SHUR GAP-FINDER — Issue No. 05 / DBM Global v0.4 Editorial Brief · Shur Creative Partners Owner / GC / Developer Read Open Viz Hub May 2026

SHUR GAP-FINDER  •  Intelligence Briefing  •  Issue No. 05

A category leader is being sold quietly. The story the buyer reads is the one being written now.

DBM Global is the country’s top-ranked structural-steel erector and the runaway leader of its category — eleven shops, $1.21 billion in revenue, a $1.72 billion backlog, and the heaviest steel job in New York history on its record. It is also the segment its parent is legally required to sell before February 2027. The platform is not in question. The story the buyer reads is.

DBM Global — Innovate Corp Infrastructure Segment Editorial Brief — v0.4 An Owner / GC / Developer Read Shur Creative Partners — May 2026
$1.21B / $1.72B
FY 2025 revenue / backlog — the operating scale, with no distress at the segment
#1 · 15 yrs
ENR Steel Erector ranking, held since 2007 — the category-leadership signal
Feb 2027
The note maturity forcing the sale — the clock the parent did not set by strategy
52.5 / 100
Structural Brand Power Index — held back by the broken edge
02
II

Two forces are converging that the construction industry is not yet discussing in the same sentence. The April 2026 Section 232 revision put a 50% tariff on imported steel and 25% on derivative products — the largest advantage domestic fabricators have seen in a decade.[8] At the same moment, US data-center construction starts reached $77 billion in 2025, up 190% in a year, with 190 gigawatts of hyperscale capacity announced.[7] Domestic structural-steel capacity has never been more valuable, and it has never been more scarce. DBM Global sits exactly where those two forces meet — and is being sold into that moment by a parent whose debt covenant, not whose strategy, set the clock.[2] This brief is timely because the asset’s value is rising while its story is going quiet.

ShurIQ reads DBM Global from the outside. Public-web evidence — the company’s own marketing across its operating brands, the Innovate Corp 10-K filed March 2026, the Q4 2025 and Q1 2026 results, ENR rankings, and the primary marketing surfaces of named competitors — combined with a structural reading of the public conversation about structural steel, modular construction, the data-center surge, and the tariff regime. No transcripts. No interviews. The reading is third-party and methodological; the brief is intelligence, not consulting.

The brief does not score DBM’s marketing. It reads the shape of the conversation: what the category talks about, who gets named, where DBM’s position is real and unstated, which frames the platform already qualifies for and has not claimed. The findings are structural. The Action Set is editorial and operational. The score is a relative position — against the ENR-ranked field and against the moment — not a performance metric.

The Reframe is one reading. The brief is the start of a conversation, not its conclusion. The Bridge names the question the brief leaves open — whether DBM enters the buyer rooms as the independent leader or as the prize inside an orderly transition. The Ask makes the next 30 days concrete. If the diagnostic reveals the parent prefers the integrated framing, the brief adjusts on its own terms. Either way, the position gets named before the buyer names it for them.

  • The platform is not in distress; the parent is. DBM runs its plants at 84–94% utilization, grew backlog 72% in a year, and is nearly all of Innovate’s revenue. The sale is a covenant outcome, not an operating one.
  • DBM is the only acquirable platform at the top of its category. The larger competitor is Berkshire-owned and not for sale; the nearest public challengers are a third of DBM’s size. The category leader is the one in play.
  • The platform lives where two un-joined conversations meet. The tariff wall and the AI-infrastructure surge are discussed separately. DBM is a domestic-steel platform with hyperscale-class modular fabrication — the asset built for exactly the convergence.
  • The position is real and unnamed. ENR #1 erector for fifteen years, the heaviest steel job in New York history, eleven shops across 1.8 million square feet — assembled by no marketing claim. The buyer is left to assemble it, and buyers discount what they assemble themselves.

