flexiblefullpage
billboard
interstitial1
catfish1
Currently Reading

AEC Leaders share lessons from past downturns

Architects

AEC Leaders share lessons from past downturns

Positions of passivity and cost-cutting run counter to the key lessons from AEC leaders who successfully navigated their firms through past market downturns.


By David Barista, Editorial Director  | November 24, 2020
AEC Leaders share lessons from past downturns

Photo: fauxels from Pexels

    

2020 has been a peach, hasn’t it? A global pandemic. Raging wild fires. Riots and looting. Facemask battles. Ongoing trade wars. Election-year shenanigans. Recession fears. Increasingly divisive politics. Everything canceled. (Lest we forget zombie deer and murder hornets.)

In a year of jobsite shutdowns, project delays, funding pitfalls, and project postponements—and with no guarantee of a more prosperous 2021—it is understandable for AEC firm leaders to take a guarded, hunker-down stance when planning for next year and beyond. It is natural for firms to focus first on “right sizing” the business by slashing investments, overhead, and operational costs. 

But these positions of passivity and cost-cutting run counter to the key lessons from AEC leaders who successfully navigated their firms through past market downturns and economic events, says Scott Winstead, President of FMI Management Consulting, who’s firm last year studied takeaways and strategic lessons from the Great Recession (BDCnetwork.com/DownturnLessons). 

A common mistake AEC firms make during down cycles, says Winstead, is running the firm as a collection of projects, versus a business. “It’s a subtle but very distinctive difference that speaks to the long view versus the short view, and to the notion that you can’t save your way to prosperity,” says Winstead.

The firms that came out of the Great Recession in growth mode, according to the FMI research report, focused on investing in their clients, people, and business; they diversified their services and found unique ways to outperform the competition; they streamlined their operations and put their “A” players in a position to succeed and grow the business; and they created a company culture that is nimble, collaborative, and transparent. 

Winstead says 2020-21 should be no different. “If I think back to 2008 and the beginning innings of the Great Recession, I heard then what we heard early on in this scenario, which is mistaking backlog as a proxy for health,” he says. “Backlog is a reflection of work that has already been sold and booked, and is in the process of being burned off. Past performance is no guarantee of future results.”

The key finding of the FMI research, which gathered insights from more than 150 engineering and construction executives, was that AEC leaders who increased their financial investment in strategy reported higher effectiveness in operations, strategy, and overall company performance, compared to respondents who either didn’t do anything or decreased spending in that area. “Strategic thinking and planning are among the top leadership skills needed to be an effective leader during a recession,” wrote the authors of the report. 

Download the FMI report, “Leading Through Business Cycles: Lessons Learned From E&C Executives,” at: BDCnetwork.com/DownturnLessons.

Related Stories

Healthcare Facilities | Jul 1, 2016

AIA releases summary of the 2016 Design and Health Research Consortium

Consortium members discussed how architects, designers, and health professionals can best apply design and health research in their communities.

Architects | Jun 30, 2016

The year's best small projects include a floating sauna, dental trailer, and smocked porch

AIA chose the 2016 recipients of the Small Project Awards. Every entry cost less than $1.5 million to build, with one as low as $900.

Architects | Jun 29, 2016

AIA: Healthy demand for all building types signaled in Architecture Billings Index

Recent client interest could signal resurgence for institutional market. May's ABI score was the highest mark in nearly a year.

Architects | Jun 28, 2016

5 easy ways architects can increase their profits

Whitehorn Financial Managing Principal Steve Whitehorn offers effective ways to recoup lost revenue, including a few strategies that capitalize on recent changes to the federal tax code.

AEC Tech | Jun 27, 2016

If ‘only the paranoid survive,’ what does it take to thrive?

“Sooner or later, something fundamental in your business world will change.” The late Andrew Grove (1936-2016), Co-founder of tech giant Intel Corp., lived by these words.

Architects | Jun 15, 2016

Design Thinking makes its way into Yale School of Management

The school will introduce Design Observer co-founders Jessica Helfand and Michael Bierut as faculty.

Retail Centers | Jun 14, 2016

Zaha Hadid and Gensler among finalists for Sunset Strip billboard design competition

The concepts are curvy, sleek, and multidimensional, and feature sharp digital displays.

Movers+Shapers | Jun 14, 2016

VERTICAL INTEGRATOR: How Brooklyn’s Alloy LLC evolved from an architecture firm into a full-fledged development company

Led by an ambitious President and a CEO with deep pockets, Alloy LLC's six entities control the entire development process: real estate development, design, construction, brokerage, property management, and community development.

Office Buildings | Jun 14, 2016

Let's not forget introverts when it comes to workplace design

Recent design trends favor extroverts who enjoy collaboration. HDR's Lynn Mignola says that designers need to accommodate introverts, people who recharge with solitude, as well.

Building Team | Jun 13, 2016

BD+C launches Women in Design+Construction Conference

Inaugural 2.5-day event will convene 125+ leading AEC women in Dana Point, Calif., November 9-11, for professional development, networking, and career training.  

boombox1
boombox2
native1

More In Category



Museums

UT Dallas opens Morphosis-designed Crow Museum of Asian Art

In Richardson, Tex., the University of Texas at Dallas has opened a second location for the Crow Museum of Asian Art—the first of multiple buildings that will be part of a 12-acre cultural district. When completed, the arts and performance complex, called the Edith and Peter O’Donnell Jr. Athenaeum, will include two museums, a performance hall and music building, a grand plaza, and a dedicated parking structure on the Richardson campus.


halfpage1

Most Popular Content

  1. 2021 Giants 400 Report
  2. Top 150 Architecture Firms for 2019
  3. 13 projects that represent the future of affordable housing
  4. Sagrada Familia completion date pushed back due to coronavirus
  5. Top 160 Architecture Firms 2021