Second generation leader Tim Watson has his firm well positioned for continued success; carries on strong work ethic and values that were a hallmark of his father, Ralph. By Brad Fullmer
Less than a year into his professional career as an engineer in Las Vegas in 2004, Tim Watson had a conversation with his father, Ralph, about coming back to work for him at Cedar City-based Watson Engineering Company (WEC), a civil firm his father had originally started in 1972, and where Tim had worked in various minor roles throughout his youth.
“I had a discussion with Ralph, and he said ‘are you coming back? If you don’t come back, you’re not working here again’.”
Watson was torn, as he had enjoyed the eight months he had worked for Brent Wright, who had founded structural firm Wright Engineers in 1997 and was someone Watson considered a mentor. He wasn’t sure he was ready to head back to Southern Utah and work for his dad.
“Brent said ‘you have to do it—there is no way you should turn it down. If it doesn’t work out, you’ll have a job here’,” Watson recalled. “He said ‘I can see you being a manager of one of our satellite offices because you think differently’. It was rewarding for him to say that.”
Now, more than 18 years later, Watson has WEC well positioned for current and future success, having been firmly in charge as President/Principal of the firm since 2008.
“Tim is so much better at what he does than I ever was,” said Ralph, 82. “He’s a good manager, he’s good with people. (The firm) is totally different. When I was an engineer, I didn’t trust anybody else to do the engineering work. Tim knows how to delegate work—that’s important.”
Success Built on Grit, Determination
Ralph Watson said he knew early in his youth that he would be an engineer of some kind, and by the time he got to high school it had become a primary goal.
“I felt I had an affinity for structural work, and I always liked to be outside,” Ralph said. “I had a few jobs where I had inside work and I absolutely hated it.”
Watson grew up on a farm in Parowan, raised by no-nonsense, hard-working jack-of-all-trades Woodrow ‘Woody’ Watson, who had Ralph herding sheep at age 8 and taught his family at an early age the value of work.
“That’s where they got their work ethic,” said Keri Watson Hammond, Ralph’s niece and Tim’s cousin who owns MarketLink, an A/E/C marketing consulting firm. “He was the hardest working guy. [Ralph] literally had to learn that for his own survival. His life depended on him working hard. That’s what [Woody] taught his boys. They [worked hard] to earn his love.”
“Dad made sure I had plenty to do,” said Ralph. “I tried to raise my kids the same way. They rib me how I always had something for them to do. All our vacations turned into a work project.”
After serving a church mission to the Northern States from 1960-62, Ralph got married, attended the College of Southern Utah (now SUU) and joined the Army (1965-73), a daunting schedule he said was “hectic.”
He started working professionally for the Utah Department of Transportation (UDOT) in 1965 and spent seven years working on transportation projects, including a key I-15 project that ran from the I-70 Interchange to Cedar City. He also transferred to the University of Utah during that period, graduating in 1969 with a Masters of Civil Engineering.
Ralph’s said his dedication to UDOT and the Army were challenged often during those years. “I never did take orders very well,” he admitted, and left UDOT in 1972 to start Watson Consulting Engineers. “I went into business for myself because I had a hard time working for other people.”
In 1976, Watson teamed with his younger brother, Ken, along with Dave Eckhoff and Rod Preator and started Salt Lake-based Eckoff, Watson and Preator (later EWP Engineers and then Stantec), though he remained in Cedar. Despite the enjoyment he got from working with Ken, he was getting pressure to move to Salt Lake and decided to leave the firm, firing up his company again in 1992 and renaming it Watson Engineering Company (WEC).
The fourth of five children, Tim started working as “chief weed digger” and other ‘gopher’-type roles at age 10 and said, “it was expected I would show up a half day in the summer.”
Watson ultimately followed in Ralph’s footsteps, serving a two-year church mission and then going on to earn a Bachelor of Civil Engineering from Utah State University in 2002 and a Master of Civil Engineering from University of Nevada Las Vegas in December 2003.