ShurIQ, Shur Creative Partners

DBM Global is one of a small number of structural-steel and industrial-construction platforms operating at the scale the AI-infrastructure surge requires — and the only ENR-ranked top-three platform sitting inside a public parent legally required to sell it before the 10.50% Senior Secured Notes mature on February 1, 2027. The next twelve months are not about adding capability. They are about defining what category the eventual buyer thinks they are buying.
The Reframe — Shur Creative Partners
03
III

The Reframe moves one frame and relocates it to another. The company currently works inside a frame that is true and incomplete: DBM is a structural-steel fabricator with a strong backlog. The frame that determines the outcome is the one the buyer is forming right now: DBM is a category-leading platform whose acquisition story is being written this year, by silence. The operating fundamentals are not in question — $1.21 billion in revenue, a $1.72 billion backlog, 84–94% plant utilization, the ENR #1 Steel Erector ranking fifteen years running.[1][4] The distress is entirely at the parent.

The brief inherits that finding and goes one step deeper. The asset is structurally a category leader and is articulated in the language of a heritage fabricator, at the exact moment when the articulation determines the multiple. A buyer reading the marketing site and the 10-K side by side reads two different companies — a confident builder and a forced divestiture — and has to reconcile them without help. The window between now and the February 1, 2027 note maturity is the period in which one of those two stories becomes the story the buyer pays for. The remaining sections trace what is at stake while the platform answers in the older vocabulary.

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IV

Eight anchors. The single source of truth for every numeric claim in the brief. Subsequent sections reference these values without re-citing them as if independently sourced.

[1] $1.21B / $1.72B DBM Global FY 2025 revenue / backlog at December 31, 2025 (backlog up 72% year over year). The operating scale — no distress at the segment.[1]
[2] February 1, 2027 Maturity of Innovate’s 10.50% Senior Secured Notes. The covenant tied to these notes forced the sale process after three milestones were missed. The forcing function.[2]
[3] 98.1% DBM Global as a share of Innovate Corp’s consolidated Q1 2026 revenue (up from 97.7% in Q4 2025). DBM is not a segment of Innovate; DBM is nearly all of it.[3]
[4] #1 for 15+ years Schuff Steel’s ENR Steel Erector ranking, held continuously since 2007. The defensible category-leadership signal — third-party, not self-asserted.[4]
[5] 95,000 tons Banker Steel’s structural steel on 270 Park Avenue — the heaviest steel job in New York City history. The proof the platform builds at the top of the market.[5]
[6] 2.5× One DBM airport-terminal job (JFK New Terminal One, 33,000 tons) versus a full Microsoft hyperscale data center (Fairwater Atlanta, ~13,250 tons). The scale comparison that reframes what AI-infrastructure capacity means.[6]
[7] $77B / 190 GW US data-center construction starts in 2025 (+190% year over year) / announced US hyperscale capacity across 777 projects (early 2026). The demand curve rewriting structural-steel consumption.[7]
[8] 50% / 25% Section 232 tariffs effective April 6, 2026 — on steel and aluminum / on derivative products, full customs value. The tailwind that turns DBM’s domestic-supply concentration from a risk into a moat.[8]
05
V

Five gaps read from the public conversation. Each names two rooms that should connect and currently do not. The connection is the diagnosis; the prose under each card is the consequence; the bridging concept is the move that closes it.

Critical · Severity 9

The company’s own story about itself and the fact of the sale do not appear in the same room.

Bridges · DBM’s “Building History” platform marketing ↔ The active sale process disclosed in the 10-K

DBM Global’s public surfaces lead with heritage and a portfolio-of-companies narrative. The Innovate Corp 10-K states plainly that the company has commenced a sales process for DBMG. Both are true at the same moment. Neither narrative references the other. An acquirer who reads the marketing site and the 10-K side by side reads two different companies — a confident builder and a forced divestiture — and has to reconcile them without help. The window between now and the February 1, 2027 note maturity is the period in which one of those two stories becomes the story the buyer pays for.

Bridging conceptOne unified articulation that names the category-leadership position and the transition together — the confident builder that happens to be in play, rather than the asset that went quiet.
Critical · Severity 9

The category has no name for the contractor who builds AI infrastructure at scale.

