We Can’t Build Anything Worthwhile If We’re Busy Fighting Each Other
I’ve spent my entire career in and around construction and if there’s one thing every jobsite has taught me, it’s this: We are really, really good at fighting.
Unfortunately, I don’t mean a healthy debate. I mean real fighting. The kind where we draw battle lines and weaponize RFIs.
I get it, the stakes in construction aren’t theoretical and somewhere along the way we convinced ourselves that survival requires being on constant defense.
But you can’t build anything meaningful with clenched fists. And in this week where we focus on giving thanks, that truth is becoming harder to ignore.
Why We Still Suck at Managing the Two Most Important Things: Time & Money
There are only two scarcities in life: time and money. And if you mess up one, you’re probably going to lose the other.
Many of us in construction have built careers fighting fires that never should have started. From war rooms full of red dashboards to schedule meetings of wishful thinking, we’ve done everything in our power to hit the deadline in time for opening day.
But only 8.5% of construction projects actually come in on time and on budget. Yup, less than one in ten.
This isn’t just a rough patch; it’s a full-blown industry crisis. Is there any hope for improvement?