For a 6-month, $1,000,000 construction contract, problems rarely appear β€œall at once.” They show up first as small variances and behavioral signals that turn into schedule slips and cost overruns.

1. Schedule-Related Early Warning Signs (Weeks 2–6)

πŸ”΄ Missed Short-Interval Milestones
  • Weekly look-ahead schedules not being met
  • Tasks consistently rolling forward OR NOT SCHEDULED
  • Inspections or approvals not requested on time
Why it matters:
If early milestones slip, the project rarely catches up without added labor overtime or sub costs.
πŸ”΄ Excessive Float (Deposit money) Consumption
  • Critical path activities using float earlier than planned
  • Schedule updates show a negative float, possibly indicating delays

Early signal:
The schedule still shows an on-time completion, but contingency time is already gone.

2.Cost & Financial Red Flags (Often First 30–60 Days)

πŸ”΄ Labor Hours Exceed Budget Early
  • Actual labor hours forecast greater than planned hours for completed work
  • Overtime introduced earlier than expected
  • Crew productivity below estimate, aka early overtime
Rule of thumb:
IfΒ 25–30% of the schedule is complete but 40%+ of labor is consumed, you have a problem.
πŸ”΄ Cost-to-Complete Trending Up
  • Forecasted cost at completion is creeping upward with each update
  • Project manager reluctant to update projections
Key metric:
Early negative earned value variance (EV < 1.0) is a strong predictor of final loss.

3.Scope & Change Management Issues

πŸ”΄ High Volume of RFIs (request for information) Early
  • RFIs spike in the first 30–45 days
  • Design clarifications increasing instead of decreasing
Why this is dangerous:
Unresolved RFIs stall crews, cause rework, and lead to unpriced changes.
πŸ”΄ Change Orders Not Priced or Approved Promptly
  • Field work proceeding pending CO approval
  • Verbal directives without written authorization
  • Change log growing faster than revenue recognition
Early margin erosion indicator:
Work is happening faster than billing approvals.

4.Procurement & Materials Red Flags

πŸ”΄ Long-Lead Items Not Released Immediately
  • Submittals are late or rejected multiple times
  • Materials ordered without final approval
  • Vendor lead times longer than estimated
Common outcome:
Acceleration costs later: air freight, overtime, resequencing.

πŸ”΄ Subcontractor Performance Drift

  • Subs requesting early payments
  • Subs missing manpower commitments
  • Increased back-charges or disputes

5.Cash Flow & Billing Warning Signs

πŸ”΄ Billings Lag Work Performed
  • Underbilling due to unresolved changes
  • Retention grows faster than expected
  • Owner payment delays tied to documentation issues
Why this matters early:
Cash strain caused by poor decisions involving rushed work.

6.Management & Behavioral Signals Often Overlooked

πŸ”΄ β€œOptimism Bias” in Reporting
  • Status reports remain β€œgreen” despite missed milestones
  • Unresolved issues described as minor repeatedly
  • PM resists external review or detailed questioning
πŸ”΄ Increased Firefighting
  • Daily plans are changing constantly
  • PM and superintendent reactive, not proactive
  • Less time spent planning, more time fixing problems

7.Simple Early-Warning Dashboard (Best Practice)

Indicator Healthy Warning
Schedule % complete vs time elapsed β‰₯ equal Behind
Labor hours used vs % complete ≀ equal >10% over
Cost variance (EV) β‰₯ 1.0 < 0.95
Open RFIs Declining Increasing
Unapproved change value <2% >5%
Cash collected vs earned β‰₯90% <80%
Categories: Case Studies