Bridges · The data-center modular product conversation (cooling, power, white-space) ↔ The integrated structural contractor conversation (fabricate, erect, self-perform)

The AI-infrastructure surge is discussed in two separate rooms. One is about modular product — power skids, cooling assemblies, the components that drop into a data hall. The other is about contractors who fabricate and erect the structural envelope and self-perform the build. No shared vocabulary connects them. DBM Global is the rare platform that lives in both: the ENR-leading erector for the envelope, GrayWolf’s multidiscipline modular fabrication for the integrated systems. The platform occupies a category the market has not yet named — and a category nobody has named is a category nobody is buying at a premium.

Bridging conceptClaim the category. Name the builder who delivers structural envelope, integrated systems, and modular fabrication for AI infrastructure as one capability, not three line items.
Notable · Severity 8

The new tariff wall and the AI demand surge are not discussed together — and DBM lives where they meet.

Bridges · The Section 232 tariff regime (50% steel, 25% derivatives, April 2026) ↔ The $77B data-center construction surge

The April 2026 Section 232 revision is the largest domestic-fabricator advantage in a decade. It lands at the precise moment the AI build-out is consuming structural-steel capacity faster than the market can supply it. The two facts are rarely discussed in the same sentence. For DBM, the convergence reframes a line in the 10-K: the company sources two-thirds of its steel from domestic vendors, previously a concentration risk, now a structural advantage immune to the tariff wall. A buyer evaluating the asset against imported-steel-exposed competitors is buying a hedge that the company has not yet named.

Bridging conceptName the convergence. Domestic steel capacity, tariff-protected, with hyperscale-class modular fabrication on the same balance sheet — the asset built for exactly this moment.
Notable · Severity 8

The platform’s scale lives in the 10-K; the marketing has never assembled it.

Bridges · The operating-reality numbers (11 shops, 1.8M sq ft, seven business units) ↔ DBM’s marketing, which presents the units as a collection rather than a platform

DBM Global operates eleven shops across more than 1.8 million square feet, with seven business units that include the country’s top-ranked steel erector, an East Coast superstructure specialist, a multidiscipline industrial contractor with hyperscale modular fabrication, and a digital-engineering practice modeling at the highest constructible detail level. An investor reads the filings and sees an integrated platform. A customer reads the marketing and sees a list of companies. The scale that justifies a platform multiple has never been assembled into a single claim — which means the buyer has to do the assembly, and buyers discount what they have to assemble themselves.

Bridging conceptPublish the platform-scale claim as one statement: the shops, the square footage, the rankings, the modular capacity, the detailing capability — named together, once.
Notable · Severity 7

DBM is the runaway leader of a top three the category has never been told exists.

Bridges · The “highly fragmented market” framing in the 10-K ↔ The actual top-of-market structure (ENR-ranked top three)

The filings describe a market “highly fragmented across many small firms.” That is accurate at the long tail and misleading at the top. The structural-steel category has a top three: DBM as the runaway leader on revenue and erection ranking, with two credible challengers ranked just behind it in ENR’s steel list, and a large privately held competitor that does not publish its numbers. None of the players has ever named the top-three structure publicly — the fragmentation frame flatters everyone by implying more consolidation runway than exists. The acquirer is buying the clear number one of a category that has never been described as having a number one.

Bridging conceptState the position plainly — the only ENR-ranked top-three platform available to acquire, and the leader of the three.
See the gaps in motion — Gap Radar
06
VI

DBM Global read against the Berkshire-owned scale competitor (W&W|AFCO Steel), the two public ENR challengers (Cooper Steel and Lexicon), an ESOP-owned national fabricator (Cives), and the data-center modular cohort as a category. Six dimensions selected from the gap analysis and the live conversation graph.

