At Andrew Goodrick Onsite Roofing, I’ve spent a lot of time thinking about what it means to do work that actually lasts.
If I could have something named after me, it wouldn’t be a building, a street, or anything flashy.
It would be something simple. Something useful. Something that quietly does its job every day without drawing attention to itself.
I’d want a standard named after me.
Not in the official sense—but in the way people in a trade might say:
“That’s how you’re supposed to do it.”
In roofing, there’s a big difference between doing a job and doing it right. Anyone can install shingles. But not everyone takes the time to make sure a roof will actually hold up 10–15 years down the line.
That’s the difference I try to represent through Andrew Goodrick Onsite Roofing.
If something carried my name, I’d want it to stand for:
- Doing the job right, even when no one is watching
- Fixing the real problem—not just covering it up
- Being honest with homeowners, even when it costs me money
- Building something that lasts
Those pages break down how I evaluate roofs and how I think about long-term solutions.
Because at the end of the day, people don’t remember the cheapest quote.
They remember whether the problem came back.
That’s the mindset behind Andrew Goodrick Onsite Roofing—doing work once, and doing it right.
If someone could look at a roof years later and say, “That was done right,” that would be enough for me.
That’s the kind of thing I’d want my name attached to.
Learn more about Andrew Goodrick, roofing contractor in Georgia:
https://andrewgoodrick.com/about/

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