Tampa, FL · Architecture
Architecture Business
Development in Tampa
Commercial and institutional practices that win on relationships and design reputation, not cold bids.
In the Tampa-St. Petersburg-Clearwater, FL Metro Area, roughly 209 architecture firms sit inside a wider field of 1,461 AEC firms competing for the region’s architecture work. In a market that crowded, Tampa architecture firms don’t win on price. They win on relationships and reputation, and that takes a business-development effort their principals rarely have time to run.
Source: U.S. Census Bureau, County Business Patterns (2022) and American Community Survey 5-Year (2022). Architecture firm counts reflect Architectural Services (NAICS 541310).
The market
The Tampa architecture market
Tampa is one of the corridor's hottest growth markets, and its design and construction buyers split into a few clear camps. Private development drives the skyline: Strategic Property Partners' Water Street Tampa, a roughly $3 billion downtown district, plus Darryl Shaw and Kettler's 50-acre Gasworx in Ybor City. Defense is the other engine, anchored by MacDill Air Force Base, home to CENTCOM and SOCOM, and the contractors orbiting it. Then there's the institutional base: Tampa General Hospital and the USF Health Morsani College of Medicine that anchor the Tampa Medical and Research District. This is a crowded, fast market where national primes and developers run repeat programs. You don't win these by underbidding strangers, you win by being the firm their program managers already trust.
Census County Business Patterns counts 209 architecture firms in the Tampa metro and 1,461 AEC firms overall. That density is the whole point: with that many firms chasing the same Tampa owners and primes, the ones that win consistently are the ones already in the room when the work comes up.
The dynamics
How architecture firms win work, and why BD slips
How the work is won
Architecture is sold on reputation, portfolio, and relationship. Institutional and public work runs through qualifications-based selection where prior sector experience and the right team are decisive; private work comes through developer and owner relationships and referrals. Either way, the firms that win are the ones already known in the sectors they pursue before the project goes out.
Who buys it: Architecture clients range from private developers and businesses to institutional owners (school districts, universities, healthcare systems, and municipalities) plus the public agencies that procure design through QBS. Each buyer type rewards a different mix of design portfolio, sector experience, and relationship, but all of them hire firms they trust to manage risk and deliver.
Why BD slips
Principal architects are designers first. Most never trained in or enjoy business development, yet the firm’s pipeline depends entirely on them. Pursuits get written in evenings and weekends, sector relationships get nurtured only when work is slow, and the firm rides a feast-or-famine cycle because no one owns the front of the funnel full-time.
Your engineers bill $300 an hour. They shouldn't be the ones chasing the next Tampa project.
The fix
What a fractional BD Director does for a Tampa architecture firm
A fractional BD Director runs the pursuit pipeline and sector relationships an architecture firm needs but can’t justify staffing full-time, keeping the funnel full so principals design instead of selling, and smoothing the feast-or-famine cycle.
Pursuits we own
Institutional QBS pursuits (K-12, higher ed, healthcare, civic)
Developer and private-owner commercial relationships
On-call / IDIQ architectural services contracts
Sector-specific portfolio positioning and shortlisting
Design-build teaming with contractor primes
The policy
Is the Tampa architecture seat open?
BD-AEC represents one firm per discipline, project type, and market. By policy, Scott won't run business development for two architecture firms competing for the same Tampawork. It's an ethical line that protects every client's pipeline, and it means each market seat is genuinely scarce.
If you're a Tampa architecture firm doing $1M to $20M in revenue and your principals are still carrying business development themselves, the seat may still be open. The only way to know is to ask.
Keep exploring
The corridor, market by market
Architecture in other corridor markets
- Architecture in Saginaw
- Architecture in Flint
- Architecture in Detroit
- Architecture in Toledo
- Architecture in Dayton
- Architecture in Cincinnati
- Architecture in Lexington
- Architecture in Knoxville
- Architecture in Chattanooga
- Architecture in Atlanta
- Architecture in Grand Rapids
- Architecture in Fort Wayne
- Architecture in Columbus
- Architecture in Indianapolis
- Architecture in Louisville
- Architecture in Nashville
- Architecture in Huntsville
- Architecture in Birmingham
- Architecture in Augusta
- Architecture in Macon
- Architecture in Tallahassee
- Architecture in Jacksonville
Questions
Architecture BD in Tampa, answered
How much does a fractional BD Director cost versus a full-time hire?
A seasoned AEC business development director commands six figures plus benefits. A fractional BD Director gives a Tampa architecture firm the same expertise for a fraction of that, with no salary line, no ramp-up, and no overhead. You pay for pipeline ownership, not a headcount.
Do you work with architecture firms in Tampa?
Yes. BD-AEC is built for principal-led architecture firms on the I-75 corridor, and Tampa is one of our core markets. We run your outreach, relationships, teaming, and pursuits as your embedded BD Director so your engineers stay billable.
Will BD-AEC represent my competitors in Tampa?
No. By policy we won’t represent two firms in the same discipline, project type, and market. If we take your firm as a Tampa architecture firm client, that seat is closed to your direct competitors. It’s an ethical line that protects your pipeline.
What does a fractional BD Director actually do day to day?
A fractional BD Director runs the pursuit pipeline and sector relationships an architecture firm needs but can’t justify staffing full-time, keeping the funnel full so principals design instead of selling, and smoothing the feast-or-famine cycle.
Schedule a discovery call
Run BD for your Tampa architecture firm the right way.
Tell us about your firm. We'll tell you honestly whether the Tampa architecture seat is open and what a fractional BD Director would own first.
Or reach Scott directly
Scott Mann responds within one business day.