consume more of masonry’s traditional market share in the future.

Masonry construction can be a very labor intensive undertaking. Labor related expenses account for nearly half our product cost, even more so in heavily union influenced markets like Illinois. Our investment in production increasing processes has attempted to keep pace with construction value demand, yet I still witness masonry components being eliminated from more and more new structures being forced to stay within established financial budgets or to meet accelerated building schedules. They seem to want masonry yet are not always able to afford it.

Our masonry industry partners must continuously focus on “value adding” strategies to thrive.

MCAA: What is your favorite aspect of being a member of the MCAA?

Baum: I have been attending MCAA annual conventions and events since the mid 70’s. I enjoy the comradery and networking which takes place anytime you can get a group of individuals together who share a common passion for maintaining or growing industry opportunities.

It’s a great place to access knowledge from a dedicated group of masonry industry professionals.

About: 5-on-5
OSHA’s Top 10 Violations of the Year

In the construction and general industry fields, there are quite a number of dangers within the various work environments. This, of course, makes perfect sense when you consider the number of variables one must deal with daily. It is only logical when you

About: Featured
Lightweight Concrete Masonry Block: Building Efficient Buildings Efficiently

In the construction industry, masonry is a labor-intensive trade. Each day, masons handle thousands of concrete masonry unit (CMU) that form a building’s structure. Because normal weight (NWT) CMU weigh about 50 pounds (lbs), repetitive lifting can strain

About: Featured
Cultural Heritage Meets Modern Architectural Design: The Alain Ducasse Restaurant, AlUla

For Craft Group’s Alain Ducasse restaurant project in AlUla, we fostered a collaborative effort between the design team and local craftsmen and ensured that the masonry work reflected the area's cultural heritage while meeting modern construction standard

MASONRY STRONG Podcast, Episode 12 Recap: Paul Cantarella Jr., President at Cantarella & Son, Inc.

On this episode of the MASONRY STRONG Podcast, Paul Cantarella Jr. joins the show to talk about his career and passion for the masonry industry, how his journey started, the building of his family's company, and his life outside of work as well. Childhoo

About: Featured