The 2026-04-06 Section 232 revision put a 50% tariff on imported steel and 25% on derivatives, the largest advantage domestic fabricators have seen in a decade.[7] At the same moment, US data-center construction starts reached $77 billion in 2025, up 190% in a year. Domestic structural-steel capacity has never been more valuable, or more scarce. The construction industry has not yet said these two facts in one sentence. DBM Global is the company caught right between those two forces.
Everything here comes from public information: DBM's own sites and marketing, its FY2025 public filing, the ENR rankings, and the public conversation about structural steel, data centers, and the new tariffs. No transcripts, no interviews.
DBM already qualifies for ways of describing itself that it has never used. The fixes range from a one-line homepage change to a quarter of steady executive publishing.
ShurIQ, Shur Creative Partners
In This Issue
Four observations from the public-web read. Each one is developed in Where It Breaks.
DBM Global is the #1 structural-steel erector in America and the most vertically integrated platform in its category. Integrated domestic fabrication has never been worth more than it is right now. And DBM, the company best built for that demand, talks about itself less than anyone else in the category.
The Argument · Shur Creative Partners
DBM describes itself as a structural-steel fabricator with a strong backlog. That description undersells the company. By revenue and by the ENR erector ranking, DBM leads its category, and its own marketing never says so. So customers and analysts form their own idea of what DBM is, and that idea sets what the company is worth. The operating fundamentals are strong. A $1.72 billion backlog up 72% in a year, and the ENR #1 Steel Erector ranking held fifteen-plus years running.[1][2]
DBM is built for this moment, and the market has not been told.
Eight figures, each from a public source.
Five connections the public conversation never makes
Five connections the public conversation never makes. Each one points to a position DBM already qualifies for and no competitor has claimed.
The filings show one integrated platform. The marketing shows a list of separate companies.
DBM operates eleven shops across more than 1.8 million square feet, with seven business units: the country's top-ranked steel erector (Schuff), an East Coast superstructure specialist (Banker), a multidiscipline industrial contractor with hyperscale-class modular fabrication (GrayWolf), and a digital-engineering practice modeling at the highest constructible detail (Vircon). Read the five operating-brand sites side by side and each leads with its own vocabulary: heritage and portfolio at the parent, design-assist at Schuff, schedule certainty at Banker, modular self-perform at GrayWolf, tanks and vessels at Milco. No shared platform claim appears on any of the five. An investor who reads the numbers sees one integrated platform. A customer who reads the marketing sees five companies, each telling its own story.
What closes it. Publish the platform-scale claim as a single statement: the shops, the square footage, the rankings, the modular capacity, the detailing, named together, once.
No one has a name for the contractor who builds AI infrastructure. DBM already does that work.
The public conversation cannot name the contractor who builds AI infrastructure, because the three conversations that would produce the name never touch. The AI build-out conversation talks compute, power, capital, and modular product. The steel conversation talks fabrication, erection, and the firms that self-perform the build. The ENR rankings conversation names the leading contractors, and neither of the other two ever cites them. As of 2026-07-02, the three vocabularies do not appear together anywhere in public. DBM is the rare platform that works in all three: the ENR-leading erector for the envelope, GrayWolf's modular fabrication for the integrated systems, and the #1 ranking itself. The first firm to speak all three languages in one place takes the position uncontested.
What closes it. Name and claim the category. The builder who delivers structural envelope, integrated systems, and modular fabrication for AI infrastructure as one capability.
The steel tariffs and the AI construction boom both work in DBM's favor. The industry discusses them separately.
The 2026-04-06 Section 232 revision is the largest domestic-fabricator advantage in a decade. It arrives as the AI build-out consumes structural-steel capacity faster than the market can supply it. The tariff conversation is all cost talk: who pays more, which projects slow down. It never names the contractors who benefit, and that silence has held for five weeks of tracking. DBM buys two-thirds of its steel from two domestic vendors. That used to be a concentration risk. Under the new steel tariffs, it lowers DBM's costs against any competitor importing steel.
What closes it. Name the winner. DBM's two-thirds domestic sourcing makes it the tariff conversation's unnamed beneficiary.
Structural steel has a top three. DBM leads it, and no one has said either fact in public.
People call structural steel "highly fragmented across many small firms." That holds for the hundreds of small shops. It misses the top, where three firms stand well clear: DBM as the runaway leader on revenue and erection ranking, two credible challengers ranked just behind it in ENR's steel list, and one large privately held competitor that does not publish numbers. No one has ever named the top-three structure publicly.
What closes it. State the position plainly. The leader of the three, by revenue and by the ENR erector ranking.
DBM already publishes plenty of safety content. The workforce story behind it goes untold.
