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AI Tips for Construction

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Real Site Tasks.

Every post is written by a construction professional for construction professionals — no generic AI content.

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RAMS· Mar 2025

How to Write a Full RAMS Pack in 20 Minutes with AI

Writing a RAMS pack used to mean half a day at your desk. Here's the exact workflow to produce a complete, professional Risk Assessment and Method Statement in 20 minutes using AI.

A complete RAMS pack — risk assessment, method statement, and supporting documentation — is one of the most time-consuming documents in construction. Here's how to produce one in 20 minutes flat.

Step 1 — The Method Statement (5 minutes)

Open ChatGPT or Claude and use this prompt:

"You are an experienced construction H&S professional. Write a method statement for the following task: [DESCRIBE THE TASK IN ONE SENTENCE]. Include: 1) Description of works, 2) Sequence of operations (numbered steps), 3) Plant and equipment required, 4) Materials, 5) PPE requirements, 6) Environmental controls, 7) Emergency procedures. The site is [BRIEF SITE DESCRIPTION]."

You'll get a structured first draft in under 30 seconds. Read through, adjust anything specific to your project, and move on.

Step 2 — The Risk Assessment (5 minutes)

Prompt: "Now create a risk assessment table for the same task. For each activity in the method statement, identify: the hazard, who is at risk, likelihood (1-5), severity (1-5), risk rating, and control measures. Format as a table."

AI will generate a comprehensive RA table covering all the hazards you'd expect — and often a few you might have missed.

Step 3 — Review and Tailor (10 minutes)

This is where your expertise comes in. Go through both documents and: add any site-specific hazards, adjust control measures to match your actual procedures, update PPE to reflect your company's requirements, and sign off as the competent person.

What This Isn't

AI doesn't replace your professional judgment. It does the scaffolding so you can focus on the review — which is where your expertise actually adds value.

💡 Pro tip: Save your best AI-generated RAMS as templates. Next time you have a similar task, paste the previous version and ask AI to adapt it for the new scenario. Even faster.
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Safety· Mar 2025

5 Toolbox Talk Prompts Your Team Will Actually Engage With

The same generic TBT every week. People on their phones, not listening. Here's how AI produces specific, relevant toolbox talks in 2 minutes that your team will actually pay attention to.

The problem with most toolbox talks isn't the topic — it's that they're generic. Your team has heard the ladder safety talk a dozen times. AI lets you make every TBT specific to exactly what your team is doing that week.

The Basic Prompt

"Write a 5-minute toolbox talk for construction workers on [TOPIC]. The team will be [DESCRIBE WHAT THEY'RE DOING THIS WEEK]. Include: why this matters today, the key risks, the controls, what to do if something goes wrong. Write in plain English — no jargon."

5 Topics That Land Every Time

1. Working near excavations — specific to the depth and soil type you're actually dealing with, not a generic talk.

2. Lifting operations — tell AI the specific lift being planned, the equipment, the site conditions. It writes the TBT around your actual lift plan.

3. Hot works — paste in your permit to work details and ask AI to write a TBT that reinforces the permit conditions.

4. New subcontractors on site — ask AI to write a site induction brief covering your specific site rules, hazards and emergency procedures.

5. Near miss debrief — describe the incident (anonymously) and ask AI to write a lessons-learned TBT so everyone benefits without anyone being singled out.

Make It Specific

The more detail you give AI, the better the TBT. Instead of "working at height", tell it "working at height on a fragile roof using MEWPs in wet conditions". The specificity is what makes people listen.

💡 Time saved: A well-written, specific TBT used to take 20–30 minutes to prepare. With AI, 2 minutes. Your team notices the quality improvement too.
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Mindset· Feb 2025

Why AI Won't Replace Site Managers — But It Will Change the Job

The worry is real. But the data and the reality of what site managers actually do tells a different story. Here's an honest take on what AI means for construction professionals.

Every few months a headline appears claiming AI will transform construction. Some of those headlines read as a threat. They shouldn't.

What AI Can Replace

AI is genuinely very good at one thing: turning structured information into structured documents. Risk assessments, method statements, reports, emails — these are all essentially "here are the facts, write them in the right format". AI excels at that.

If your entire job was typing up documents that follow a template, yes — that part is going to be heavily automated. But that's probably 20-30% of what a good site manager actually does.

What AI Cannot Replace

A site manager's real value is in judgment, relationships, and leadership. Reading a situation. Knowing when a subcontractor is cutting corners. Managing a difficult client. Making a call under pressure with incomplete information. Keeping a team motivated in awful weather on a job that's behind programme.

None of that is going anywhere. If anything, as AI handles more of the admin, the human skills become more valuable — not less.

What's Actually Happening

The site managers and contracts managers who are thriving right now are the ones who've learned to use AI as a tool. They're producing better documents faster, which means more time on site, better client relationships, and less stress.

The ones at risk aren't the experienced professionals. They're the people in purely admin roles whose output is 100% document production with no judgment involved.

