George Allen / EducateMHC Blog Mobile Home & Land Lease Community Advocate & Expert

November 20, 2025

1960s Management Wisdom Still Good in 2025

Filed under: Uncategorized — George Allen @ 11:14 am

Blog Posting # 868; Copyright 21 November 2025. EducateMHC

Know this! HUD-Code manufactured housing (‘MH’) is federally-regulated, performance-based, affordable-attainable, factory-built housing (a.k.a. one of four types of offsite construction: being manufactured, modular, panelized housing & Park Model RVs), routinely paired with traditional stick-built single-family residential housing (a.k.a. onsite construction). Land lease communities, a.k.a. manufactured home communities & ‘mobile home parks’) are the commercial real estate (‘CRE’) component of MH. And, along with various types of housing finance (e.g. chattel or ‘home only’ loans, and real estate-secured mortgages) constitutes the post-production segment of the MH industry.

EducateMHC is an MH historian, trade term & trend tracker, as well as perennial MH information source! Contact EducateMHC via (317) 881-3815; email gfa7156@aol.com, or www.educatemhc.com, to purchase ‘Community Management in the Manufactured Housing Industry’ (This book belongs in every land lease community nationwide!), and ‘SWAN SONG’ – History of land lease communities & official record of annual MH production totals since 1955.

And my autobiography, ‘From Smitty”Alpha6 to MHMaven’, describes personal combat adventures in Vietnam as a USMC lieutenant, a 45 year entrepreneur business career in MH & community ownership, as well as freelance consulting and authoring of 20 nonfiction texts.

George Allen is the sole emeritus member of the Manufactured Housing Institute (‘MHI’), a founding board member of MHI’s National Communities Council (‘NCC’) division, an RV/MH Hall of Fame enshrinee, Allen Legacy columnist and editor at large for ‘MHInsider’ magazine.

1960s Management Wisdom Still Good in 2025

My first brush with management wisdom occurred when I was an officer candidate in the U.S. Marines’ Platoon Leaders Class (‘PLC’) during the summer of 1964. Had no idea what training officers meant when they told us 19 year olds to ‘Keep It Simple Stupid!’ – The infamous KISS Rule; how ‘Pain is just weakness leaving the body!’ when on forced marches; and how we must lead by example. Oh, there was a lot more to learn than just those three truisms, but you get the idea.

Some of the military wisdom, it turned out, was transferable into my civilian career, initially as a management trainee, later as a business owner, writer and consultant. Some examples. In the Marines, we were taught to accomplish missions by planning, organizing, leading and controlling resources and events via the acronym SMEAC: Situation, Mission, Execution, Administration & Logistics, Command & Communication. And it works! Can’t tell you how many times I relied on SMEAC to ensure I ‘crossed my T’s & dotted my I’s’ when planning for combat operations with my platoon.

What’s the civilian equivalent to SMEAC? I articulated and copyrighted a Management Wisdom formula in 1979. Here’re the four major steps and supporting touchpoints:

PLANNING. ‘Proper Prior Planning Prevents Poor Performance’ and ‘Failure to plan is planning for failure!’ emphasize the value of this first step to accomplishing one’s mission or being successful. It is here the Problem-solving Procedure begins. This wise exercise follows….

ORGANIZING. Emphasis on Simplicity & Flexibility. This is also where the Basic Ms of Management apply: Manpower (personnel, labor), Machinery (equipment & tools), Material (inventory & services), Methods (policies & procedure) and Money (income & expenditures).

LEADING by directing and delegating; coordinating and controlling. Leading is a matter of management style; authoritative and/or participative? Depends on one’s circumstances, nature of the task at hand, and the makeup of the folk performing. And when delegating, don’t abdicate!

CONTROLLING. Appraise performance to standards; evaluate and improve effectiveness

The above Management Wisdom formula has been a personal mainstay for 46 years!

Now here’s the aforementioned Problem-solving Procedure.

Select a Problem, a Task. Then consider it a Challenge, an Opportunity.

Define it, Document it. Ensure the situation is what it appears to be. Oftentimes it’s not.

Study it, Question every detail. Break the problem down into parts.

Research & Organize Data. Get the facts. Here’s where one applies the aforementioned Basic Ms of Management!

Refine & Digest Data. Internalize and Reflect on Alternatives.

Produce & Rework Ideas. Weigh & decide by combining, eliminating, rearranging, simplifying, testing & selecting the best alternative(s)…Set and schedule Objectives, establish standards of performance.

Implement & Monitor. Take action by adjusting & modifying as necessary, evaluating performance & results.