Dimension DBM Global W&W|AFCO Steel Cooper Steel Lexicon Cives Modular cohort (Vertiv / Schneider / PCX)
Revenue scale $1.21B (2025) Private; not disclosed (Berkshire-owned) ~$452M (ENR #4 Steel) ~$100M, expanding ($37.6M expansion underway) ~$361M (estimate) Large public cos (Vertiv, Schneider) + specialist (PCX)
ENR position Schuff #1 Steel Erector, 15+ yrs Larger by facility footprint #4 in Steel, #80 overall #3 in Steel, #40 overall Multi-division, AISC-certified Not ENR-ranked (product, not contractor)
Ownership Innovate Corp segment — for sale Berkshire Hathaway (via Alleghany) Third-generation family-owned Family-of-companies ESOP-owned Public + private
Modular / data-center capacity GrayWolf — multidiscipline modular fab, hyperscale-class Limited Limited Limited Limited Core business — product modules
Vertical integration Fabricate + erect + modular + detail (Vircon LOD 500) Fabricate + erect Fabricate + erect Fab + erect + maintenance + energy Fabricate + erect Product manufacture only
End-market breadth 14 verticals; mission-critical + commercial + industrial Broad Mission-critical + commercial + industrial Industrial + commercial + bridge Buildings + bridges Data center only

What the table makes visible is the structural position the Reframe argues. On revenue, DBM is the clear leader of the ENR-ranked field: roughly three times the nearest publicly-comparable challenger and the only one carrying the top steel-erector ranking. W&W|AFCO is larger by facility footprint but operates as a Berkshire-owned subsidiary that does not publish numbers and is not for sale — making DBM the only acquirable platform at the top of the category. Against the data-center modular cohort, DBM holds a position none of them can match: Vertiv, Schneider, and PCX manufacture the product modules, and they do not fabricate or erect the structural envelope. DBM does both, plus the modular fabrication, plus the detailing capability. The vertical-integration row is the one row where DBM is alone in the table. Every action in the brief sequences from there — the position exists; it has never been named; and the naming window closes when the sale closes.

See what is missing — Negative Space Topology
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VII

A composite read of how clearly the platform’s position is articulated to the market — scored 0 to 100 across five equally weighted dimensions, each split between what is present today and the opportunity that is open.

52.5 / 100
Composite Index — Five dimensions, equal weight
The composite is held back by two of the five dimensions. Competitive Position Clarity (55.0) and Public Voice Density (47.5) carry a combined 20.5 of a possible 40.0. Both dimensions share a single cause: DBM is structurally a category leader and proactively silent about it. The recovery move — name the position publicly and build a deliberate voice during the sale window — lifts both from a single editorial decision.
Competitive Position Clarity
55.0 20%
Category-Frame Multiplicity
52.5 20%
Customer / Pipeline Diversity
60.0 20%
Public Voice Density
47.5 20%
Workforce Activation
47.5 20%

Competitive Position Clarity 55.0 / 100

DBM is structurally the category leader — the ENR #1 Steel Erector for fifteen-plus years, the runaway revenue leader of the ENR-ranked field — and the position is not articulated externally. The marketing leads with “Building History”; the parent describes “a structural steel and industrial construction company.” Present is 30 because the leadership is real and earned. Opportunity is 80 because a single-line repositioning closes the gap at near-zero cost, and the cost of leaving it unsaid rises every week the sale process runs.

Category-Frame Multiplicity 52.5 / 100

DBM credibly addresses multiple category frames — structural steel, industrial construction, mission-critical defense, modular data-center fabrication, design-assist engineering. It articulates one: steel. The AI-infrastructure-builder frame, which sits at the convergence of the tariff regime and the data-center surge, is unclaimed across the entire discourse. Present is 25 because exactly one frame is in the public language. Opportunity is 80 because the alternate frames are already substantively true; only the articulation is missing.

Customer / Pipeline Diversity 60.0 / 100

Top-two customer concentration is 22.1%, down from 25.5% the prior year, across fourteen named end-market verticals and a roster of blue-chip general-contractor relationships. The demand side is genuinely diversified. Present is 55 because the diversification is real and improving. Opportunity is 65 because the acquirer pool is undefined and the general-contractor continuity risk during the sale is unmanaged — a diversified order book means little if key relationships read the sale as instability.