The Right Frame

Think about when email replaced letters, or when spreadsheets replaced manual calculation. Did those technologies put professionals out of work? No — they made good professionals more productive and freed up time for higher-value work.

💡 The honest bottom line: Learn to use AI now, while it's an advantage. In 2-3 years it'll just be a baseline expectation — like knowing how to use Excel.
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Site Management· Feb 2025

From Voice Note to Site Report in 5 Minutes

Most site managers spend 45 minutes writing up their daily report at the end of an exhausting day. There's a better way — and it takes 5 minutes.

End-of-day site reports are one of the biggest time drains for site managers. By the time you sit down to write it you're tired, you're trying to remember everything that happened, and you've still got emails to deal with.

The Voice Note Method

The trick is capturing the information while you're on site, not trying to recall it at 6pm at your desk.

Step 1: Use your phone's voice memo app. As you walk the site throughout the day, record short voice notes: "Groundworks team completed pile caps on grid lines A1 to A4. Concrete pour tomorrow subject to weather. Had a near miss — recorded separately. Subcontractor B were late — arrived 10am instead of 7:30am, lost half a day."

Step 2: At the end of the day, use a free transcription app (Otter.ai is free and accurate) to convert your voice notes to text. Takes 30 seconds.

Step 3: Paste the transcript into AI with this prompt:

"Turn these site notes into a professional daily site report. Include sections for: Works Completed, Works in Progress, Issues & Delays, H&S Observations, Tomorrow's Programme, Weather Conditions. Keep it concise and professional. Notes: [PASTE TRANSCRIPT]"

Step 4: Read through, add anything missing, send.

What Changes

Your reports become more consistent, more complete, and better written. Clients notice. And you get an extra 40 minutes back at the end of every day.

💡 Bonus use: After a few weeks of reports, you can ask AI to summarise the month's progress for your monthly report. It reads through all the daily reports and produces the summary. That used to take hours.
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Commercial· Jan 2025

How to Write Variation Notices and Early Warnings with AI

Late or poorly written variations cost contractors money. Here's how AI helps you produce NEC and JCT-compliant notices quickly and confidently — even when contract admin isn't your strength.

Contract administration is where a lot of site-side people feel less confident. RAMS and site reports feel natural — NEC early warnings and compensation event notifications less so. AI levels the playing field.

NEC Early Warning Notice

"Draft an NEC3/NEC4 Early Warning Notice for the following situation: [DESCRIBE THE ISSUE — delay, cost increase, quality risk, etc.]. The notice should identify: the matter that could affect cost/time/quality, the proposed actions to avoid or reduce the impact. Keep it factual and professional."

JCT Variation Instruction

"Draft a variation request letter under a JCT Design and Build contract. The variation involves: [DESCRIBE THE CHANGE]. Include: description of the change, reason it arose, estimated cost impact, estimated programme impact. Professional tone."

Delay Notification

When an employer's action (or inaction) is causing delay, you need to notify formally and promptly. AI helps you write a clear, evidence-based delay notification that protects your position without inflaming the relationship.

Important Caveat

For high-value claims or complex contract disputes, always involve your commercial manager or a solicitor. AI helps you draft routine notices quickly and correctly — it's not a substitute for professional contract advice on significant issues.

💡 The bigger picture: Getting contract admin right protects your company's cashflow and programme. Using AI to produce timely, professional notices is one of the highest-value uses of the technology on a construction site.
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Getting Started· Jan 2025

Your First Week Using AI on Site — A Step-by-Step Guide

Never used AI before? This guide walks you through exactly what to do in your first 7 days to go from complete beginner to saving hours every week on real construction tasks.

The biggest barrier isn't the technology — it's knowing where to start. Here's exactly what to do in your first week.

Day 1 — Sign Up and Get Comfortable

Go to chat.openai.com and create a free account. Then just have a conversation. Tell it you're a site manager and ask it something you'd normally Google. Notice how it responds. You're not using it for real work yet — just getting comfortable with the interface.

Day 2 — Your First Real Prompt

Find a toolbox talk you need to deliver this week. Ask AI to write it. Describe the topic, the task your team is doing, and ask for plain English. Read it through. You'll probably be surprised at the quality — and the time you just saved.

Day 3 — A Risk Assessment

Pick a straightforward risk assessment you'd normally write this week. Use the prompt from our RAMS article. Generate the first draft, review it against your own knowledge, make adjustments. Your job is to check and improve — not start from scratch.

Day 4 — An Email

Find an email you've been putting off — a difficult one to a client, a subcontractor chase, a formal notification. Describe the situation to AI and ask it to write it. Notice how much easier this is than staring at a blank screen.

Day 5 — Voice Note to Report

Try the voice note to site report method. Record observations throughout the day, transcribe them, paste into AI. Compare the report to what you'd normally produce. Notice the time difference.

Weekend — Reflect

Look back at the week. Which task saved you the most time? That's your "anchor habit" — the thing you make routine. Everything else builds from there.

💡 The most important rule: Always review what AI produces. It's a brilliant first drafter — but you're the competent person. Your review is what makes it safe and professional.

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