DBM's brands talk about safety a lot. On three of the five operating-brand sites it is one of the biggest topics, and all of it is process language: schedules, inspections, planning, compliance. What never appears is the workforce as a story: the named crews, the AISC certifications, the record in a trade that loses dozens of workers a year. And the AI data-center conversation, the biggest conversation in the category, has no workforce voice from anyone.
What closes it. Tell the workforce story into the AI-infrastructure conversation: the named crews, the certifications, the safety record. No modular-product company can copy it; they have no ironworkers.
The Competitive Field
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. Compared on the six things that decide the position: revenue, ENR ranking, ownership, modular capacity, vertical integration, and end-market breadth.
| Compared on | 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 | ~$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 (NYSE: VATE) public parent | 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, highest constructible detail) | Fabricate + erect | Fabricate + erect | Fabricate + 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 |
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. Against the modular cohort, DBM holds a position none of them match: Vertiv, Schneider, and PCX manufacture the product modules. None of them fabricate or erect the structural envelope. DBM does both, plus modular fabrication, plus the detailing. On vertical integration, DBM is the only firm in the table doing all of it.
The composite is held down by two scores with one shared cause
A 0-to-100 score of how clearly the platform's position is articulated to the market, across five equally weighted scores. Each score has two parts: what DBM shows the market today, and what the same facts could earn.
The composite is held down by two scores with one shared cause. Competitive Position Clarity (55.0) and Public Voice Density (47.5) carry a combined 20.5 of a possible 40.0.
55.0 / 100The ENR #1 ranking, the strongest third-party fact about the company, does not appear as a theme anywhere on DBM's own sites. The marketing leads with "Building History" and 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.
52.5 / 100DBM could credibly describe itself several ways: structural steel, industrial construction, mission-critical defense, modular data-center fabrication, design-assist engineering. It uses one: steel. Its own sites give data-center and AI language about 2 to 3 percent of everything they say. The AI build-out is roughly 43 percent of the category conversation (ShurIQ mapping, 2026-07-02). The AI-infrastructure-builder description, where the new tariffs and the data-center surge meet, is unclaimed across the whole conversation. Present is 25 because the company uses exactly one of these descriptions in public. Opportunity is 80 because the others are already substantively true; only the articulation is missing.
60.0 / 100Top-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 diversified order book is not yet a told story; the blue-chip GC roster and the 14 named end-markets are proof points the brand has never assembled.
47.5 / 100The ENR ranking is a strong third-party signal. DBM itself carries almost no proactive public voice: no executive thought leadership, no category-defining content, and a website that leads with heritage. The most important fact about the company is in a public filing. Present is 20 because the third-party signal exists while the proactive voice does not. Opportunity is 75 because DBM can speak for a category no one else is speaking for yet, and the platform has the proof points to own it.
47.5 / 100The safety credentials are real. The people behind them never appear in the marketing. Present is 25 because the safety content exists while the workforce story is untold. Opportunity is 70 because the AI data-center conversation has no workforce voice at all, and only the category leader can put ironworkers in it.
The two lowest scores share one cause. DBM has never stated its market position, and a company can't build a public voice around a position it hasn't stated.
Name the position, then build the voice. One unified articulation, published as one claim and carried by a deliberate executive voice. Projected composite lift: 52.5 to ~62 in 90 days, at the cost of editorial and executive time.
Five recommendations, each one aimed at raising a different one of the five scores.
Name the category-leadership position in one sentence.
"The #1 ENR-ranked structural-steel erector and the most vertically integrated platform in the category." Apply across the DBM homepage, the Schuff and Banker about pages, and executive signatures. Production cost: editorial hours plus a leadership sign-off.
Claim the AI-infrastructure-builder category.
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. Lead 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.
Assemble the customer-proof brief.
A one-page capability brief for the top general-contractor relationships (Tishman, Turner, Clark, AECOM Hunt, Lendlease, MCG) that presents DBM as one integrated platform: the combined backlog, the named marquee jobs, the self-performed scope across fabricate, erect, modular, and detail.
Publish the platform-scale claim and build a deliberate voice.
Put the scale numbers into one homepage statement. Pair with a 90-day executive-voice cadence: one LinkedIn post or byline per week from named leadership, built around the category claim and the domestic-steel advantage.
Activate the safety and craft workforce story.
Make the workforce credentials a running content series: the AISC certifications, the safety record in a high-risk trade, the named project teams behind the heaviest steel job in New York history. Four content pieces over the quarter that put the workforce in the marketing.
Actions 01 and 03 first, lowest cost and fastest. Action 02 is the 60-day category claim, published with one trade-outlet placement. Actions 04 and 05 stack through the quarter, building the public voice that tells the market what the position is.
A 30-day positioning diagnostic.
The proposal is a 30-day diagnostic. Shur does the work. DBM contributes a 60-minute leadership interview and one decision.
What We Propose Together · Shur Creative Partners
Three write-ups ready to publish, one chosen lead description, and a customer-proof 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.