Follow-up & Recap Results. Review all actions, and plan for the future.

SPECIAL OFFER. The Management Wisdom formula, Basic Ms of Management, and Problem-solving Procedure, along with several other management wisdom tools have been published on wallet-sized plastic cards. If you’d like a FREE package of these cards, simply request them via gfa7156@aol.com  All I need from you is a preferred postal mailing address. Again this is FREE.

Not all military wisdom applies to the civilian world. Here’s an obvious example, called AIM POINT. These are rules of thumb for selecting one’s aiming point when firing, say, the M16 service rifle.

Jet crossing in front of you. Aim two football fields in front of plane’s nose.

Jet flying overhead. Aim two football fields in front of plane’s nose.

Jet flying directly at you. Aim slightly above plane’s nose.

Helicopter crossing in front of you. Aim one-half football field in front of chopper’s nose.

Helicopter hovering overhead. Aim slightly above chopper’s body.

Helicopter flying directly at you. Aim slightly above chopper’s body.

Finally, there is a quotation from ‘grunt’ (infantry) doctrine that does apply directly to those supervising and managing just about any type operation in our industry and among land lease communities: “You’re only as Strong as Those you Lead!”

George Allen

November 13, 2025

What Will Your Acceptance Speech Be Like?

Filed under: Uncategorized — George Allen @ 10:55 am

Blog Posting # 867; Copyright 14 November 2025. EducateMHC

Know this! HUD-Code manufactured housing (‘MH’) is federally-regulated, performance-based, affordable-attainable, factory-built housing (a.k.a. one of four types of offsite construction: manufactured, modular, panelized housing & Park Mode RVs), routinely paired with traditional stick-built single-family residential housing (a.k.a. onsite construction). Land lease communities, a.k.a. manufactured home communities & ‘mobile home parks’) are the commercial real estate (‘’CRE’) component of MH. And, along with various types of housing finance (e.g. chattel or ‘home only’ loans, and real estate-secured mortgages) constitutes the post-production segment of the MH industry.

EducateMHC is an MH historian, trade term & trend tracker, as well as perennial MH information source! Contact EducateMHC via (317) 881-3815; email gfa7156@aol.com, or www.educatemhc.com, to purchase ‘Community Management in the Manufactured Housing Industry’ (This book belongs in every land lease community nationwide!), and ‘SWAN SONG’ – History of land lease communities & official record of annual MH production totals since 1955.

And my autobiography, ‘From SmittyAlpha6 to MHMaven’, describes personal combat adventures in Vietnam as a USMC lieutenant, a 45 year entrepreneur business career in MH &  community ownership, as well as freelance consulting and authoring of 20 nonfiction texts.

George Allen is the sole emeritus member of the Manufactured Housing Institute (‘MHI’), a founding board member of MHI’s National Communities Council (‘NCC’) division, an RV/MH Hall of Fame enshrinee, Allen Legacy columnist and editor at large for ‘MHInsider’ magazine.

What Will Your Acceptance Speech Be Like?

I wasn’t present to hear it, but what I heard about Jim Ayotte’s acceptance speech motivated me to want to read and share it with you. The occasion was Manufactured Housing Institute’s annual meeting, where the institute honored Jim with MHI’s Lifetime Achievement Award. I have no idea what the meeting hosts said about Jim Ayotte, to validate honoring him in this fashion (Actually, I do – from personal experience and recollection), but how he describes his 38 year career in manufactured housing is well worth reading and reflecting upon, especially as to what one (you) might say, given similar circumstances. (Following is lightly edited. GFA)

“I am honored and humbled to receive this recognition. It’s difficult believing I’m being honored for doing what I am ever so passionate about!

What I do, NO, what WE do, in manufactured housing is important! Homeownership is the cornerstone of the American dream. Homeownership is more than just a financial investment. Owning a home provides stability, security, and a sense of pride. Homeownership supports strong families and strong communities. Whatever role you play in the manufactured housing industry, you should be proud of the positive impact you have on the lives of families throughout America.

My love affair with the industry began in Storrs, Connecticut in 1987. I had recently graduated from business school, and knew I wanted to work for a trade association. I interviewed with a group of community owners for the executive director position at the New England Manufactured Housing Association, a six state trade body representing mobile and manufactured home communities in New England states. I knew nothing about the industry! The interviewers told me they sold homes built in a factory and rented the land where the homes were sited. A light went off in my head: What an incredible business model! Affordable homes in a neighborhood setting!

