
When margins get tight, cutting overhead feels like the quickest fix. Fewer salaries, lower monthly burn, problem solved. Except it often creates a bigger hole in the business. In episode 02 of The Cost Codes Show, Steve Coughran, construction profitability expert and founder of Coltivar, warns that looking at the income statement and slicing overhead without context is “super dangerous.”
Here’s a practical way to reduce overhead risks in construction without hurting backlog, sales, or delivery.
In the episode, Steve shares a moment from a past landscaping company he founded and led, when he had to lay people off because he “wasn’t really watching the numbers.” It wasn’t a smart, targeted reduction. It was a leadership mistake that cost the team and the business.
That’s the trap. If you trim overhead in the abstract, you risk removing the very people who build backlog, close work, or keep jobs on schedule. Revenue slips, change orders stall, and you chase volume to backfill the dip. You “saved” overhead, then paid it back in lost gross profit and slower cash.
1) Get current on earned revenue
Run a WIP report and make sure you know what you’ve actually earned, where you’re over or under-billed, and your cost to complete. Without WIP, you’re guessing. With it, you can see whether today’s cash is truly yours and what the next 60–90 days look like.
2) Confirm your job cost story
If you don’t measure job performance against budgets, you’ll pull the wrong lever. Steve frames the discipline as bid → build → measure → adjust. That job costing loop shows where production rates, labor, or buyout are slipping so you can fix delivery before you raid overhead.
3) Identify what actually drives backlog and wins
Before you cut, list which roles and processes create proposals, negotiate givebacks, move change orders, and keep crews productive. Those are revenue engines. If you cut them, you slow wins and execution. Steve’s point is simple: don’t decide in a spreadsheet first and discover the consequences later.
4) Model reductions against reality, not averages
Tie any proposed overhead change to specific jobs in progress, pipeline timing, and cost-to-complete. If a coordinator you plan to cut is the one pushing subs, schedules, or AIA pay apps over the line, your “savings” may reduce near-term earned revenue.
Cutting overhead can be smart. Cutting it blind is expensive.
To learn more about how Knowify can help you manage costs and stay profitable, start a free 14-day trial.