by Simplar | Mar 2, 2023 | Built Environment, Business of Construction, Weekly Construction Message
Adapting To Trends Thomas C Schleifer, Ph.D. If you’ve been with us since the first of the year, we have been discussing managing risk under the disrupted market conditions of 2023. The risk factors of inflation, recession, labor scarcity, and supply chain snags have...
by Simplar | Apr 28, 2022 | Business, Strategic & Project Planning, Business, Strategic and Project Planning, Business, Strategic and Project Planning, Business, Strategic and Project Planning, Cash Flow (Getting Paid), Financial Management and Risk, Financial Management and Risk, Financial Management and Risk, Financial Management and Risk, Leadership, Weekly Construction Message
SURPRISE We’ve Run Out of Money! What surprised me most over the many years my consultancy finished hundreds of jobs for sureties after contractors had failed mid-project was how many contractors were surprised when they ran out of money. Most of them believed...
by Simplar | Jan 14, 2021 | Risk Management
A Megaproject True Story You don’t have to look very far to find megaprojects to illustrate the causes of failure we have been discussing. The contracting team Purple Line Transit Constructors, building the Purple Line light rail in Washington D.C. announced plans...
by Simplar | Nov 13, 2025 | Business Failure, Business Failure, Financial Management and Risk, Financial Management and Risk, Risk Management, Weekly Construction Message
Managing Capital Risk Recognizing the reality that there are multiple types and magnitudes of capital risk in construction is the first step in risk management. You may be familiar with the term risk prevention, but in fact, we can’t prevent risks from...
by Simplar | Oct 23, 2025 | Built Environment, Business of Construction, Financial Management and Risk, Financial Management and Risk, Leadership, Risk Management, Risk Management, Weekly Construction Message
Businesses fail for any number of reasons but rarely is it a surprise to management. Only construction companies seem to experience sudden collapse when they unexpectedly run out of cash. The element of surprise expressed by most of the failed contractors I worked...