Public Voice Density 47.5 / 100

The ENR ranking is a strong third-party signal, and DBM carries almost no proactive public voice — no executive thought leadership, no category-defining content, a heritage-focused marketing surface. The most consequential fact about the company sits in a 10-K and is narrated by no one. Present is 20 because the third-party signal exists while the proactive voice does not. Opportunity is 75 because the AI-infrastructure-builder category voice is open whitespace and the platform has the proof points to own it.

Workforce Activation 47.5 / 100

AISC certifications, the top erector ranking, two centuries of combined leadership experience, a skilled union and non-union workforce — the craft expertise is real and is not activated as a brand surface. Safety leadership, in an industry that loses thirty-five workers a year, is a latent story told by no one. Present is 25 because the credentials are real while the workforce-as-brand is dormant. Opportunity is 70 because the “who actually builds the AI infrastructure” workforce story is unclaimed and uniquely available to the category leader.

The Broken Edge

Competitive Position Clarity × Public Voice Density. Combined contribution: 20.5 of a possible 40.0. The two dimensions share a single cause: DBM is structurally a category leader and proactively silent about it. The 30-Present on Position Clarity and the 20-Present on Voice Density are not independent failures — they are the same fact seen from two angles. A company that does not name its position cannot build a voice around it; a company with no voice cannot make a position legible to the market. The single move that lifts both is to articulate the category-leadership position publicly and build a deliberate voice around it during the sale window.

Recovery Move

Name the position, then build the voice. One unified articulation — the ENR-ranked top-three platform, the AI-infrastructure builder, the domestic-steel hedge, the eleven-shop scale — published as a single claim and carried by a deliberate executive voice through the sale process. Pair the articulation with a general-contractor continuity brief and a workforce-credential story. The single move lifts the broken edge from 20.5 to a projected ~27, raising the composite from 52.5 to a projected ~62. Cost: editorial and executive time, not capital. Time: 90 days — inside the sale window.

See dimensions in motion — Structural Advantage
08
VIII

Five actions, each closing a named Index dimension. Each carries three tags — Priority, Effort, and Impact — so the move can be sequenced against cost and urgency at a glance.

01

Name the category-leadership position in one sentence.

Priority Critical Effort Easy Impact Transformational

“The only ENR-ranked top-three structural-steel and industrial-construction platform available to acquire — and the leader of the three.” Apply across the DBM Global homepage, the Schuff and Banker about pages, the executive signature lines, and any sale-process materials within the company’s control. Production cost: editorial hours plus a leadership sign-off.

Closes → Competitive Position Clarity
02

Claim the AI-infrastructure-builder category.

Priority High Effort Moderate Impact Transformational

Publish a single positioning page that names the category the market has not: the builder who delivers structural envelope, integrated modular systems, and digital-engineering detailing for AI infrastructure as one capability. Anchor it with the 2.5× comparison (one terminal job versus a full hyperscale data center) and GrayWolf’s multidiscipline modular fabrication. Pair with one executive byline placed in a construction or infrastructure trade outlet.

Closes → Category-Frame Multiplicity
03

Ship a general-contractor continuity brief.

Priority Critical Effort Easy Impact High

A one-page brief for the top general-contractor relationships (the named roster on the East Coast business) that neutralizes sale-process continuity risk: backlog commitments, leadership continuity, and the platform’s independence of the parent’s financial position. Sent proactively before a GC hears about the sale from a third party.

Closes → Customer / Pipeline Diversity
04

Publish the platform-scale claim and build a deliberate voice.

Priority High Effort Moderate Impact High

Assemble the operating scale into one statement — eleven shops, 1.8 million square feet, the ENR ranking, hyperscale-class modular capacity, highest-level detailing capability — and place it on the DBM Global homepage. Pair with a 90-day executive-voice cadence: one LinkedIn post or byline per week from named leadership, anchored to the category claim and the domestic-steel tariff advantage.

