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The real Mackoy

27 Feb 19 The house-building boom has meant rapid growth for one aspiring Hampshire-based groundworks contractor. David Taylor reports

Mike Mayock is a man in a hurry. The company he founded, Mackoy Construction, based in Chandler鈥檚 Ford, Hampshire, is not yet eight years old but he expects it to turn over 拢30m this year.

Interviewed just before Christmas, Mayock says he doesn鈥檛 know where 2018 went: 鈥淚鈥檝e had a bloody busy year,鈥 he says. 鈥淲e鈥檙e so busy 鈥 it feels like we鈥檝e been going 20 years, not seven!鈥

Even before he set the business up, Mayock was acting like his own boss 鈥 even when he was on someone else鈥檚 books. 鈥淚 always knew that I would have a fleet of vehicles,鈥 he says. 鈥淚 had my own name and logo on the side of my van even when I was working for other firms.鈥

Now, at the age of just 34, he鈥檚 turned the business that back then had existed 鈥榡ust on paper鈥 into one of southern England鈥檚 fastest-growing groundworks contractors with a fleet of over 40 machines and a staff of 30 people.

Like so many of the people who have shaped the British construction industry over generations, Mayock has his roots in Ireland. Born into a farming family in County Mayo, on Ireland鈥檚 west coast, Mayock arrived in England in 1990, age seven, when his father, a 鈥渄raughtsman and self-taught site engineer鈥 left Ireland in search of work.

While Mayock鈥檚 immediate family settled in Torquay, on the south coast, his uncles and cousins continued farming in Ireland and the young Mayock returned frequently, helping out on the farm and on building sites for local residents and other farmers.

鈥淲e went back for three months every year after we moved to Torquay to earn money and help out the family we had left behind,鈥 explains Mayock.聽

His boyhood experience in the building trade laid the foundations for a career in construction and after leaving school, Mayock went straight out to work 鈥榦n the tools鈥 for various contractors along the south coast. By this time his family had relocated to Hampshire.

Although a conscientious and reliable employee, Mayock always intended to be his own boss and it was his impatience to achieve this that led him to put the cart before the horse and drive around in his own liveried vehicle even before the business existed.

鈥淚 was going to name the business after my first house 鈥 Roselands 鈥 but in the end I didn鈥檛 like the sound of it,鈥 he says. Playing around with his own name, he came up with Mackoy 鈥 an anagram of Mayock 鈥 which he felt had a certain ring to it.

鈥淚 had all this in my mind before I actually went out on my own. The brand was born!鈥 he says.

When he did finally strike out on his own, Mayock simply freelanced for various house-builders, taking on small groundworks and site preparation jobs. He had no equipment of his own, no office set-up and just two or three casual workers he could call on when he needed them.

鈥淭hen one day I got a call from Bellway in Newcastle. A local Bellway director that I鈥檇 worked for had put a shout in for me,鈥 recalls Mayock. Before he knew it, Bellway was offering him a 拢750,000 groundworks contract for a 24-unit development in Stubbington.

鈥淟ooking back, I can鈥檛 really remember how I landed that first job. I suppose I was in the right place at the right time. It was 2011 and house-building was taking off,鈥 he says.

Mayock likes to think it was his honesty and no-nonsense approach that had impressed the man from Bellway. 鈥淚 don鈥檛 like to say 鈥榥o鈥, but at the same time I never over-promised and I never under-delivered 鈥 and there鈥檚 a lot of that goes on in this industry,鈥 he explains.

The size of that contract was out of all proportion to what Mayock had anticipated when he started the business less than six months earlier. 鈥淭hat鈥檚 when the madness began,鈥 he says. 鈥淚 had to set up an office in my spare room; I was laying kerbs in the morning, dashing back to do the paperwork in the afternoon and then back out again on site.鈥

That first year, Mackoy shifted around 100,000 tonnes of earth; the following year (now operating from a proper head office in Chandler鈥檚 Ford) the company more than doubled that figure to 250,000 tonnes.

Going from nothing to 拢750,000-worth of work in its first year stretched Mackoy鈥檚 meagre resources to the limit and generated a cashflow crisis. 鈥淚 had very low credit limits with all my suppliers, which held us back. I had to negotiate cashflow arrangements with my clients,鈥 says Mayock. 鈥淚t was a bit of a juggling act.鈥

In 2013 Mackoy landed its first 拢1m contract, to carry out earthmoving and groundworks on a 35-unit development in Romsey for Barratt Homes. That year it also made its first major investment in earthmoving plant, placing a big order for 14-tonne and 20-tonne Volvo excavators.

鈥淚 grew up with Hitachis 鈥 everybody in Ireland has them 鈥 and my first machines were all Hitachis,鈥 says Mayock. 鈥淏ut I got to know the local Volvo guy and managed to get a roller on demo. I blagged it, really, because I couldn鈥檛 afford to buy it,鈥 he adds.

Volvo鈥檚 willingness to supply equipment on approval and accept deferred payment was a significant help to Mayock, who says he also appreciated the quality of the equipment as well as the personal service he got from the supplier.

The company has continued to invest in Volvo equipment, although the fleet still incorporates a significant number of Hitachi machines.

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鈥淲e have over 40 Volvos and more than 20 Hitachis and between 80 and 90 excavators in total,鈥 says Mayock. The company also has a fleet of around 40 site dumpers, cabbed dumpers (mostly Hydremas) and ADTs.

