Why the Winners Will Be
the Firms That Stay Focused
2026 is not shaping up to be a year where the market suddenly gets easier. It looks more like a year where disciplined operators pull ahead — and everyone else feels stuck fighting margin pressure, labor shortages, and uneven demand.
5 Key Trends
$1M–$5M Operators
A lot of the industry’s recent strength has been driven by a relatively narrow group of sectors. The market is still active, but it is not active in a balanced way. Contractors that know where demand is going, how to protect margins, and how to position their business around the right opportunities will have an advantage. Those that wait for the market to “normalize” may spend the year spinning their wheels.
Material Pricing May Be Calmer, But Cost Pressure Is Not Going Away
Most forecasts point to moderate inflation rather than another extreme pricing event — meaning contractors are less likely to get blindsided by broad-based materials chaos. But that does not mean estimating gets easier.
Steel and aluminum still under pressure from tariff-related effects
Electrical equipment — volatile from grid upgrades, power demand, and AI-driven building
Labor costs applying more pressure than materials in many markets
Bottom line: Stable pricing will help disciplined firms. It will not save disorganized ones. Your protection has to come from process.
SBGP reviews your financials and financial tracking process, plus your ops and estimating-related workflow, then delivers a step-by-step 12-month plan to tighten pricing discipline, allowances, and decision timing so you stop leaking margin when costs shift.
Data Centers Will Keep Driving Demand — and Distorting the Market
The data center boom tied to cloud infrastructure, AI, and digital expansion continues to drive aggressive project activity. But even if you never build a data center, the sector still affects you.
It pulls on the same labor pool, the same electrical talent, the same equipment categories, and in some markets, the same subcontractors you rely on.
Builders who understand these second-order effects will make better scheduling and staffing decisions than those who only watch housing headlines.
Infrastructure Will Stay Active, But the Back Half of 2026 Could Get More Competitive
Public infrastructure should continue to provide meaningful construction volume through much of 2026. Projects tied to highways, airports, ports, bridges, and water systems still have momentum. But the caution is timing.
Strong pipeline momentum where funding is already committed and regional projects are moving.
Questions around reauthorization and public funding continuity could slow new awards and intensify competition.
Use DISC and Motivator assessments for you and up to 5 management team members to clarify communication, decision-making, and ownership, then blend the findings into your 12-month plan so the business runs smoother even when labor and scheduling pressure spikes.
Manufacturing Is Still Strong, But It’s Becoming More Selective
Manufacturing construction is no longer in the same “everything is booming” phase it was in when reindustrialization first surged. Some categories — especially EV-related manufacturing — have cooled. But that does not mean manufacturing is falling apart.
Industrial investment near you can mean more competition for labor, more subcontractor strain — and eventually, more population growth and downstream housing demand. The companies that capitalize best are the ones already running clean systems with solid hiring, forecasting, and project controls.
Lower Interest Rates Could Help, But the Rebound Will Not Hit Every Segment at Once
There is growing expectation that 2026 will bring a somewhat easier rate environment. But contractors should not mistake lower rates for immediate acceleration. Rate relief tends to move through the market with a lag — and it will not move through every sector at the same pace.
Residential — buyers who’ve been sitting on the sidelines waiting for better financing
Smaller private projects stalled by tighter capital conditions
Commercial and manufacturing — more dependent on sector-specific conditions and policy certainty
Focus, Systems, and Positioning
2026 does not look like a year where everyone wins equally. It looks like a year where strong sectors stay active, weak operators feel squeezed, and disciplined contractors separate themselves from the crowd. That is especially true for companies in the $1M–$5M range, where a few estimating misses, bad hires, or schedule failures can do real damage.
Know which opportunities fit your business and your team
Bid with discipline, not desperation
Escalation clauses, scope clarity, no loose allowances
Manage tightly, communicate early with trade partners
A business model that can absorb volatility without breaking
This is not a “wait for normal” year. It’s a year where focused operators separate fast — because they know what’s working, what isn’t, and what to fix before growth creates more chaos than profit.
Turn “busy” into a clear plan for profitable growth.
A BPA gives you a personalized 30+ page, step-by-step, time-based 12-month plan — built from a detailed review of your marketing, sales, team communication, hiring, financials, and strategic planning. Plus DISC and Motivator assessments (and a team scatter chart) to tighten leadership alignment and execution.
Marketing · Sales · Operations · People · Finance · Processes
For Builders · Remodelers · Trade Contractors · $1M–$5M Operators
2026 Outlook
SBGP