From that point on, I was hooked on the industry. It gave me a sense of purpose, and I knew that factory-built housing should be an important component of our nation’s housing supply.

My passion eventually took me to Columbus, Ohio. There I had the opportunity to display two identical factory-built homes across from the state capitol. Everything was identical down to the pictures on the walls. We handed out fortune cookies to legislators which said: ‘Today you will learn about America’s best kept housing secret!’ When legislators visited the homes the secret was revealed. One home was a manufactured home, the other was a modular home built to the state building code. The point of the exhibit was to begin a dialogue about the affordability of modern manufactured homes and land use discrimination. This home display led to the expansion of land use opportunities for manufactured housing in Ohio.

In 1995 I was hired by MHI to head up the newly created National Communities Council, today a full-fledged division of the institute.*1 Then I was put in charge of the National Manufactured Housing Federation as it merged with MHI. Know how often life comes full circle? Well today. 25 years later, I am chairman of MHI’s Federated States Division.

Parenthetically, I know from experience that working with Congress and federal agencies is not easy. So I commend Dr. Lesli Gooch and her team for making so much progress for our industry in such a challenging environment.

I really hit my stride when I went to work for the Florida Manufactured Housing Association. I ended my interview with their Search Committee by saying: ‘If you are looking for an association manager, I may not be your guy; but if you are looking for someone to lead this industry in Florida, I am up for the task!’ We have made tremendous strides advancing the manufactured housing industry in Florida. A few years ago I couldn’t get a return call from local government officials to discuss manufactured housing. Today, local officials often call to discuss how to incorporate factory-built housing into their housing strategies, to address their pressing need for workforce and senior housing.

As I wind down my career at FMHA, I have an observation I want to communicate to you. While it’s not super insightful, it is right on point. The biggest impediment to expanding manufactured housing in Florida, and elsewhere around the country, is this: We build homes that local governments need, but local governments want something different. They want more residential-looking homes for residentially-zoned area. This is a huge potential market for our industry! We can build those homes! The question is – will we seize upon this opportunity?

We are closer than ever to becoming part of mainstream housing in America. We need to continue the fight – to educate and innovate, to communicate our message whenever and wherever possible!

Finally. I am not standing here tonight on just my efforts. I have had plenty of support from industry pioneers and leaders like Kris Jensen, Jim Moore, Jim Fryer Sr., Bill Poole, Jim Dale, Nelson Steiner, and many others in this room that have encouraged and supported me throughout my career.*2

And I would not be able to do the work I do without the support of my family. My wife Chris and daughters Muneerah and Munezah are amazingly supportive; I am so blessed. They put up with my hectic travel schedule, taking phone calls at night and over weekends, and my personal distraction during legislative sessions. They indeed fuel my passion and zest for life.

The Florida Manufactured Housing Association board of directors has been incredible. The board has always been receptive to my suggestions for legislation, regulatory changes, consumer education and marketing, and exhibiting homes around the state, to familiarize state and local policy makers about the strength, durability, style and value of today’s manufactured homes. I could not ask for a better, more supportive employer!

I have enjoyed an incredible career and want to thank MHI once again for this high honor!

Jim Ayotte, CAE

End Notes

  1. For the NCC story, read Bruce Savage’s ‘The First 20 Years’. Available from www.educatemhc.com
  • Jensen, Moore and Steiner are RV/MH Hall of Fame enshrinees.

November 7, 2025

TOTAL U.S. HOUSING COMPLETIONS DURING SEPTEMBER 2025

Filed under: Uncategorized — George Allen @ 7:02 am

Blog Posting # 866; Copyright 7 November 2025. EducateMHC

Know this! HUD-Code manufactured housing (‘MH’) is federally-regulated, performance-based, affordable-attainable, factory-built housing (a.k.a. one of four types of offsite construction: manufactured, modular, panelized housing & Park Model RVs), routinely paired with traditional stick-built single-family residential housing (a.k.a. onsite construction). Land lease communities, a.k.a. manufactured home communities & ‘mobile home parks’) are the commercial real estate (‘CRE’) component of MH. And, along with various types of housing finance 9e.g. chattel or ‘home only’ loans, and real estate-secured mortgages) constitutes the post-production segment of the MH industry.

EducateMHC is an MH historian, trade term & trend tracker, as well as perennial MH information source! Contact EducateMHC via (317) 881-3815; email gfa7156@aol.com, or www.educatemhc.co, to purchase ‘Community Management in the Manufactured Housing Industry’ (This book belongs in every land lease community nationwide!), and ‘SWAN SONG’ – History of land lease communities & official record of annual MH production totals since 1955.

