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Brad Bernstein on How Lean Construction Planning Can Reduce Job Site Delays

Kyle Matthews by Kyle Matthews
June 3, 2026
in Business
Reading Time: 9 mins read
Brad Bernstein on How Lean Construction Planning Can Reduce Job Site Delays

Job site delays cost contractors money, but they also cost something harder to measure: credibility. When a project falls behind, the pressure falls on crews who had nothing to do with the decision that caused the problem. That gap between planning and execution is exactly where lean construction methods try to make a difference.

Delays Usually Have an Upstream Cause

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The instinct is to look at the field when a project stalls. But most delays trace back to decisions, or the absence of them, that happened well before crews arrived. Missing submittals, unresolved RFIs, materials that were never confirmed, and trade handoffs that nobody formally planned are the real culprits. By the time workers are standing around waiting, the delay has already been in motion for days or weeks.

According to a 2025 Associated General Contractors survey, 78% of construction firms reported at least one project delay in the previous 12 months, with workforce shortages cited as the leading cause. That figure reflects a structural problem, not just a run of bad luck. When labor is already stretched thin, poor planning makes the situation significantly worse.

Brad Bernstein from Georgia puts it plainly: “The delay doesn’t start on the day the crew is standing around. It starts two weeks earlier when nobody asked whether the materials were confirmed or the access was ready.”

What Lean Planning Is Actually Trying to Do

Lean construction planning is a set of practices designed to make work more predictable by removing obstacles before they interrupt progress. The underlying idea is that a schedule is only useful if the conditions to execute it have already been met.

The Lean Construction Institute’s Last Planner System formalizes this thinking through five interconnected conversations: 

  • What should happen
  • What can happen given current conditions
  • What the team will commit to this week
  • What actually got done
  • What the team can learn from the gap

That progression shifts planning from a top-down directive into something closer to a real-time coordination tool

Constraint Removal Is the Core Discipline

The most practical application of lean planning is constraint identification. Before any task enters the weekly work plan, the team asks what could realistically prevent that task from happening. The list is typically longer than most project managers expect.

Common blockers include:

  • Open RFIs or incomplete design details
  • Materials not yet confirmed or staged on site
  • Inspection timing that has not been coordinated
  • Equipment or crane access shared across trades
  • Trade stacking where multiple crews need the same space
  • Crew availability that has not been confirmed with subcontractors

This kind of pre-work shifts the team from reactive scheduling to readiness planning. A task does not go on the weekly plan until it is ready to happen. 

A 2024 study published in the Lean Construction Journal found that Last Planner System metrics support more accurate capacity planning and help reduce schedule delays when applied consistently. The researchers also noted that misapplication, specifically over-allocating resources based on the same metrics, can introduce new problems, which underscores that the system works only when the people closest to the work provide honest input.

Labor Shortages Make This More Urgent

The labor market adds a practical urgency to lean planning that did not exist a decade ago. AGC’s 2025 workforce data found that 45% of firms experienced delays due to worker shortages. 

Associated Builders and Contractors estimates the industry needs 349,000 net new workers in 2026 alone, a gap that is not closing quickly. When crew availability is limited, wasted time becomes a sharper problem. A crew that spends half a day waiting for another trade to clear space is not just a productivity loss; it is a real cost that compounds across a project.

Brad Bernstein describes the logic this way: “When you’re short on labor, and you’re wasting the labor you do have because the work wasn’t ready, that’s not a field problem. That’s a planning problem.”

Daily Huddles and the Weekly Rhythm

One of the less glamorous parts of lean planning is also one of the most effective: the daily huddle. Short team check-ins give crews a chance to surface small problems before they grow. Field leaders can reroute work, coordinate deliveries, and confirm that the plan for the day still reflects actual site conditions.

The weekly work plan and the daily huddle work together. The weekly plan sets the commitment; the daily huddle keeps that commitment honest. Without both, the system tends to drift back into reactive mode, where teams learn about problems at the same moment those problems are already blocking work.

Supply Chain Coordination Belongs in the Plan

Supply chain disruptions have eased since the worst years of the pandemic, but long-lead items still affect schedules. AGC’s 2025 Construction Hiring and Business Outlook found that nearly 45% of contractors reported no supply chain issues in 2024, a meaningful improvement. 

Still, electrical components, including panels, transformers, and switchgear, continued to cause problems. Roughly 41% of firms accelerated purchases after winning contracts, 32% turned to alternative suppliers, and 25% specified alternative materials to manage exposure.

Lean planning connects procurement to the actual build sequence. If a milestone depends on switchgear delivery, that delivery should be tracked as a constraint well before the installation date. Make-ready planning gives teams a structured way to catch those gaps in advance rather than discover them at the worst possible time.

Final Thoughts

Lean construction planning is not a fix for every job site problem. Labor shortages, weather, design changes, and owner decisions can disrupt even the best-prepared project. But there is a meaningful difference between a team that discovers a problem on the day work was supposed to start and one that found it two weeks earlier. That buffer is not accidental. It is the result of a planning habit that takes time to build and real discipline to maintain, and contractors who develop it tend to spend less time recovering from delays and more time finishing on schedule.

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Kyle Matthews

Kyle Matthews

The idea of The American Reporter landed this businesswoman to the digital avenue. Kyle brought life to this idea and rendered all that was necessary to create an interactive and attractive platform for the readers. Apart from managing the platform, she also contributes her expertise in business niche.

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