Bowman Consulting Group Q1 2026 Earnings Call - Record backlog and upgraded guidance as energy and data center work accelerate
Summary
Bowman kicked off 2026 with a punch. Q1 produced double-digit growth in gross contract revenue, net service billing, and Adjusted EBITDA, and backlog hit a record of about $653 million. Management raised full-year revenue guidance and margin targets, driven by outsized activity in power, transportation, natural resources, and an expanding data center footprint.
The quarter showed execution plus acquisition momentum, but also typical early-cycle drag from mobilizing large awards. Bowman is leaning into geospatial/data capture investments, expanded liquidity, and a posture that AI will lift differentiation rather than compress pricing. The company expects strong back-half cadence as sizeable awards ramp, including a disclosed government contract that will materially influence H2 and 2027.
Key Takeaways
- Record backlog reached approximately $653 million, up 56% year-over-year and 36% sequentially, driven entirely by organic wins in the quarter.
- Management raised full-year 2026 guidance to $520 million to $540 million in net revenue and now targets Adjusted EBITDA margin of 17.25% to 17.75%.
- Q1 gross contract revenue was $126.5 million, a 12% increase versus prior year; Net service billing was $114.2 million, up 14% year-over-year at a ~90% net-to-gross ratio.
- Adjusted EBITDA was $16.8 million, up nearly 16% year-over-year, with an Adjusted EBITDA margin of 14.7%; GAAP loss was $3.7 million due to non-cash amortization and one-time items.
- Organic net service billing grew 6% year-over-year, with sector organic growth led by natural resources (+16%), transportation (+13%), power (+5%), and building infrastructure (+2%).
- Power was the fastest-growing sector on a gross revenue basis, up 37% year-over-year; power now represents about 28% of gross revenue while building infrastructure declined to ~41%.
- Data center related activities have more than doubled and now account for just over 6% of revenue; management is shifting resources regularly to accommodate growing data center demand.
- Company disclosed a large government contract: roughly $177 million not-to-exceed, 36-month term, with a lower-than-average net-to-gross ratio (around mid-70% net-to-gross), expected to meaningfully impact the second half and into next year.
- Backlog conversion dynamics: about 60% of expected remaining 2026 revenue is supported by existing backlog (~$250 million from backlog for Q2-Q4), leaving roughly $170 million to be won through new bookings; full-year book-to-burn target ~0.7x.
- Contract costs were ~48% of gross contract revenue (52% gross margin). Overhead rose about 50 basis points versus prior year due to slow January/February and mobilization for assignments beginning in Q2, and because Bowman exits emerging growth company status this year with incremental costs.
- Cash generation: $11.6 million of cash from operations in Q1, roughly 70% conversion of Adjusted EBITDA; company repurchased about $9.2 million of stock and invested in geospatial/data capture and internal-use software.
- CapEx and liquidity: heavy investment in geospatial and data collection assets accounted for about half of CapEx this quarter; revolver expanded to $250 million to support CapEx, organic growth, and M&A.
- M&A strategy remains active and strategic. Recent small add-on Smith & Associates expands production capability in Las Vegas; pipeline remains robust with selective focus on targets that drive organic growth, especially in energy and utilities.
- AI and automation stance: management argues AI will not commoditize engineering services; majority of assignments are fixed-fee and require professional accountability. Bowman has developed over 25 proprietary tools aimed at higher-value deliverables and front-office client engagement.
- Margins and SG&A: SG&A rose in the quarter (about a 50 basis point YoY increase and ~200 basis points sequentially) driven primarily by revenue timing and mobilization; management expects overhead to trend down as higher revenue absorbs fixed costs.
Full Transcript
Rivka, Conference Operator: Good morning. My name is Rivka, and I will be the conference operator today. At this time, I would like to welcome everyone to the Bowman Consulting Group first quarter 2026 conference call. All lines will be placed on mute for the presentation portion of the call, with the opportunity for questions and answers at the end. Please note that many of the comments made today are considered forward-looking statements under federal security laws. As described in the company’s filings with the SEC, these statements are subject to numerous risks and uncertainties that could cause future results to differ from those expressed, and the company is not obligated to publicly update or revise those forward-looking statements. In addition, on today’s call, the company will discuss certain non-GAAP financial information such as Adjusted EBITDA, Adjusted net income, and Net service billing.