And my autobiography, ‘From SmittyAlpha 6 to MHMaven’, describes personal combat adventures in Vietnam as a USMC lieutenant, a 45 year entrepreneur business career in MH & community ownership, as well as freelance consulting and authoring of 20 nonfiction texts.

George Allen is the sole emeritus member of the Manufactured Housing Institute (‘MHI’), a founding board member of MHI’s National Communities Council (‘NCC’) division, an RV/MH Hall of Fame enshrinee, Allen Legacy columnist and editor at large for ‘MHInsider’ magazine.

TOTAL U.S. HOUSING COMPLETIONS DURING SEPTEMBER 2025

George Allen’s Estimated Total of New Onsite & Offsite Construction Homes Together!

Sorry, but no report yet! Why? Apparently the federal government shutdown has affected the U.S. Census Bureau too. As of yesterday, 3 November, the August 2025 Press Release to this end (i.e. Estimated Total of New Onsite Construction ‘permits, starts & completions’) was still being displayed on the U.S. Census Bureau’s website.

Just as soon as the September 2025 Press Release appears, I’ll write it into the next blog posting. Until then, there’s little that can be done but await the end of the shutdown.

Something to Think About & Anticipate Reading…

Yes, I am retired and enjoying bonus time with Carolyn and our great granddaughter Emmie, who we child-sit a couple days most weeks. She’s four years old now, but has been a regular visitor with us since she was a few days old, so her mother can work as an attorney and father as pastor of a local church. Her older sister Peyton is still in high school, and older brother Hunter, is in the U.S. Army, and with his wife, are parents of our newly arrived great great grandson. That’s just part of our growing family…with two more recent babies recently on the scene.

I continue to write professionally. There’s the weekly blog you’re reading right now, and the quarterly ‘MHInsider’ magazine that features my Allen Legacy column. Hope you receive and read that regularly. I’ve got several highly interesting articles planned for coming months.

What you probably don’t know is, for the past two years, I’ve been researching and penning the history of the RV/MH Hall of Fame in Elkhart, IN. I calculate I have another two years of work (2026 & 2027) before the tome will be ready for printing, binding, and distribution.

Why the extended time frame? In part, my work schedule. However, the truth of the matter is  there’s a lot of territory to cover, i.e. decades of history, from 1972 thru 2025, so far. And some of the ‘early history’ is pretty sketchy, due to economic ups & downs in the MH & RV industries. The late Dr. Carl Edwards, RV/MH historian until the early 1990s, prepared but never published a manuscript titled ‘History of the Recreation Vehicle & Manufactured Housing Heritage Foundation’. I’ve used much of Edwards’ work as Part I (i.e. 1972 – 1992) of the umbrella history project. Part II is well underway and covers 1993 thru probably 2026. I’m treating each year as a ‘chapter’ in the project, so there’re 54+/- such segments in play.  Project format?

Each chapter will likely feature a recitation of world and or national historic events for that year (chapter), followed by notable developments throughout the RV & MH industries. The chapter (year) ends with a list of individuals inducted (some say enshrined) in the RV/MH Hall of Fame that year. All told there are more than 400 such individuals today, and each will have a brief biographical sketch following their name. And therein is where readers will find the most interesting information, e.g. Who introduced ‘forced air heating’ in manufactured homes, who worked with the federal government during WWII to supply ‘trailers’ and develop ‘mobile home parks’ for use by government workers, and on and on….By the way, there were no inductions during 1977, and annual ‘classes’ sizes number between five and 15; today the average is ten inductions per year.

The most frustrating thing about this personal writing project? Having apropos historic resources from which to draw highlights, inventions, and more. For example, only a dozen land lease community owners/operators, during the past 50 or so years, have written and self-published (Sam Zell’ book is the only one from a traditional publisher) their autobiographies. And I’ve attempted to quote from each of these industry pioneers in the history project. But there are many of you out there today, who have compelling stories to tell as well – but are not doing so! Like, who conceptualized the Frost Free Foundation? Who named the Community Series Home? Who birthed the CrossMod® home design? Who visualized the largest land lease community in the U.S. and manufactured every HUD-Code home sited within it? I know, but it’d be so illuminating to read those stories in the words of their inventor.

Even more frustrating is the paucity of printed literature describing the various stages of development throughout the history of the RV/MH Hall of Fame!

Well, now you know how I spend much of my time during retirement. If you have suggestions relative to historical resources, etc., please let me know via gfa7156@aol.com

George Allen

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