If you lead a construction company or a real estate development firm, growth can hide a leadership problem … but only for a little while. Backlog may look strong, and new opportunities may keep coming in, but too much of the business may still depend on a small group of people.
Across the construction and real estate development industries, this problem is all too common. A recent survey from Associated General Contractors of America illustrates the trends:
94% of construction firms were having difficulty filling open positions.
54% of projects experienced delays tied to workforce shortages.
42% had increased spending on training and professional development.
Talent in commercial real estate development is a critical source of competitive advantage because employees’ judgment and abilities can shape whether projects succeed, miss expectations or never move forward.
If client trust, operational knowledge or ownership planning still rest with a few people, your firm is carrying more risk than it may appear.
As your firm grows, so does complexity. More projects, more stakeholders, more entities and more capital demands all require a deeper layer of leaders who can make sound decisions without waiting on one owner or one senior executive.
You can usually spot the warning signs quickly. Look for roles where one person still carries too much responsibility:
Key client relationships
Estimating knowledge
Field leadership
Investor or lender communication
Underwriting or entitlement decisions
Finance and reporting oversight
Once those pressure points are clear, you can build a pipeline that supports the business you are trying to run. That matters because informal assumptions rarely hold up during rapid growth or leadership transition.
Leadership gaps create problems in any business. They hit harder in construction and real estate development because daily execution depends on judgment, timing and coordination.
A leadership gap can show up in several ways, even simultaneously:
Slower decisions on live projects
Weaker job costing and margin visibility
More pressure on field oversight
Strained communication with owners, lenders, and subcontractors
Heavier dependence on a few senior leaders
These issues often spread beyond operations. They can affect client confidence, project performance, and long-term planning.
This is where RKL’s construction industry team fits naturally. Leadership pipeline gaps often require more than just hiring support. They may require succession planning, strategic business advisory, risk management, and business valuation insight so you can see where leadership concentration is creating exposure.
The same issue looks different on the development side. In real estate firms, leadership gaps can lead to:
Slower deal review
Delayed response to market changes
Weaker communication with lenders, investors and partners
Too much dependence on one person’s capital strategy
Limited continuity around entity structure or approvals
When those gaps sit unresolved, growth gets harder to manage and transition planning gets harder to time.
That is where RKL’s real estate development team becomes relevant. Developers often need guidance that ties leadership continuity to interim financial management, valuation, gifting and estate planning, as well as broader ownership transition decisions.
A strong pipeline is built on a repeatable system. It does not depend on tenure, verbal assumptions or last-minute promotions.
Define the leadership roles your firm will need over the next one to three years. Do not limit this to the current org chart and build around the strategy you are actively pursuing.
That usually means identifying roles tied to:
Project execution
Business development
Capital planning
Finance and reporting
Operations leadership
Client or investor relationships
Look at internal candidates’ fit for future responsibilities, not just current performance. Strong technical performance matters, but leadership readiness matters, too.
As you review potential opportunities, ask whether candidates can:
Make decisions under pressure
Guide teams through change
Communicate with clients or investors
Manage financial accountability
Carry responsibility beyond technical delivery
Use development steps that connect to the job in front of you, which may include:
Client communication responsibilities
Stretch assignments tied to real projects
Financial accountability
Mentoring from senior leaders
Structured coaching for managers
A recent NAIOP report also supports this approach, suggesting that recruitment and training should serve long-term strategic goals. It shows how formal training, mentorship and clear paths for advancement strengthen retention and readiness.
Some leadership gaps will not be filled from within, so plan for that early. A stronger recruiting plan usually focuses on:
Roles you cannot leave open for long
Specialized skills your current team does not have
Timing tied to growth plans and transition plans
Clearer career paths for incoming leaders
Most firms do not deliberately ignore this issue. Instead, they delay it because short-term demands keep winning. Common barriers routinely include:
Reactive hiring after a resignation
Limited time for coaching or knowledge transfer
Vague career paths
Overreliance on long-tenured leaders
Founder-led decision-making that has not expanded with the business
Family business assumptions that are not backed by role clarity or readiness
If you want progress, connect leadership planning to business planning by asking a few direct questions:
Which roles carry the most operational risk today?
Which roles will matter more over the next three years?
Which internal candidates are ready for broader responsibility?
Which leadership gaps require outside recruiting?
Where would a transition create the biggest hit to continuity, lender confidence or firm value?
You do not need a complicated process to get started, just a disciplined one. Focus your resources on following a practical sequence:
Review where decisions, relationships and knowledge are overly concentrated.
Define future leadership roles based on your growth plan.
Separate strong performance from true leadership readiness.
Address internal gaps through development and external gaps through recruiting.
Connect pipeline planning to succession, risk management, business valuation and owner transition planning.
RKL can support construction and real estate development firms through our internal teams that are capable of providing services that include:
Succession planning for ownership and leadership transition
Strategic business advisory tied to growth plans
Workforce strategy when leadership gaps require targeted recruiting
Risk management when too much responsibility sits with a few people
Business valuation when continuity affects firm value
Virtual support when leadership or reporting gaps need near-term coverage
If your firm is growing, preparing for an ownership transition, or relying too heavily on a few key people, now is a good time to act. Reach out to RKL’s specialized Construction and Real Estate Development teams to see how industry-specific guidance can support your leadership pipeline, reduce continuity risk, and help you plan for the next stage of growth.