CBIA BizCast: ‘The Universe Is Setting Me Up’

10.09.2025
Member News

Jacqueline Laramee didn’t realize it at the time, but the course of her life and career trajectory shifted when—while still in high school—she met Melissa Sheffy.

ā€œWhen I met her, I didn’t know that I was meeting my future boss, my future business partner, my future best friend,ā€ Laramee, now president of Plainville-based NDC Commercial Construction, told the CBIA BizCast.

ā€œIt was just kind of like, the universe is setting me up.”

Larmaee and Sheffy, then president of Network Interiors and Network Framing Solutions, first met as members of a local YMCA board—Laramee as a high school representative.

Sheffy said she saw something special in Laramee almost immediately, recalling a conversation about where she planned to go to college.

‘Breaking the Mold’

ā€œā€™It doesn’t matter where I graduate from,ā€™ā€ Sheffy recalled Laramee saying. ā€œā€™My college isn’t going to make me successful. I will make me successful.’

ā€œThat stuck with me, because I was like, ‘this one is different.’

ā€œI’ve had a lot of young people over the years, and I tell people, ā€˜I’m going to hire you, and I’ll create an opportunity, but you have to run through the holes that I create on the field.’

ā€œShe was the first to really kind of break the mold.ā€

ā€œThere still are not enough women, as far as I’m concerned, but it’s become a lot more professional.ā€

Network Interior’s Melissa Sheffy

Sheffy started Network Interiors—a commercial metal framing and drywall company—about 34 years ago.

At the time, it was one of the few 100% women-owned companies in a male-dominated industry.

ā€œIt was different than it is now,ā€ Sheffy said. ā€œThere still are not enough women, as far as I’m concerned, but it’s become a lot more professional.ā€

During the 2008-2012 economic downturn, Sheffy saw the need to diversify, eventually launching Network Design and Construction and later branching off NDC Commercial Construction in 2016.

‘No Shortcut’

Laramee joined Network Design and Construction in 2008 while still in high school.

ā€œI just said, ā€˜I want a job that I can work with people,'” Laramee recalled.

“I want a job that I could do anywhere, and I want a job that I can learn something new every day.”

“There’s no shortcut, no hack. You can’t replace hard work.”

NDC Commercial Construction’s Jacqueline Laramee

That’s when the mentor-mentee relationship began.

During that period, Laramee worked multiple jobs while going to school full-time.

“I’m not the smartest person,” Laramee said. ā€œBut I will work and work and work.

“There’s no shortcut, no hack. You can’t replace hard work.”

Building a Bond

Over the years, Laramee and Sheffy became closer as they spent more time together.

ā€œMelissa helped raise me,ā€ Laramee said. ā€œWe spent a lot of time driving to job sites, just bonding and being there for each other.ā€

ā€œIt was a true mentor-mentee situation.ā€

Sheffy

Laramee continued to grow with the company, becoming president of NDC Construction in 2024.

ā€œIt was a true mentor-mentee situation,ā€ Sheffy said. ā€œI trusted her.

ā€œShe always had my and the company’s best interest at heart, and her level of honesty and integrity is very similar to mine.ā€

Full Circle

Laramee, who was elected to CBIA’s board of directors last year, said one of the biggest lessons she learned from Sheffy was to engage with people at every level.

ā€œI love that connectivity,ā€ Sheffy said. ā€œWe’re building buildings, but we’re building relationships.

ā€œSo people matter to me, and I think that’s different.ā€

As their relationship has grown, both women said they’ve helped each other step outside their comfort zones to develop as business leaders.

“That’s what keeps life interesting—we get to learn every day if we want to.ā€

Laramee

ā€œI’ve converted her to systems and processes,ā€ Laramee said. ā€œShe has converted me into being a hugger and being open.ā€

Sheffy said their relationship has now come full circle—where she is learning from Laramee.

ā€œThe sign of a good teacher is that the student surpasses the teacher,ā€ Sheffy said. ā€œThat’s what’s happening here, and that’s exciting.ā€

ā€œI get to work with some of the most amazing, talented people,ā€ Laramee said.

ā€œI love learning from them, and I think that that’s what keeps life interesting—we get to learn every day if we want to.ā€


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