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The Price of Progress: Why Oklahoma’s Construction Model Is Failing Its Workers and Its Future
Note: You can find our full research and market analysis as the inspiration for this post in another of our blog posts, or via this link: https://www.stronghold.construction/post/oklahoma-construction-industry-trends-1993-2025-market-research-analysis For thirty years, Oklahoma’s construction industry has been running harder just to stay in place. Wages doubled. Costs tripled. Productivity barely moved. And even when we “win” a low bid, we lose somewhere else — in quality,

Zach Simmons
Oct 274 min read


Oklahoma Construction Industry Trends (1993–2025) Market Research & Analysis
Tradespeople Wage Trends (1993–2025) Wages for construction tradespeople in Oklahoma have roughly doubled in nominal terms since the early 1990s. In 1995, the average annual pay for construction workers in Oklahoma was about $22,500 ( bls.govbls.gov ), equivalent to roughly $10–11 per hour for full-time work. By 2024, Oklahoma’s construction and extraction occupations had a median wage around $23–24 per hour , with mean hourly earnings over $26 ( oklahoma.gov ). As of 2025,

Zach Simmons
Oct 2616 min read


Low Bid Doesn't Work: Exploring Alternative Delivery Methods in Oklahoma's Construction Industry
The allure of the hard bid method in Oklahoma's construction scene, commonly termed "low bid," appears straightforward on the surface:...

Zach Simmons
Oct 28, 202310 min read


What the Data Says: Commercial Construction Delivery Methods
Introduction The U.S. building construction industry, with its myriad stakeholders and intricate processes, is a complex web of...

Zach Simmons
Sep 26, 20234 min read
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