3 minute read
What does the construction industry look like to an IT Consultant?
After spending an 18 year career in IT in working in Australia and the UK I had a Covid moment in late 2020. I had worked in various roles over that time and always thought that I could make it as a Business Development Manager. Jumping into a digital engineering consultancy focused on the building and construction industry did not seem that much of stretch. How wrong I was. I think I reached ground zero after a solid ten months of adaptation, learning, reading, writing commercial bids and meeting new clients and partners.
What I mean about reaching ground zero is about my level of 'unlearning' that has taken place. Unlearning my preconceived ideas about an industry. This is the second time this has happened to me, as I started a retail business when I was 23 in London. 8 months in running that business, everything I thought I knew about retail had been discarded. The unlearning had taken place. The same thing has happened again moving into the construction industry this year.
From the start of my IT career I was fortunate enough to start when TCP/IP had been decided as the standard communications protocol for networking. Windows was the business operating system of choice, MS Exchange Email was the mail server for 80% of the worlds businesses and SQL DB for data analysis and data storage. The world I was trained for, was one built on standards for communications, data storing and analysis. Completing a career change into the construction industry over 2021 has highlighted to me how big a challenge this industry faces in 'going digital'. It seems to me the problem is quite immense because of the lack of standardisation in building technology. The technology used in construction looks like it is 20 years behind the IT space.
I could rattle off a page of IT centric acronyms of hardware and software systems I have implemented over the last 18 years, which all follow the same communications principal of the Open Systems Interconnection model (OSI model). I have used this model nearly every week to solve hundreds of thousands of IT issues. Why? The best and brightest minds in Government R&D and academia got together in the 70s and 80s to define how computers, and email servers and databases, and operating systems should talk to each other using a common approach.
The construction industry is rife with vertical integrators, all proclaiming that they have invented the best approach for building technology, data handling, data ingestion, data process, control and communications. If this was true, were is the Apple or Microsoft of the smart building technology world? One of the reasons I joined Buildings Evolved is that they have been actively participating on the would stage setting shaping the needed standards under the UN IEA Annex 81 in partnership with 30 other academic institutes around the world.
The calibre of people in this group is world class and inspiring. I look forward to the next generation of professionals in the construction industry benefiting from this work. One day soon someone in there 20's can move from building to building optimising energy load profiles with the latest quantum computing algorithm, because it all runs on a common standard. Between now and then I it will take money, grit, effort, work, sound investment, new technology, training, and most importantly committed people with an organisation from the top down to make the changes needed to reach this goal. Feel free to call me and talk technology strategy any time and thanks for reading.
Principal Consultant
Arne is a creator of strategies for technology and data in the built environment. Having worked with leading property trusts and government research institutions, Arne utilises his real-world experience of acquiring and processing data using agile development methodologies.