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Data Analytics for Construction: Productivity, Risk, and the Numbers the PM Trusts

Analytics for the questions construction leadership actually asks — which jobs are making money, which subcontractors are slipping, where the safety risk is accumulating, and why the last three bids missed by the same percentage. Built on the ERP, field, and schedule data that drives real project decisions.

Why Construction Analytics Programs Don't Change How PMs Manage Jobs

A regional GC invests in an analytics program and builds 40 dashboards across job cost, safety, schedule, and procurement. Two years later, the COO asks whether the analytics investment has actually changed any project outcomes. The honest answer is uncomfortable: PMs still manage jobs from the same spreadsheets they used before, the dashboards get opened before monthly project reviews and ignored the rest of the month, and the safety analytics are interesting but haven't changed how the safety director plans pre-task meetings. The dashboards report what already happened. The PMs need analytics that tell them what's about to happen — which cost codes are trending over budget, which subcontractors are falling behind on a trajectory that will miss the next milestone, which jobs have enough approved change orders to cover the current over-billing position and which don't.
Construction analytics that changes PM behavior starts with the PM's actual decision points and works backward. The Monday morning review where the PM looks at every active job. The buy-out meeting where preconstruction commits subcontractor and material costs. The monthly WIP review where the controller and PM agree on cost-to-complete. The safety pre-task planning meeting. Each of these has a specific information need that analytics can serve — but only if the analytics is designed for that moment, delivered in that workflow, and calibrated to the PM's trust threshold. Done this way, analytics becomes part of how the company runs. Done as a BI CoE project that produces dashboards on the data team's roadmap, it produces reports nobody integrates into their workflow.

How Construction Companies Apply It

Job Profitability & Trending

Job-level profitability analytics with cost code trending — identifying which cost codes are tracking over budget early enough for the PM to intervene, not late enough for the variance to show up in the monthly WIP.

Job profitability + cost code trending + early warning

Subcontractor Performance Scoring

Subcontractor performance analytics across safety, schedule, quality, and commercial dimensions — scoring that informs prequalification and buy-out decisions on the next job based on actual performance data from completed and active projects.

Sub performance + prequalification + buy-out support

Bid Accuracy & Estimating Feedback

Bid accuracy analytics that compares estimates to actual costs at the cost code level — surfacing the systematic patterns (the same items overestimated or underestimated consistently) that help the estimating team calibrate future bids.

Bid accuracy + cost code comparison + estimating feedback

What You Receive

Construction analytics delivered for PM workflow integration: data integration from ERP, scheduling, field reporting, and safety systems; job profitability and cost code trending; subcontractor performance scoring; bid accuracy analysis; integration with the PM's weekly review process; reconciliation to the WIP schedule; and the training that makes analytics part of how the company runs.

From Our Blog

Data Analytics for Construction — FAQ

How do you get PMs to actually use the analytics?

By designing it for their existing decision points — Monday job reviews, buy-out meetings, WIP reviews — rather than asking them to open a dashboard separately. The analytics has to arrive in the workflow at the moment the PM makes the decision. We co-design with PMs during the build so the output matches their actual working pattern.

Yes. We've built integrations with Procore, Viewpoint Vista, Sage 300 CRE, CMiC, Primavera P6, Microsoft Project, and several other construction-specific systems. The connection patterns vary but the analytical model is consistent across platforms.

Yes. Pre-qualified data analysts and analytics engineers with construction domain experience — job costing, WIP, schedule analysis, safety analytics, and the SQL discipline to build models that match the controller's numbers. 92% first-match acceptance.

Analytics Designed for
the PM's Monday Morning

Job trending, sub performance, bid accuracy — built backward from the decision points that determine project outcomes.