Closes → Public Voice Density
05

Activate the safety and craft workforce story.

Priority Medium Effort Moderate Impact Medium

Build a workforce-credential franchise: the AISC certifications, the safety record in a high-risk trade, the two centuries of combined leadership, the named project teams behind the heaviest steel job in New York history. Four content pieces over the quarter that make the workforce a brand surface, not a line item.

Closes → Workforce Activation
Sequencing Actions 01 and 03 are unlock moves — lowest cost, highest urgency, and they gate the sale narrative. Sequence them first, in the next 30 days. Action 02 is the category claim that takes 60 days to land with a trade placement. Actions 04 and 05 stack on top through the quarter, building the voice that makes the position legible before the sale closes.
What we ask of you in the next 30 days — access and one decision. Three frame audits, one positioning pressure-test, one general-contractor continuity diagnostic. The Index lifts from 52.5 to a projected 62 on the moves they unlock.
The Ask — Shur Creative Partners
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30-Day Diagnostic

A 30-day positioning diagnostic. Shur runs it. DBM provides access and one decision.

  1. Three named-frame audits. One audit per frame: the category-leadership position, the AI-infrastructure-builder category, and the M&A-transition narrative. Each audit is a 6–8 page memo: what DBM can credibly claim under that frame today, what is publishable in 90 days, the proof points that anchor it, and a sample of the published artifact ready for leadership sign-off. Access required: a 60-minute interview with DBM leadership, a 30-minute interview on the sale-process communications posture, and a read of the most recent marketing and IR materials. Output is sales- and sale-ready material, not a strategy document.
  2. One positioning pressure-test session. A 90-minute working session with DBM leadership to pressure-test which frame leads into the buyer rooms — and whether DBM enters them as the independent category leader or as a portfolio company in transition. Output: one paragraph and one number for the homepage and the platform-scale page, plus a decision on the voice posture for the sale window. This is the move that closes Competitive Position Clarity at the leadership level, in 90 minutes.
  3. One general-contractor continuity diagnostic. Shur maps the top general-contractor relationships against sale-process continuity risk and drafts the one-page continuity brief (Action 03) ready to send. For a B2B construction platform mid-sale, the relationships are the asset that walks if the narrative slips — the diagnostic protects them before the sale becomes public knowledge.
Outcome at day 30 DBM has three frame-audit memos ready for publication, one decided voice posture for the sale window, and a general-contractor continuity brief ready to send. The Structural Brand Power Index lifts from 52.5 to a projected 62 if Actions 01, 03, and 04 are greenlit. The Reframe holds, and it now has leadership’s signature behind it — and the category-leadership position is named before the buyer pool finishes its own read.
X

Does DBM enter the buyer rooms as DBM Global on its own — the independent category leader with its own balance-sheet story — or as “DBM Global, an Innovate Corp portfolio company in transition”? Both can work. One leads with the platform’s independent strength and treats the parent’s position as a footnote; the other leads with the orderly-transition narrative and frames the platform as the prize inside it. The brief leaves this open because the answer depends on data Shur does not have. What is not optional is the silence — every week the position goes unnamed, the buyer writes the story instead.

Shur Creative Partners · May 2026

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XI

Glossary

Reframe
A single conceptual move that shifts the frame inside which a question is asked. One Reframe per brief. The body of the brief demonstrates the move rather than deriving toward it.
Structural Brand Power Index
A composite 0–100 read of how clearly a platform’s position is articulated to the market, across five equally weighted dimensions. Each dimension splits 50/50 between what is present today and the opportunity that is open. The broken edge is the dimension pair that shares one cause and lifts together.
Structural Gap
Two rooms in the public conversation that should connect on the public surface and currently do not. Severity scored 1–10 by the size of the connecting topics and the strategic cost of the absence.
The Broken Edge
The pair of Index dimensions that share a single underlying cause, so that one editorial move lifts both at once. For DBM, it is Competitive Position Clarity paired with Public Voice Density.

