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Profit starts on the roof

Profit starts on the roof
July 12, 2026 at 6:00 a.m.

By The Coffee Shops™. 

Roofing crew leaders can help protect margins by understanding how daily field decisions affect profitability. 

When we start talking about profitability and overhead costs, it can be tempting for field crews and jobsite supervisors to brush it off as something the guys in the office deal with. But in roofing, profitability is not something determined only by the contract and paperwork. It is shaped every day by the decisions made by people with their boots on the ground. This is especially true right now, when unpredictable material costs and tight labor margins require even more precise labor, material, time constraints and quality control.  

Understanding finances in the field 

For crew leaders, financial fluency begins with understanding the difference between direct and indirect costs. Direct costs include labor, materials and equipment rentals tied to a specific project. Indirect costs include office staff salaries, insurance, rent, vehicles, software tools and other business expenses that keep the company running. A job may look profitable in the field, but it still must help cover the overhead that is not always visible from the roof. 

That context matters because average net profits in roofing can range from 3% to 8%, depending on company size and efficiency. When margins are that narrow, wasted labor hours, poor material staging, preventable rework or unclear communication can quickly erode the profit built into a bid. 

How to keep things on track 

Effective crew leaders protect that margin through disciplined jobsite management. Daily huddles and pre-shift walkthroughs help reduce confusion before work begins. Assigning tasks by skill level keeps experienced installers focused on precision rather than cleanup. Staging tools and materials strategically reduce unnecessary movement, while quality control checks throughout the project help prevent costly fixes after inspection. 

Labor-hour awareness is another critical part of the equation. If a project is bid at 1,000 labor hours and the crew finishes in 900, those saved hours can strengthen profitability. If the job runs to 1,100 hours, however, that difference can consume the margin. 

Conclusion 

As roofing companies prepare crew leaders for larger roles, including superintendent positions, financial awareness, digital competence, safety compliance and productivity management are becoming essential leadership skills. Crew leaders are no longer just managing work; they are helping manage profitability. As John Kenney of Cotney Consulting Group puts it, “Crunching the numbers isn't just for accountants anymore — it starts on the roof.” 

Learn more about Cotney Consulting Group in their Coffee Shop Directory or visit www.cotneyconsulting.com.



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