The biggest challenge in utility construction these days isn’t securing the job, it’s keeping up. As project volume grows and billing cycles tighten, many contractors are looking for technology that better connects the field and the office.
With 5,000 construction companies on its platform, including 42 of the top 50 heavy civil contractors and 15 of the top 20 utility contractors, as ranked by ENR, HCSS is well positioned to provide insight into where the industry is headed.
A recent survey of utility contractors identified their biggest obstacles. The largest share, 40%, pointed to the demand for data and communication between the field, the office and customers. Another 28% said speeding up billing cycles and getting paid faster were top concerns. Risks related to labor shortages and rising material costs accounted for 20%, while 12% cited increased demand for utility work and the challenge of managing large teams and work orders.
Market forces reshape infrastructures
At the moment, public works are experiencing significant growth. Pure utility infrastructure, which includes gas, electric, underground and water work, continues to expand as contractors respond to system upgrades, replacements and increasing demands for reliability. The high-profile outages have only increased the urgency to invest more in modernizing grid resilience.
Additional energy-related work is growing rapidly, driven by renewable energy, solar and wind grid connection requirements, and the large power needs of semiconductor plants and manufacturing centers. The boom in the use of AI, particularly the proliferation of data centers and other AI infrastructure, has increased the complexity of public service work, putting more pressure on already strained workflows.
Why operational challenges continue to grow
Even high-performing contractors still struggle with manual, paper-heavy workflows and disconnected systems. The biggest challenge remains communication and data flow between the field, the office and customers.
These challenges tend to fall into five broad categories:
1. Slow throughput on a massive volume of work orders: Utility and MSA work can generate thousands of work orders, often arriving via PDFs, emails or spreadsheets that are difficult to organize and distribute efficiently.
2. Paperwork and manual processes overwhelm teams: When teams and office staff don’t have clear visibility into contract payment elements, amounts and documentation can be lost, leading to revenue leakage.
3. Delays and errors affect billing: Slow intake and inconsistent data can lead to billing delays, inaccurate amounts, and invoice receipts, making it harder to shorten payment cycles.
4. Limited visibility makes prediction difficult: Disconnected systems make it difficult to track crew performance, track margins and forecast revenue based on POs.
5. Under-Cost Tracking Leads to Budget Overruns: Without real-time data from the field, contractors often don’t realize they’re over budget until weeks after the job is done.
Generate real value through practical digital tools
When contractors combine well-defined processes with the right digital tools, the benefit can be immediate and measurable. For example, HCSS recently worked with a utility client using a bulk work order import tool to automate the receipt of 15,000 work orders. What had previously taken weeks of manual configuration was reduced to just three hours.
This type of improvement dramatically changes how quickly teams can execute work and bill for it. These gains are not accidental. They come from a deliberate effort to improve the way data, workflows and systems fit together.
The role of construction technology software
HeavyJob helps contractors capture field data, track labor and production costs, and improve visibility between the job site and the office. HeavyBid helps teams standardize estimating, create repeatable bid workflows, and create stronger handoffs from estimate to execution. HCSS fleet gives contractors better control over equipment maintenance, shop activity and asset readiness in distributed work.
As part of the HCSS platform, these solutions connect workflows in the office, field and shop, giving contractors a clearer view of performance and greater confidence in project outcomes. Implementing software like this doesn’t require a large IT department. Contractors can scale usage at their own pace to create effective digital transformation.
Final takeaways for utility contractors
Here are three essential points for utility and infrastructure leaders:
- Know your project costs and the levers you can pull to get on track.
- Connect field data to invoicing to accelerate cash flow and reduce errors.
- Empower teams with mobile tools that reduce administration time and improve productivity.
For utility contractors looking to improve work order visibility, estimating team consistency and performance, this kind of connected approach offers a smarter path forward.
