Started By
Message

re: Construction Managers

Posted on 10/4/17 at 9:23 am to
Posted by lowhound
Effie
Member since Aug 2014
7638 posts
Posted on 10/4/17 at 9:23 am to
CM is a degree that you can pretty much do anything you want in construction. Residential, Commercial, Industrial, Heavy Civil, Piping, Structural Steel. etc. etc. You can either work in project management of some sort or estimating. What was said earlier about being experienced to be a manager is correct. Working in the field, you'll start out scheduling, writing daily reports/RFI's, timesheets/payroll, or purchasing and spending as much time as possible doing walk-down's and trying to learn the field you are in. If you're in estimating you'll be sending out RFQ packages, preliminary schedules, and doing takeoffs. The downside is you're a desk jockey 95% of the time with the occasional site visit or out of office meeting. The positive for that is you work normal hours, out of the heat/cold all day, and usually work from a main office instead of traveling from job to job. I've worked both field project management and estimating now in my 12+ years and prefer estimating, you have to be a good people person to be a PM. It really is a babysitting job most of the time whether it be your own people, subs, or clients. Eventually you get tired of working with some of those people and the bullshite they bring to you on a daily basis at 6am after you drove and hour to get to the jobsite. With estimating you get a package on your desk, usually bid it within a month or so, get instant results of your work win or lose, then move onto the next one. Depending on what size company you're with, you may have to help get the project going with contract buyouts, submittals, and purchasing. Smaller company PM's usually wear all the hats, estimate & manage. Being a traveling PM has benefits in pay, but not very conducive to family life.

Main thing is CM is knowledge based, knowledge you learn outside of school. If you've worked in the field at all, which is preferable, use your knowledge to expand in that field. You could always change fields, but you'll have to learn a whole new type of construction. I.E. going from commercial interior work to heavy civil/structural.
This post was edited on 10/4/17 at 9:26 am
first pageprev pagePage 1 of 1Next pagelast page
refresh

Back to top
logoFollow TigerDroppings for LSU Football News
Follow us on Twitter, Facebook and Instagram to get the latest updates on LSU Football and Recruiting.

FacebookTwitterInstagram