Design firms have gone all out with management innovations in the last year. Check out which ones might work for your firm.
1. Hone your client relationships. TK Architects creates annual relationship plans for current and prospective clients. Plans cover marketing opportunities, improvements to the firm’s service and delivery, and face-to-face “touch points” in the office or at industry events. Project managers must contact major clients every week. TK audits completed projects to gauge client satisfaction.
2. Help clients make tough decisions. BLDD Architects’ Qualified Learning Environment Outcomes software helps K-12 clients take the emotion out of decisions related to their facilities. QLEO projects the first costs and life cycle costs (and benefits) of numerous scenarios and compares the data to how well the district’s buildings perform. QLEO helped the St. Joseph (Mo.) SD prove that a plan to retire six schools and build three new ones was superior to a competing plan—from voters, no less—to renovate the six buildings.
3. Beef up your revenue forecasting. HMC Architects created an advanced revenue forecasting tool to provide a detailed view of the firm’s backlog versus budgeted revenues and staffing capacity. Projects are weighted based on schedule and the probability of being won.
TOP ARCHITECTURE FIRMS
2014 Architecture Revenue ($)
1 Gensler $1,041,280,000
2 Perkins+Will $413,070,000
3 Kohn Pedersen Fox Associates $223,188,000
4 Perkins Eastman $182,900,000
5 NBBJ $163,000,000
6 ZGF Architects $131,689,176
7 Populous $122,000,000
8 Corgan $111,250,000
9 Adrian Smith + Gordon Gill Architecture $81,198,766
10 VOA Associates $70,331,475
SEE FULL LIST
TOP ARCHITECTURE/ENGINEERING FIRMS
2014 A/E Revenue ($)
1 Stantec $477,440,639
2 HOK $416,549,000
3 Callison RTKL $402,411,373
4 Skidmore, Owings & Merrill $356,060,910
5 HDR $331,450,000
6 HKS $280,308,323
7 SmithGroupJJR $197,158,405
8 CannonDesign $178,000,000
9 EYP $144,727,249
10 DLR Group $130,000,000
SEE FULL LISTARCHITECTURE GIANTS SPONSORED BY:
4. Refine your target markets. GWWO is drilling down on its core markets—museums, visitor and nature centers, and education facilities—by type, size, location, and conformance to the firm’s five-year goals. It doubled its business development staff, to four, to pursue projects that best fit these parameters.
5. Start your own firm (and immediately land a mega-project). Dan Meis, FAIA, formerly of NBBJ Sports and Entertainment, establishedMEIS Studio a year ago and quickly got the green light on the $400 million Stadio Della Roma, a 52,000-seat stadium for Rome’s AS Roma soccer team, with accompanying mixed-use retail.
6. Don’t be afraid to fight City Hall. SRG Partnership (designer), Equilibrium Engineers (SE), and Lease Crutcher Lewis (GC) had to prove to Portland officials that cross-laminated timber could safely meet the state structural code for the cantilevered roof of the new Oregon Zoo Elephant Lands Plaza Visitors Center.
7. Open a new office. In early 2014 New York–based FXFOWLE moved from a shared office in the District of Columbia to its own space, with 10 professionals. The office has since landed a handful of projects in the Mid-Atlantic region.
8. Add a new service. LPA Inc. added lighting design to its armamentarium.
9. Enhance an existing service. Retail designerapi(+) sharpened its focus on food retailing and foodservice design. The move has produced new commissions.
10. Hire ex-CEOs to bring in business. Westlake Reed Leskosky grabbed a major orchestra’s executive director, an art museum head, and the former CEO of Cleveland Clinic’s flagship Hillcrest Hospital (Jeff Leimgruber) to shake the trees for high-profile projects in the firm’s target sectors.
11. Make your staff the firm’s “Brand Ambassadors.” KSQ Architects’ “Brand Ambassadors” are 25 staffers who contribute to the firm’s blog and community outreach projects. Social media sharing by staff has doubled. KSQ provides sales training to its professionals: in the last year, they generated work worth more than $10 million.
12. Put a spin on your firm’s birthday. To add zing to its Golden Jubilee,Legat Architects is encouraging staff to conduct pro bono community-based design charrettes. The firm also sponsored an “Art of Architecture” exhibit in its hometown of Waukegan, Ill.
13. Issue your firm’s own “Declaration of Innovation.” Little issued such a document setting forth 20 initiatives designed to harness the firm’s diversity. Little’s “Constitution” gives its 326 employees the freedom to work throughout the organization.
