Startups are everywhere in construction. Builders want them to meet the moment.

Startups are everywhere in construction. Builders want them to meet the moment.

Startups are everywhere in construction. Builders want them to meet the moment.


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Construction has a reputation as a Luddite industry.

This label isn’t without merit. Consider the oft-cited 2017 productivity report from consulting firm McKinsey, which revealed that labor-productivity growth in the construction industry was only 1% per year over the prior two decades, compared to 2.8% for the total world economy and 3.6% for manufacturing.

This improvement gap remains an issue: A 2024 follow-on report from McKinsey showed that construction productivity improved by only 10%, or 0.4% annually, between 2000 and 2022. Again, these productivity gains lagged severely behind the total world economy and manufacturing, which posted 50% and 90% gains respectively.

But the tide is turning as contractors across the country embrace new technologies to aid in tasks across the built lifecycle, such as to speed up invoicing, implement autonomous machinery on jobsites and deal with change order management, not to mention the advent of artificial intelligence and generative AI.

Builders themselves are taking advantage of this environment and these offerings via steps into the investment arena. These businesses, which handle multibillion-dollar projects, partner with later-stage startups to tailor a firm’s product to its specific needs.

All this is to say technology is far more common on jobsites than it once was. As builders become more technologically literate and comfortable, the onus that once existed on these construction pros to adapt may be flipping back to the startups themselves, which experts say are struggling to meet the demands that construction firms actually have.

Contech products need to innovate

In construction, a solution doesn’t just need to work — it needs to be 10 times better than something that already exists, Jim Barrett, chief innovation officer for New York City-based Turner Construction, told Construction Dive.

A headshot of Jim Barrett

Jim Barrett

Permission granted by Turner Construction

 

“It’s got to be significantly better to make us want to spend the time to think about either changing out an existing solution or trying to spend the time integrating it into our organization,” Barrett said.

One such example would be Turner’s implementation of change order management tech Clearstory for all of its project teams. The contractor announced an agreement with the firm in October.

“Clearstory layers onto a high-touch workflow that impacts hundreds, if not thousands, of people on our projects and makes it simpler and faster in a way that raises the bar for outcomes,” said Maria Pantelaros, director of innovation for Turner, in the announcement. “That’s the kind of innovation we embrace.”

Barrett added that there’s only so much time and energy that a company can give to startups, particularly to companies that present unproven solutions. 

“The effort it takes to bring a new solution into our organization is significant,” Barrett explained. 

This is compounded for firms that deal with AI offerings. Turner recently revealed a partnership with OpenAI that has led Barrett to question the value of farming out the development of AI agents. He questions whether paying an organization to build an AI tool is worth it when a Turner employee could create it in-house, likely with more insight on the desired functionality to address existing needs.

Such circumstances can put a builder at odds with a startup that wants to prove that its product works. Startups can’t rely on a single contractor to prove products are a general solution for the industry, said Henning Roedel, the founder of startup Hardhat Robotics and the former robotics lead at DPR Construction.

Rather, startups need to prove their products can work for the whole industry.

“It’s really important that you get a high touch and a lot of reps as a startup founder,” Roedel told Construction Dive. “When I was at DPR, I tried to optimize for speed for these startups.”



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