After evaluating a couple of Volvo ADTs on demonstration last year, Mayock placed an order for one of the machines which is scheduled for delivery this month.聽 鈥淚鈥檓 awaiting revised 2019 prices for two or three more later this year,鈥 he says. 鈥淚 imagine we鈥檙e looking at three- to four-month delivery times.鈥

This month also sees the arrival of Mackoy鈥檚 first screening plant, supplied by McCloskey International.

The house-building boom has ensured that Mackoy has achieved rapid and sustained growth in its short life so far. After Bellway and then Barratt, Mackoy added Cala to its client list in early 2016 with a 拢3.4m contract for earthmoving and foundations work for 75 new homes at Medstead.

Later that year the company landed its first 拢5m contract, to deliver the full groundworks infrastructure for 148 new homes for Bellway in Ferndown, east Dorset. Then in 2017 Persimmon chose Mackoy to carry out the groundworks contract for a 120-unit development in Portchester and last year Mackoy carried out its first contract for Redrow.

鈥淟ast year we were invoicing 拢3m to 拢4m per month. Obviously, December and January are quieter months, but we are on for 拢30m-plus for Mackoy this financial year,鈥 says Mayock.

Eager to continue this level of growth, Mayock says that he has decided to 鈥渦p our portfolio鈥. With its track record in earthmoving, the company is pursuing opportunities for landscaping contracts. 鈥淥ff the back of the housing, we鈥檙e now doing more sports grounds and amenity work,鈥 explains Mayock. Golf courses are another possible source of new work, he says.

Reinforced concrete is a further sector Mayock is keen to develop. 鈥淲hen I was on the tools, I used to do a lot of steel fixing. We have a lot of concrete expertise in the company too,鈥 he explains. Construction director Danny Bowers, who joined Mackoy in late 2016 has 鈥渕assive鈥 concreting experience, adds Mayock.

The company already carries out concrete foundations work, but Mayock is now branching out into concrete frame construction. 鈥淚 don鈥檛 want to be a jack of all trades, but I do want more than one string to my bow,鈥 he says. 鈥淭he company is young and the average age of our staff is low 鈥 we鈥檙e very keen to get on.鈥

In parallel with his contracting work, Mayock is building up his own development business, Macra (鈥榓cra鈥 is Gaelic for 鈥榓cres鈥, he explains), set up two years ago. 鈥淲e can pick up smaller sites that the likes of Barratt and Bellway wouldn鈥檛 look at,鈥 says Mayock. 鈥淭here are plenty of potential sites for developments of up to 60 units,鈥 he adds.

With the government鈥檚 拢1bn Home Building Fund, designed to help small to medium-sized builders, being launched only last year, Mayock鈥檚 timing appears to be spot-on, though he declares it鈥檚 just good luck: 鈥渞ight place, right time鈥 again.

Macra could offer small turnkey housing projects of its own, though another approach might be to acquire the land and complete all the site preparation, including all roads, drainage and infrastructure but not actually build. 鈥淲e could then offer the site as a blank canvas for other house-builders,鈥 he says.

The house-building boom has provided Mackoy with fertile ground in which to grow and notwithstanding signs of a slow-down in the sector, Mayock is confident of continued growth and prosperity in the foreseeable future. Not even the unfolding drama of Brexit gives him pause:

鈥淭here鈥檚 so much talk about Brexit but I鈥檓 not reading too much into it,鈥 he says. 鈥淚鈥檓 not worried about Brexit per se. There will be changes, but the work will keep coming. It鈥檒l certainly have an effect but I don鈥檛 think it will be as serious or as long-lasting as some people seem to think.鈥

Not even the worsening skills crisis seems to faze him: 鈥淲e will be recruiting this year. There鈥檚 no skills shortage around here 鈥 we get people ringing up all the time looking for work,鈥 he says. As for training: 鈥淭wo years ago we looked at starting an apprentice scheme. But we鈥檙e so busy that we haven鈥檛 been able to do it yet.鈥

The main stumbling block is the lack of space. 鈥淲e need to sort out a proper HQ to take the apprenticeship scheme forward,鈥 explains Mayock, who recently went to view a large new business unit in Nursling, a few miles outside Southampton. 鈥淲e are currently looking at potential floor plans for this new unit to make it work for us,鈥 he says.

A busy start to the new year

Mackoy celebrated the New Year by getting stuck into a new groundworks contract for 98 new homes on the North Stoneham Park development in Eastleigh, Hampshire.

This is Mackoy鈥檚 second contract on the 1,100-unit North Stoneham Park and comes hard on the heels of the first phase of work, laying the foundations for the site鈥檚 first 120 new homes.

This new phase sees Mackoy turn its attention to plots 119 鈥 177 and 297 鈥 335, casting the concrete foundations, laying blockwork, installing the beam-and-block flooring and carrying out works including internal and external drainage, paths, patios and driveways.

Ashley Beckett,聽project聽director at Highwood Group, says: 鈥淭he Mackoy聽team has聽done聽a聽great聽job聽on the first phase of work, delivering to a high standard and to schedule.聽It鈥檚 good to have an experienced聽team on site for the next phase.鈥

When completed, the 120-acre North Stoneham Park will comprise two-, three- and four-bedroom houses, apartments and associated facilities including a community centre, primary school and retail units.

This article was first published in the聽

UK readers can have their own copy of the magazine, in real paper, posted through their letterbox each month by taking out an annual subscription for just 拢50 a year.聽

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