You can find this information together with the reconciliations to the most directly comparable GAAP information in the company’s earnings press release filed with the SEC and on the company’s investor relations website at investors.bowman.com. Management will deliver prepared remarks, after which they will take questions from research analysts. A replay of this call will be available on the company’s investor relations website. Mr. Bowman, you may begin your prepared remarks.
Gary Bowman, Chief Executive Officer, Bowman Consulting Group: Great. Thank you, Rivka. Good morning, everyone, and thank you for joining our first quarter 2026 earnings call. Bruce Labovitz, our CFO, and Daniel Swayze, our Chief Operating Officer, are with me today. First, I’d like to welcome all Bowman employees on today’s call, including those from Smith and Associates Land Surveying in Las Vegas, who are the newest members of the Bowman team. After my introductory remarks, I’ll turn the call over to Bruce, who will cover our financial performance and technology initiatives. Dan will provide more detail on the opportunities we’re seeing across our end markets. Turning to the first quarter. From a performance standpoint, we delivered double-digit growth in gross contract revenue, net service billing, and Adjusted EBITDA. Our backlog reached a record level of over $650 million.
These results were driven by both organic execution and continued contribution from our acquisition strategy. We saw growth across our diversified end markets. Demand remains robust, and we continue to benefit from markets where we have deep expertise, strong client relationships, and increasingly integrated service delivery. Our capabilities are increasingly important in high-barrier, high-demand sectors where our expertise, national scale, and ability to self-perform work position us to win and execute consistently. All this reinforces what we’re seeing in the business: strong demand, durable revenue streams, and increasing opportunities to expand both organically and through targeted acquisitions. Based on our performance and outlook, we raised our full year 2026 guidance and now expect over 20% revenue growth for the year.
For 2026, we expect net revenue to be in the range of $520 million to $540 million, and we expect to report Adjusted EBITDA margin between 17.25% and 17.75%. With that, I turn the call over to Bruce.
Bruce Labovitz, Chief Financial Officer, Bowman Consulting Group: Thanks, Gary. Good morning, everyone. I’ll begin with a review of our financial performance for the first quarter. Then I’ll turn the call over to Dan to bridge Q1 to year-end. After that, I’ll return to share some thoughts on how we’re thinking about technology and automation and begin to draw a line towards its impact on the future of Bowman. The first quarter culminated with a record March that capped off a solid start to 2026. Our results reflect the durability of our end markets, the scalability of our operating platform, and disciplined execution of our long-term strategic plan. Gross contract revenue of a hundred and twenty-six and a half million represented a 12% increase over Q1 last year.
At a 90% net-to-gross ratio, Net service billing was $114.2 million, up 14% year-over-year. The increase was anchored by 6% organic growth, enhanced by strong performance from recent acquisitions. Looking ahead, we expect to see our net-to-gross ratio come down by about 3-5 points based on new awards and new service lines with higher subcost ratios. Power was our fastest-growing sector, with 37% growth of gross revenue year-over-year. Transportation followed at 13%, with natural resources at 6% and building infrastructure at 1%. Dan will talk more about where growth is coming from.
Growth of organic Net service billing was 6% year-over-year, with the highest organic growth rate coming from natural resources at 16%, followed by transportation at 13%, power at 5%, and building infrastructure at 2%. I will point out that there is a significant amount of organic growth embedded in power and utilities revenue characterized as inorganic for now. Our mix of gross revenue continues to evolve, with power up to 28% and building infrastructure down to 41%. In just one year, data centers activities have more than doubled to a bit over 6% of revenue.
Over the course of the next few quarters, we do expect to see a noticeable shift in mix as natural resources will expand by virtue of a significant new award being classified in that category. Contract costs represented approximately 48% of gross contract revenue at a 52% gross margin. When we combine a bit of a slow start in January and February with mobilization costs for assignments that began in Q2, total overhead as a percentage of revenue was up around 50 basis points compared to last year. I’ll also point out that 2026 is the year we exit emerging growth company status, which generates some incremental costs this year that will normalize next year. With accelerating revenue and relatively stable overhead, however, we expect to see total overhead once again trend down as a percentage of revenue moving forward.
For the quarter, we reported a GAAP loss of $3.7 million. Unlike Adjusted EBITDA, that result includes non-cash amortization of acquired intangibles, acquisition-related expenses, financing costs, and other non-reoccurring items, including those associated with the CEO transition. Adjusted EBITDA was $16.8 million, up nearly 16% at a margin that expanded year-over-year to 14.7%. We generated $11.6 million of cash from operations in the quarter, representing approximately 70% conversion of Adjusted EBITDA to cash. It’s nice to finally report a quarter with no deferred R&D tax adjustments on the cash flow. During the quarter, we used cash to repurchase approximately $9.2 million of our stock and advance future organic growth initiatives through investments in data capture, automation, and internal use software, among others.
