In this episode of Verify In Field, host Jacob Edmond sits down with John Mercure, President of Raydeo Enterprises, to explore four decades of leadership in architectural metals, millwork, and signage. From humble beginnings in neon signs to delivering complex scopes on stadiums, high rises, and major commercial projects, John shares the lessons that shaped his company and his philosophy on building.
With nearly 40 years at the helm of Raydeo, John has navigated economic downturns, evolving general contractor dynamics, major technological shifts, and the increasing complexity of contract risk. Through it all, one principle has remained constant. Deliver the job.
As John puts it, “One of our things is we’ve never failed. I ain’t gonna tell you, we made money on everything, but we’ve never failed.”
About Our Guest
John Mercure is the President and founder of Raydeo Enterprises, a multidisciplinary fabrication company specializing in architectural metals, millwork, and signage for large scale commercial construction. What began as a neon sign operation in the early eighties evolved into a full scope fabrication firm serving stadiums, hotels, high rises, museums, and corporate environments across the United States
Over the years, John expanded Raydeo through strategic reinvestment in technology, facilities, training, and people. Today, the company operates with approximately 85 to 100 employees in a 72,000 square foot facility, focused on complex projects that demand coordination, creativity, and precision
What You Will Learn
- How the role of the general contractor has changed
John explains the shift from build focused contractors to contract and risk management driven organizations, and how that impacts finishing trades - Why pre build strategy matters
By pushing for 80 percent pre build and embedding coordination into contracts, Raydeo reduces field chaos and improves quality outcomes - The cost of litigation driven construction
Excessive contract complexity increases cost, reduces quality, and strains trade relationships. John shares how trades can respond intelligently instead of reactively - The power of data and constraints
Drawing from constraint theory, John discusses identifying bottlenecks, managing project flow, and avoiding repetitive cycles that starve production - Conservative growth and reserve capital
Surviving downturns requires disciplined profit management and avoiding overextension, especially in volatile commercial markets - Building succession intentionally
Rather than selling to private equity, John is focused on transitioning leadership internally through mentorship, incentive participation, and long term planning - Why collaboration among trades is the future
John believes the next evolution in construction is trade partners working together earlier, coordinating layouts proactively, and reclaiming influence in project execution
Key Insight
Construction may evolve, contracts may grow thicker, and technology may accelerate, but the art of building remains. The pride of creating something from nothing, delivering quality work, and finishing what you start will not change.
Where To Learn More
Raydeo Enterprises: https://www.raydeo.com
John Mercure´s LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/john-mercure-b081406/
Final Thoughts
John’s story is not just about growth. It is about resilience, accountability, and responsibility to the people who build alongside you. From neon signs to national stadiums, Raydeo’s journey reflects what is possible when leadership stays steady through change and refuses to compromise on finishing the job.