14. Punch up your punch list system. RBB Architects mobilized a punch-listing team of 14 to meet Los Angeles County’s fast-delivery schedule for Martin Luther King Jr. Community Hospital. The project involved 10 separate permits with California’s Office of Statewide Healthcare Planning and Development for three new buildings (including a six-story, LEED Silver inpatient tower) and five complete remodels. More than 50,000 comments were categorized, processed, and closed.
15. Catalog your staff’s expertise. Architects Hawaii Ltd. developed a system for capturing employee experience, skills, and interests—data that can be used to make staffing decisions on future projects.
16. Ally with a compatible firm. Schradergroup architecture formalized its long-standing relationship with Mission Critical Partners (mcp911.com). Schradergroup does the facility design; MCP provides the technology design. The two firms now do joint marketing at trade shows.
17. Merge with another firm to expand your mutual capabilities. Healthcare design leaderFreemanWhite joined engineering/design-build giant Haskell (www.haskell.com). The partnership creates a fully integrated team, from strategy straight through to post-occupancy.
18. Solidify your position: acquire. CannonDesign acquired Astorino to strengthen its design-led construction services. Joint ownership in both AEC entities will allow Cannon to offer clients single-source responsibility for projects.
19. Turn your employees into owners. In 2014, JLG Architects implemented an ESOP stock plan and became 100% employee-owned.
20. Get your succession plan in order. Kirksey expanded its ownership to 25 vice presidents, thereby enabling the firm to maintain its culture, retain its knowledge-based experts, and solidify the next generation of owners.
21. Conduct product research. GBBN has given its younger staff time to work on and test new designs for improved acoustic ceilings, using glass panels to reflect sound.
RETURN TO THE GIANTS 300 LANDING PAGE
Related Stories
Giants 400 | Aug 7, 2015
UNIVERSITY SECTOR GIANTS: Collaboration, creativity, technology—hallmarks of today’s campus facilities
At a time when competition for the cream of the student/faculty crop is intensifying, colleges and universities must recognize that students and parents are coming to expect an education environment that foments collaboration, according to BD+C's 2015 Giants 300 report.
Giants 400 | Aug 7, 2015
RECONSTRUCTION AEC GIANTS: Restorations breathe new life into valuable older buildings
AEC Giants discuss opportunities and complications associated with renovation, restoration, and adaptive reuse construction work.
Giants 400 | Aug 6, 2015
GREEN BUILDING GIANTS: Green building movement hits a new plateau, but the underlying problems remain
Today, the green building movement is all about eliminating toxic substances in building materials and systems and, for manufacturers, issuing environmental and health product declarations. Whether these efforts will lead to healthier products and building environments remains an open question.
Giants 400 | Aug 6, 2015
BIM GIANTS: Robotic reality capture, gaming systems, virtual reality—AEC Giants continue tech frenzy
Given their size, AEC Giants possess the resources and scale to research and test the bevy of software and hardware solutions on the market. Some have created internal innovation labs and fabrication shops to tinker with emerging technologies and create custom software tools. Others have formed R&D teams to test tech tools on the job site.
Giants 400 | Aug 6, 2015
GIANTS 300 REPORT: Top 75 Healthcare Construction Firms
Turner, McCarthy, and Skanska top Building Design+Construction's 2015 ranking of the largest healthcare contractors and construction management firms in the U.S.
Giants 400 | Aug 6, 2015
GIANTS 300 REPORT: Top 80 Healthcare Engineering Firms
AECOM, Jacobs, and Burns & McDonnell top Building Design+Construction's 2015 ranking of the largest healthcare engineering and engineering/architecture firms in the U.S.
Giants 400 | Aug 6, 2015
GIANTS 300 REPORT: Top 115 Healthcare Architecture Firms
HDR, Stantec, and Perkins+Will top Building Design+Construction's 2015 ranking of the largest healthcare architecture and architecture/engineering firms in the U.S.
Giants 400 | Aug 6, 2015
HEALTHCARE AEC GIANTS: Hospital and medical office construction facing a slow but steady recovery
Construction of hospitals and medical offices is expected to shake off its lethargy in 2015 and recover modestly over the next several years, according to BD+C's 2015 Giants 300 report.
Giants 400 | Aug 6, 2015
GIANTS 300 REPORT: Top 75 Construction Management Firms
Jacobs, AECOM, and Hill International head Building Design+Construction's 2015 ranking of the largest construction management and project management firms in the United States.
Giants 400 | Aug 6, 2015
GIANTS 300 REPORT: Top 100 Contractors
Turner Construction and Whiting-Turner Contracting top Building Design+Construction's 2015 ranking of the largest contractors in the United States.