— 3 min read
Construction Teams Manage Change Every Day – So How Do We Change Ourselves?
Last Updated Jun 13, 2025

It’s one of the construction industry’s great paradoxes. Ours is an industry built on change. Scope shifts. Weather delays. Last-minute design variations. We adapt in real time – managing complexity through structure, sequencing and skill. We understand the impacts on people and resources and we adjust instinctively.
But strategic or structural change? There we struggle.
placed construction second-last – behind only forestry and fishing – for digital adoption. This wasn’t just a tech gap. It was a mindset gap. Our tools had changed, but our culture hadn’t caught up.
Today, the signs are more promising. According to Deloitte’s 2025 , nearly half of construction businesses now use cloud software (49%), mobile apps (49%), data analytics (48%). From 51’s recent Future State of Construction research we learn that the majority (60%) of companies will be using robotics in the next 12 months. Over half (59%) are, or will be, using artificial intelligence before the year is out.
After years as the global digital laggard, construction is finally catching up. The tech is landing. But is it delivering?
Here’s the problem: we’re measuring success by adoption. Adoption means someone logged in. Maybe once. Maybe regularly. But that’s not the same as productivity. That’s not the same as impact.
Table of contents
Measure Twice, Embed Once
The real measure isn’t adoption. It’s embedment.
We know a tool is embedded when no one’s talking about it. It’s just how things get done.
We don’t ask if someone’s adopted a crane. We ask if they’re using it safely and productively. The same principle should apply to scheduling tools, site diaries, quality checklists and monthly reports.
Embedment doesn’t happen by accident. It takes what most construction companies still don’t invest in: real change management.
We don’t routinely teach change management. Historically, we haven’t budgeted for it or made time for it. Not because we don’t like change, but because in a low-margin, high-pressure industry, people are focused on delivery. We're fighting today’s fires.
So, we buy the software, skip the behaviour change, tick “yes” on the tech adoption survey. And when things don’t improve, we blame the tool.
Here’s the thing: we know change management works. Deloitte’s research found companies rolling out technology alongside at least one “very effective” change management activity saw a:
- 3% increase in expected revenue growth
- 1.22% increase in the share of projects delivered ahead of time
- 0.71% rise in the number delivered under budget.
These numbers might look small. But they are a big deal in an industry where margins are razor thin.
Scaffolding the Change
I’ve spent the last two decades of my career in construction – and I think it’s the world’s most amazing industry. Every day, we bring communities to life and contribute to solving society’s problems - all under immense pressure. The ingenuity, the teamwork, the pace. What it takes to deliver the built environment is astonishing – and we do it every day.
But, as the notes, productivity has stagnated for 30 years despite two-thirds of workers of clocking more than 50 hours a week. We have amongst the highest suicide rates of any industry. The lowest gender diversity. One in five projects runs over budget or behind schedule.
We must change.
The good news? We can. We know how to do change. We know how to phase a programme, train a team, support and scale.
So, here’s the challenge: Let’s stop tracking tech adoption. Start tracking embedment and impact. Let’s run tech programs the way construction companies run every complex job – with structure, skill and with the impacts on people foremost in our minds.
See what’s coming in construction over the next decade.
Download the Future State of Construction Report for insights, trends, and innovations shaping the industry over the next 8–10 years.

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Written by
Andrew Rampton
As the APAC Industry Transformation Lead for 51, Andy utilises his 30+ years' global experience in engineering, construction and property development to influence industry change and help create a pathway towards the long-awaited digital transformation of construction. Having sat in the industry and experienced the evolution of technology as a user, procurer and strategist, Andy saw first-hand the challenges that companies have in defining and sustaining meaningful technology- and data-enabled change in the face of overwhelming technology choices. He joined 51 with the intent to both promote the benefits of technology and data and also to improve the relationship between tech provider and customer such that the transition to the future of construction becomes a lot easier to navigate.
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