Methodology

ShurIQ reads DBM Global from the outside. The reading combines public-web evidence — the company’s own marketing across its operating brands, the Innovate Corp 10-K filed March 2026, the Q4 2025 and Q1 2026 results, ENR rankings, and the primary marketing surfaces of named competitors — with a structural reading of the public conversation about structural steel, modular construction, the data-center surge, and the tariff regime. The brief does not score DBM’s marketing or measure traffic; it reads the shape of the conversation — what the category talks about, who gets named, and where DBM’s position is real and unstated. The findings are structural; the score is a relative position against the ENR-ranked field and against the moment. No transcripts, no interviews, no internal DBM data were used. Every numeric claim traces to the Numbers Spine and the Source Index. The Reframe is testable against sale-process data Shur does not have; the Bridge surfaces the question whose answer redirects the editorial move.

Source Index

1DBM Global FY 2025 revenue ($1.21B) and backlog ($1.72B at December 31, 2025, up 72% year over year) — Innovate Corp 10-K, filed March 26, 2026 · DBM Global — dbmglobalinc.com
210.50% Senior Secured Notes maturity (February 1, 2027) and the covenant-driven sale process — Innovate Corp 10-K (three missed milestones: Sept 1, 2025 / Nov 1, 2025 / Feb 1, 2026)
3DBM Global as 98.1% of Innovate consolidated Q1 2026 revenue (up from 97.7% in Q4 2025) — Innovate Corp Q1 2026 results and 8-K filings · Innovate Corp investor relations
4Schuff Steel ENR Steel Erector ranking, #1 held continuously since 2007 (15+ years) — Engineering News-Record Top Lists · Schuff Steel — schuff.com
5270 Park Avenue — 95,000 tons of structural steel, the heaviest steel job in New York City history — Banker Steel / DBM Global project disclosures
6JFK New Terminal One (33,000 tons) versus Microsoft Fairwater Atlanta hyperscale data center (~13,250 tons), a 2.5× comparison — DBM Global / Banker Steel project pages · Microsoft data-center project disclosures
7US data-center construction starts $77B in 2025 (+190% year over year) / 190 GW announced US hyperscale capacity across 777 projects (early 2026) — construction-industry data, 2026
8Section 232 tariffs effective April 6, 2026 — 50% on steel and aluminum / 25% on derivative products at full customs value — White House proclamation, April 2, 2026
9W&W|AFCO Steel — Berkshire Hathaway operating company (via Alleghany, acquired October 2022); private, does not publish standalone revenue; larger by facility footprint, lower ENR erection ranking. Revenue not disclosed — no specific revenue comparison drawn in this brief.
10Cooper Steel (~$452M, ENR #4 Steel, #80 overall; third-generation family-owned) · Lexicon (~$100M expanding, ENR #3 Steel, #40 overall) · Cives Corporation (~$361M estimate, ESOP-owned, multi-division, AISC-certified) — ENR Top Lists and company marketing surfaces
11Data-center modular cohort — Vertiv, Schneider Electric, and PCX (Hubbell subsidiary); product-module manufacturers, not ENR-ranked structural contractors
12GrayWolf multidiscipline modular fabrication (hyperscale-class) — graywolf.com (DBM Global business unit)
13DBM platform scale — eleven shops, 1.8M+ sq ft, seven business units; Vircon LOD 500 digital-engineering detailing; top-two customer concentration 22.1% (down from 25.5%); fourteen end-market verticals — Innovate Corp 10-K and DBM Global marketing surfaces

Disclosure

This brief uses public-web evidence only; no internal DBM Global data, transcripts, or post-call analyses were used. All numeric claims trace to the Numbers Spine and the Source Index above. Competitive framing rests on ENR rankings and the acquirable-versus-not distinction; where a competitor’s revenue is private and unconfirmed, no specific revenue comparison is drawn. The “largest” position is qualified throughout by metric — ENR #1 Steel Erector, runaway revenue leader of the ranked field. The Reframe is a reading the diagnostic is designed to test; the Bridge surfaces the question whose answer redirects the editorial move.