He was introduced to Brent Wright by a high school associate and landed a job at Wright Engineers, where he learned a ton in a short eight-month period. He said Wright is a “great, great man” and was an excellent mentor. “I learned a lot from Brent that really helped me do some different things than what my dad did here. It helped me look at the way I want to manage the office and interact with employees and team members.”
Changing of the Guard
When Watson came back to the family firm in 2004, he quickly found out that his dad would not be rolling out the red carpet for him.
“Ralph said ‘I have my clientele; you find your own’. That first year my job was to bring in enough to pay for my salary, which I did.”
Watson would quickly learn all aspects of the business, doing his own land surveying, materials testing, topography, civil and structural design, and project management.
Watson said one benefit of those early years was that much of Ralph’s work was in Las Vegas for Clark County School District, so the local market in Cedar was relatively untapped.
“We had a small presence locally; I had to build those relationships,” Watson said. “Right now, 100% of our work is local. It has been beneficial. As the market changes, we’ve been able to adjust accordingly.”
In 2005, WEC started working on renewable energy projects, and landed Thermo 1 and 2, a 10 MW geothermal plant in Beaver County with complex design elements.
“Since then, we’ve worked on many renewable projects in Southern Utah—geothermal, solar and wind,” he said. “They’ve been good projects.”
That includes a hybrid geothermal and hydroelectric energy project at Cove Fort, the first of its kind for North America geothermal plants.
Watson earned his license in 2007 and was made President of WEC in 2008, even though he had no formal ownership of the company. When Ralph and his wife left to serve an 18-month church mission from September 2010 to March 2011, Watson was essentially told “good luck” and brought his wife, Shauna, on board to help with administrative duties and anything else required to keep the company going during the recession.
“It was a bad economy,” said Watson. The company persisted though, and things turned around to where the company was in good shape when his parents got back home.
“It’s been interesting to see how it’s all changed,” said Watson. “My wife and I grew a lot together at that time. We did well because we really pushed it.”
The transitional process of ownership was finalized in 2013 and Ralph stayed on board in a mostly full-time capacity until 2017, when he moved into ‘semi-retired’ mode.
Watson admits that he has a similar work ethic as Ralph, although he tries to be conscious of balancing a professional career with his personal life. He oversees a staff of 12 people, which includes two professional engineers, a structural engineer, a professional land surveyor and geotechnical field technicians, including twin sons Trevor and Mason.
“I do what’s necessary to keep things moving forward,” he said. “It’s not uncommon to have a 12- to 14-hour day. This morning I couldn’t sleep, was up at 3:00 a.m. and came into work. That’s what happens sometimes.”
The company has made steady progress the past ten years since Tim officially took ownership of the firm and every year the past five years has seen significant annual revenue increases.
“We’re doing really well,” said Watson. “We have a different culture—that is something I learned from Brent Wright. Office culture is very important. We hire people to fit our culture. We have amazing people, and they get their job done. That’s really all you can ask.”
The elder Watson still does engineering and survey work on the side, a testament to his skill, longevity and solid reputation in the local market.
“I don’t look for work, it just walks through the door,” Ralph quipped. “It helps me stay sharp and in shape. It gives me an opportunity to get out in the mountains and fields. That’s just part of me.”
Watson marvels at his father’s dedication to stay busy.
“He taught me a good work ethic […] and things like integrity,” he said. “It’s trying to provide clients the best possible product we can and respond quickly to their needs.”
The majority of the firm’s work is in Cedar City and the surrounding 50 mile-radius, including projects like State Bank of Southern Utah in Cedar City, and the Southern Utah University stadium track. The Dixie National Forest District Office in Cedar City was completed in 2019. Renewable energy projects have been a firm staple since 2005, including Four Brothers 400 MW Solar projects in Enterprise and Milford, completed in 2016.







