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5 Ways to Improve Contractor Margins C
Construction is a high-risk, low-margin business, with some sectors faring better than others. According to Tyler ParĂŠ, principal with FMI Corp., a construction-focused consulting and investment banking firm, when barriers to entry are high, margins improve. Data from Risk Management Associates supports this view. Average profit margin before tax was 6% or higher among electrical contractors, highway contractors and utilities in 2019. General contractors had the lowest profit margin before tax of just over 4%. âThere are inherent risks in construction work that can negatively impact overall net profitability,â ParĂŠ said. Contractors know all too well how labor shortages, supply chain delays, design errors, underutilization of equipment, jobsite accidents and change orders can negatively impact profitability. Corporate strategy plays an important role in how firms mitigate these risks and improve contractor profit margin. We asked three industry leaders to discuss the reasons for lackluster profits and some profit-boosting strategies.
1. REDUCE WASTE
Don Swasing, CEM and COO of site prep firm Schlouch Inc., sees a lot of waste in construction. âThere are plenty of people using a fix-when-fail fleet model, who donât give a thought to the complete cost of equipment ownership,â Swasing said. âWe run a high-performance fleet model which means Iâm trading at the sweet spot prior to major component failure and not wasting dollars on major repairs. It keeps our team in the latest technology and most reliable equipment. Schlouch tracks equipment use very closely and if a machine is underperforming or not meeting targets, itâs addressed quickly. Troy Guevara, a former contractor who is now a construction technologist for Digitek Solutions, believes contractors are still using a lot of manual processes for tasks such as accounts payable, project reporting and estimating that can be replaced with technology. âThey are paying people to do things they donât have to do,â Guevara said. âYou can take those people and put them in other roles.â
2. EMPLOY THE BEST PEOPLE
âThe best contractors have the best people,â ParĂŠ said. âThe best firms are serious about finding, attracting and retaining the best people. They become a destination employer that attracts highly qualified project managers, superintendents, and craft labor. Swasing agreed. âSkill equals profit in construction.â To retain employees, Schlouch uses individual job descriptions, performance feedback and merit increases. They show employees a career path. Employee retention is measured monthly and strategy around retention and employee development is discussed weekly. When the company experienced a shutdown due to COVID-19, they carried healthcare costs for employees. According to Swasing, itâs a move that will improve retention and help nurture the culture of trust among its 300 employees.
3. PUT SYSTEMS IN PLACE
âThe No. 1 thing that high-performing contractors utilize are systems that hold them and their employees accountable,â Guevara said. âSystems help employees avoid mistakes.â Without one complete system for estimating, accounting, project management, inventory and tool tracking, Guevara said contractors are leaving money on the table. âThe truth is they donât know what they donât know.â At Schlouch, they understand the importance of getting employees on board with new systems. âWe engage them, listen to their ideas, understand the business problems they want to solve and collaborate on expectations and accountabilities,â Swasing said. âIt doesnât matter what you are trying to do: improve equipment reliability, safety management, or project management. If you canât get the people rallied around your idea, where you want to go and what you want to do, you are not going anywhere.â
4. GET REAL TIME VISIBILITY
ParĂŠ suggested that those contractors who have more control over project risk, have better project outcomes. âTechnologically advanced contractors are going to have more
clarity and more control relative to key performance indicators,â he said. âThat should lead to better financial results.â âWith todayâs technology you should have, at a minimum, daily real time job costs,â Guevera said. He said contractors with real time job costs can see the trends before they peak and adjust.
5. PICK THE RIGHT CLIENTS
According to ParĂŠ, high performing contractors are more selective about the jobs they take on and will only go after work they know they will make money on. This is one of the keys to success at Schlouch, a company that has been in business 38 years. âWe ask potential clients tough questions about their history, how they select a contractor, ability to pay, their public reputation, and safety, Swasing said. âWe are looking for shared values.â âThe world of the lowest bidder is not the best place to be,â Guevara said. If you do go after low-bid work, itâs essential to understand your costs.
IMPROVE PROFITABILITY
Now that weâve identified the key areas where you might be leaving money on the table, Swasing suggested taking two steps. The first is to create a clear vision for the business. The second is to look at your business with a fresh set of eyes. âAllow yourself to see the waste and inefficiencies, the guys who arenât making money, the equipment that chews on your balance sheet and the customers who you canât make money on,â Swasing said. âYou have to be brutally honest.â For contractors who are behind the curve on understanding the financial aspects of the business, ParĂŠ recommended focusing on improving the integrity of field reporting, locating a strong accounting partner and improving financial knowledge with help from associations like the Construction Financial Management Association. âA good accountant that specializes in construction is worth their weight in gold,â ParĂŠ said. â FROM ASSOCIATION OF EQUIPMENT MANUFACTURERS
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