For years, bank erosion was treated like weather. Unpredictable, frustrating and above all unavoidable.
A crash on the field. A duct run that collides with a structure after fabrication has already begun. A crew standing by while crews work out a coordination problem that should have been spotted weeks earlier. They were often treated as common workplace headaches. But they come at a real cost: construction rework on average approximately 5% of the total project cost. And in an industry where contractor margins are often measured in the single digits, a 5% avoidable cost ends up costing you the project’s profits.
And since most margin loss doesn’t happen all at once, it often goes unnoticed until it’s too late. It seeps through field workarounds, labor inefficiency, material waste, schedule compression, and the endless hours project teams spend solving problems that should never have made it to site.
This is why BIM is being rethought within construction companies. As a visualization tool it can also provide one of the clearest margin protection strategies available to contractors today.
The reason for this is simple: BIM moves problem solving upstream.
A coordinated model can expose clashes before they require demolition and resettlement. Constructability issues may surface before labor is mobilized. It can improve sequencing, reduce material waste and give teams a clearer picture of where the risk is before the field starts paying for it.
ROI data helps explain why this is important. Research compiled by GEM found that BIM-led workflows can reduce project costs by 15-24% in the design phase and 5-15% during construction. But the gains go beyond the cost. In design, BIM can improve productivity by 38-43% by detecting coordination issues and rework risks before they reach the field, when solutions are still relatively inexpensive. In construction, productivity gains of 25-36% are tied to better crash detection, smoother sequencing, and fewer change orders during execution.
And the value doesn’t stop at delivery: in operations and maintenance, BIM-enabled workflows are associated with 10-20% lower lifecycle costs and approximately 35% gains in operational efficiency.
What matters, however, is not just having BIM. It’s having BIM close enough to execution to really protect the margin.
A model that lives only in design review does not preclude field rework. A crash report that identifies hundreds of issues without prompting resolution doesn’t protect the margin either. BIM begins to create financial value when it influences procurement timing, trade coordination, manufacturing readiness and installation sequencing before teams are left to improvise around on-site conflicts.
It’s also why more contractors are looking for support beyond preconstruction. Attention.ai was already helping contractors move faster in preconstruction with Beam AI through the automation of take-offs, estimates and bid management. Moving into the construction phase was a natural progression, enabling the company to support contractors throughout the lifecycle. And with the new release CoPilot BIMis extending this support to the construction phase through human-verified multi-official BIM management across architecture, structure, civil, HVAC, plumbing, electrical and fire protection.
This is the biggest change going on now. The contractors who best protect margin over the next decade will be those who use BIM not only as a coordination tool, but as one of the most effective ways to defend margin before the field starts to take it away.
