The conversation most construction project teams never have.
March 25, 2026

Why communication, not complexity, is the real cause of rework, delays and project friction
It starts small. A main contractor receiving notice of a design change two weeks after it was initially communicated. A subcontractor who stops raising concerns because the last time they did, nothing happened. A project meeting where the real conversation takes place in the corridor, not around the table.
No one sets out to create these dynamics. They emerge naturally when a group of organisations, each with their own priorities, pressures and ways of working are assembled into a project team and expected to perform as one. The assumption is that a contract and a PC deadline will be enough to align them. Usually, they aren't.
The result is a fault line that runs beneath most major construction projects. It's rarely visible on the programme. It doesn't show up in the risk register. But when the pressure increases as it always appears, it's where things break.
In complex projects, technical capability is rarely the constraint. Culture is.
What the Data Actually Shows
Construction has a rework problem, and most of the industry knows it.
What's less commonly acknowledged is where that rework comes from. Global research suggests that approximately 52% of rework on construction projects is caused by poor communication or incorrect information, not technical error. The average cost of rework sits at around 10% of total project value.
Add to that the finding that roughly 35% of project time is spent on non-optimal activities, resolving disputes, searching for information, unpicking misalignments and a pattern emerges. A substantial portion of what makes construction projects expensive and difficult to deliver isn't complexity of the build. It's the friction created when people aren't communicating, aligned or working effectively together.
The uncomfortable implication is that a great deal of what gets written off as 'the nature of construction projects' is, in fact, preventable.
Why Project Teams Struggle to Communicate
It's worth being specific about why communication breaks down on construction projects, because 'poor communication' as a diagnosis is almost useless. It describes the symptom, not the cause.
Construction project teams are unusual in their composition. They typically bring together people from different organisations, different disciplines and different company cultures, each of whom interpret risk, information and pressure in different ways. A commercial manager and a design lead looking at the same situation will often draw entirely different conclusions about what it means and what needs to happen next. Neither is wrong. They're just working from different perspectives, shaped by their training, their role and what their organisation is incentivising them to prioritise.
When those differences aren't surfaced and understood early, they become sources of friction later. Assumptions go unchecked. Decisions get made on incomplete information because people didn't know what others needed to know. Issues sit unraised because the environment doesn't feel safe enough to raise them and on construction projects, where hierarchy is often pronounced and pressure is high, psychological safety is frequently in short supply.
There's also the structural reality that most project teams never actually design how they will work together. They agree what they will deliver. They set out the technical standards and contractual obligations. But how they will share information, how they will handle disagreement, how they will make decisions when things get complicated, these are almost never discussed explicitly at the start. They're assumed. And assumptions, under pressure, tend to fail.
Most project teams never design how they will work together. They agree what they will deliver, but not how.
What Effective Project Teams Do Differently
The project teams that consistently perform well under pressure tend to have a few things in common and none of them are technical.
A Question Worth Sitting With
Think about your current project, or the last significant one you were involved in. How much of the friction, the delays, the disputes, the rework, the conversations that happened too late was genuinely technical in nature? And how much of it was rooted in misalignment, assumption, or communication that didn't happen when it should have?
Most people who ask themselves that question honestly come up with a similar answer.
The good news is that these are solvable problems. The teams and organisations that invest in building strong behavioural foundations at the start of a project consistently find it pays back significantly as the project progresses.
“Project Playbook provides a powerful space for project teams to reflect on behaviours, communication and leadership within live project environments. The sessions are engaging, practical and immediately applicable back on projects. It is an excellent programme for strengthening collaboration, trust and overall team performance.” Project Playbook participant
At The Condor Collective, we work with project teams to build exactly these foundations, through Project Playbook, a practical culture workshop programme designed specifically for construction projects where collaboration, pressure and pace are constantly in play. If this has prompted some useful thinking about your own project, we'd be glad to talk.
How is your organisation approaching team culture at the start of a project? We'd love to hear what's working, and what isn't.
