Cincinnati, OH · Construction Management

Construction Management Business
Development in Cincinnati

Owner’s-rep and CM firms whose next contract depends on the trust earned on the last one.

In the Cincinnati, OH-KY-IN Metro Area, roughly 373 engineering-services firms sit inside a wider field of 638 AEC firms competing for the region’s construction management work. In a market that crowded, Cincinnati construction management 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.

373
engineering-services firms in metro Cincinnati
638
AEC firms metro-wide (NAICS 5413)
7,145
People employed by engineering-services firms
2.3M
Cincinnati metro population

Source: U.S. Census Bureau, County Business Patterns (2022) and American Community Survey 5-Year (2022). Firm counts reflect Engineering Services (NAICS 541330), the category construction management falls within.

The market

The Cincinnati construction management market

The Cincinnati metro spans three states, Ohio, Kentucky, and Indiana, which means AEC firms here navigate three regulatory environments, three sets of public owners, and a fragmented buyer landscape that rewards firms with real local relationships. It is one of the densest AEC markets on the corridor, and competition for institutional, municipal, and private work is correspondingly intense. The firms that win consistently here do it on relationships and reputation, not low bids.

Census County Business Patterns counts 373 engineering-services firms in the Cincinnati metro and 638 AEC firms overall. That density is the whole point: with that many firms chasing the same Cincinnati owners and primes, the ones that win consistently are the ones already in the room when the work comes up.

The dynamics

How construction management firms win work, and why BD slips

How the work is won

Construction management is won on track record and owner trust. There is no shortcut around demonstrated program experience and relationships with the owners and program managers who control capital budgets. The firms that grow are continuously visible to those owners: present at the right associations, known to the agencies, and positioned long before a program goes to procurement.

Who buys it: CM and owner’s-representative firms are hired by the owners who run capital programs (school districts, universities, healthcare systems, municipalities, and private developers) to manage cost, schedule, and risk on their behalf. Selection is almost entirely qualifications- and trust-based: owners hire the firm with the relevant program experience and the references that prove it.

Why BD slips

CM principals are deployed on active programs, billing and managing risk, which leaves the firm’s own pipeline unmanaged. Relationships with owners and program managers, the entire basis of future work, get attention only between assignments, and the firm’s growth tracks the founder’s personal network rather than a deliberate BD strategy.

Your engineers bill $300 an hour. They shouldn't be the ones chasing the next Cincinnati project.

The fix

What a fractional BD Director does for a Cincinnati construction management firm

A fractional BD Director owns the owner-relationship and pursuit calendar a CM firm can’t staff while its people are deployed: staying visible to capital-program owners and positioning the firm before procurement, so growth isn’t capped by the founder’s spare time.

Pursuits we own

Owner capital-program and bond-funded pursuits

Institutional CM-at-risk and owner’s-rep selections

Public-agency on-call program-management contracts

Developer and private-owner program relationships

Association and industry-group visibility with capital owners

The policy

Is the Cincinnati construction management seat open?

BD-AEC represents one firm per discipline, project type, and market. By policy, Scott won't run business development for two construction management firms competing for the same Cincinnatiwork. It's an ethical line that protects every client's pipeline, and it means each market seat is genuinely scarce.

If you're a Cincinnati construction management 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.

Questions

Construction Management BD in Cincinnati, 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 Cincinnati construction management 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 construction management firms in Cincinnati?

Yes. BD-AEC is built for principal-led construction management firms on the I-75 corridor, and Cincinnati 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 Cincinnati?

No. By policy we won’t represent two firms in the same discipline, project type, and market. If we take your firm as a Cincinnati construction management 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 owns the owner-relationship and pursuit calendar a CM firm can’t staff while its people are deployed: staying visible to capital-program owners and positioning the firm before procurement, so growth isn’t capped by the founder’s spare time.

Schedule a discovery call

Run BD for your Cincinnati construction management firm the right way.

Tell us about your firm. We'll tell you honestly whether the Cincinnati construction management seat is open and what a fractional BD Director would own first.

Or reach Scott directly

Scott Mann responds within one business day.

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