John Deere | Raised on Blacktop

John Deere | Raised on Blacktop

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John Deere | Raised on Blacktop

 

Bill Stanley isn’t one to mince words.

A grizzled veteran of the paving industry, Stanley shoots from the hip and speaks from the heart. He is a natural storyteller — the kind of man who sprinkles jobsite tales with colorful language and pearls of profound wisdom.

On a brisk November morning, as he drives his truck to a jobsite in Mahopac, New York, where his company American Pavement Specialists will be paving for long- time customer Liffey Van Lines, he speaks pridefully about the growth of his family business.

He talks about being a builder, but not in the way one might expect. To Stanley, his career hasn’t been about building structures, or roads, or profit margins.

“To me, it is about building a name,” he says, placing a purposeful emphasis on the final word. “It’s not about the money. You could have $100,000 in your checking account one day and the next it could be gone. The most important thing I’m going to leave my family is my good name.”

Stanley started American Pavement Specialists three decades ago with a small staff and few customers. After 30 years in business, the Danbury, Connecticut, company has carved out a powerful niche conducting paving, milling, fine grading, and reclamation and stripping work. Even more importantly to Stanley, American Pavement Specialists is synonymous with the family name, a brand built upon the sturdy foundation of trust.

And now a new generation of the Stanley family is picking up where Bill left off — and finding brand-new ways to build up the family name. Bill’s youngest son Matt has spearheaded efforts to give American Pavement Specialists a presence on social media. “The feedback we’ve gotten from our social media is insane,” Matt says. “Everywhere we go people ask about it — it’s all anyone talks about.”

Matt and his brothers Jack and Josh all contribute to the company’s social media presence, frequently updating followers on everything from the projects American Pavement Specialists is completing to the new equipment it is using. In addition to generating a substantial buzz, these efforts are helping land jobs. Multiple new clients have reached out to the company through social media channels to request its services. For Matt, this blooming digital presence represents a new way to accomplish what his parents have been working on for decades: building up the family name.

“Now with social media, we are able to show people what we do not only locally, but to the whole world,” he says.

“The most important thing I’m going to leave my family is my good name.”

Bill Stanley, Owner,
American Pavement Specialists

Raised on blacktop

Bill Stanley introduced his sons to the paving business in their youth, and it certainly left an impression: his oldest son William Stanley III has started his own residential paving business; his three youngest sons all work for American Pavement Specialists. Matt remembers tagging along to jobsites from a very young age.

“I’ve been working for American Pavement Specialists basically my whole life,” recalls Matt, a smile stretching across his face as his mind shifts back to those early childhood days. “As soon as I was potty trained, Dad started taking us to work.” Bill, who has been in the paving business for a half-century, vividly recalls those early days of bringing his kids onto the jobsite. “I don’t think I forced them into doing the work,” he says. “My boys went to school and they played sports. But when they weren’t doing that, they wanted to be here.”

The athletic influence is still palpable at American Pavement Specialists, which has dubbed its busiest time of year “The Playoffs.” The straight-forward slogan is a nod to the end-of-season push in sports like baseball and football, when the lights are brightest and stakes are highest. For American Pavement Specialists, “The Playoffs” come in the final quarter of the year as the weather cools and workload intensifies. By embracing this time of year — and sharing the experience with followers on social media — the company highlights and broadcasts its all-in mentality.

“It’s our big push,” Matt says with a glimmer of intensity in his eyes. “It’s the time of year when our guys know it’s going to be chilly and we’re going to be working a little longer hours than normal. So it’s time to step up — and leave it all at work.”

Customers come first

Even with decades of experience under his belt, Bill still relishes those busy stretches that define the company’s year — and remains reluctant to step away from the family business.

“People look at me sometimes and say, ‘When are you going to retire?’,” he says, shaking his head from side to side to express his dissatisfaction.

“I tell them, ‘I never even gave it a thought. Maybe when I can’t get out of bed.’ ”

While Bill struggles to see a valid reason for retirement, he’s got plenty of things that keep him coming back to the jobsite.

“There’s no better feeling than knowing you built something. I love being able to pave a mile of road, turning around, and it’s completed, and you realize ‘I really did something,’” Bill says, glancing down at the newly paved surface stretching out before him. “There’s a lot I love, really. I love my business, I love my employees, and I love my customers.”

Bill’s passion for his work has inspired him to take a hands-on approach to everything related to his company. “When you go into work in the morning as a small business owner, you realize everything is on you. Everything falls into my lap. And I am not just talking about bottom-line stuff, I am talking about customer satisfaction.”

 

“We’ve been running Wirtgen machines for 10 to 12 years now. They’re the best in the business.”

Jack Stanley, Head of Milling and Reclamation Division,
American Pavement Specialists

Family fingerprints

The fingerprints of the Stanley family are on virtually every part of the company, which has carved out a customer base that cuts across Connecticut and stretches toward surrounding states in the northeastern United States.

As he directs the paving crew on a busy, winding road in Ridgefield, Connecticut, Matt emphasizes the importance of meeting challenges.

“In this line of work, you have to be a problem solver,” he says. “It’s what we do every day. There are always obstacles, and you have to overcome them. I think the equipment we have on site helps us do that.”

Matt’s older brother Josh embraces that mindset wholeheartedly. Standing at 6 feet 2 inches, Josh’s physical presence matches his big personality as he moves around the jobsite.

“I love running the John Deere Skid Steers,” he exclaims. “When I’m not on a paving machine, I’m usually in a skid steer grading or doing cleanup. The other machines, there’s just no comparison. The John Deere ones are easy to run, easy to use. I’ve tried other machines, and I can barely fit inside the cab.”

As part of the American Pavement Specialists workforce in Mahopac, another crew is conducting milling work on a stretch of road a couple of hours away. A testament to the company’s continued evolution, American Pavement Specialists first dipped its toe into milling work a little over a decade ago. The company has grown into a go-to option for local entities needing the service.

“Ever since we bought our first milling machine, the business has really blown up,” says Jack Stanley, who plays a pivotal role on the milling project. He emphasizes that a key part of this booming business has been the equipment made by Wirtgen Group, a German equipment manufacturer that joined forces with John Deere in 2017.

“We’ve been running Wirtgen machines for 10 to 12 years now. They’re the best in the business,” Jack says. “They start up every morning and work 12- to 14-hour shifts. We would never buy anything else.”

 

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