Big fund spending on geospatial and data collection assets associated with specific new future revenue opportunities represented about half of our CapEx in the quarter, along with another million or so of OpEx spending, which is not added back to Adjusted EBITDA. To accommodate anticipated increases in CapEx this year, we expanded our revolving credit facility to $250 million, which provides sufficient liquidity to support continued investment in organic growth and acquisitions. Backlog increased to approximately $653 million, up 56% year-over-year and 36% sequentially from year-end. Backlog growth in the quarter was entirely organic. Net of one unusually large organically generated contract award, backlog grew at a 20% annualized pace.
As Gary mentioned, we’re raising our 2026 net revenue guidance to a range of $520 million-$540 million and increasing our margin forecast. The guidance increase implies more than 20% growth of organic net revenue this year and nearly 28% year-over-year growth of Adjusted EBITDA at the midpoints. In terms of revenue cadence, we expect the remaining three quarters will build on each other as some consequential assignments ramp up through the second half, with third quarter being at or near the midpoint of the second and fourth quarters. It’s notable that this is a bit of a change from prior years. With that, I’m gonna turn the call over to Dan.
Daniel Swayze, Chief Operating Officer, Bowman Consulting Group: Thank you, Bruce. Today, I’m going to spend a few minutes bridging the revenue gap from Q1 to our full year forecast. Backlog is a foundation of any revenue bridging exercise. We have discussed in prior calls somewhere between 70% and 80% of backlog typically converts to revenue within a 12-month period, with timing influenced by contract structure, phasing, and notice to proceed. For the remainder of the year, approximately 60% of our expected revenue is supported by existing backlog, with the balance driven by sell and deliver activity. As we move through the year, the mix naturally shifts more heavily towards backlog conversion. Looking at Q2 through Q4, approximately $250 million of our remaining revenue is supported by backlog, leaving the remaining 40%, or roughly $170 million, to be delivered through new bookings within the year.
When accounting for normal conversion timing between bookings and revenue, that translates to just under 0.7 times book-to-burn ratio, which is our full-year guidance. This remains at a manageable level, giving our ability to deliver book-to-burn above 1 time on a consistent basis. The priority is ensuring our resources and capacity are aligned at the right time to deliver high-quality, on-schedule outcomes for our customers, something we actively plan for and manage every day. Let me cover where I believe our greatest opportunities are for new bookings. Transportation is in a strong position to continue delivering results. Required book-to-burn is lower than average based on substantial existing backlog coverage for this year’s forecast. With many long-term and recurring revenue assignments across infrastructure design, construction engineering, corridor management, and inspection services, we are well-positioned to deliver. Power and energy.
Longer than desired timelines to secure power from the traditional grid is forcing end users to develop their own power solutions. When our customers move forward with alternative power solutions, we expand our wallet share. Recent acquisitions have significantly broadened our reach and opportunities within the energy services vertical. They have also transformed the characteristics of our assignments to include higher velocity sell and deliver opportunities. To deepen our engagement with customers, address the resource void in the marketplace, and become more entrenched in long-term durable revenue, we have expanded to offer procurement services across the sector. Awards for services relating to midstream pipeline infrastructure, energy reliability centers, compressor stations, and terminal operations have shown meaningful increase of late and show no signs of abating. We’re also seeing increased demand for renewable energy solutions, particularly as customers respond to upcoming expirations of IRA incentives.
Natural resources includes a wide range of services and is a sector in which we will report the large government contract award going forward, as Bruce previously advised. It is also much of where our industry-agnostic geospatial data collection efforts are reported. Recent upgrades to our fleet of data collection assets have already been impactful, opening opportunities for new streams of revenue. As example, a recent manned aerial award from a long-standing government agency customer was nearly triple that of last year. Accelerated activity in mining and renewed demand for water resources have likewise supported sustained demand. Geospatial, while not a vertical, is a service that sits at the core of everything we do across all our markets. High-resolution 3D imaging and complex GIS-embedded point clouds are increasingly the basis of infrastructure planning and management. Availability of intuitive and predictive real-time analytics is rapidly becoming a post-operational imperative.
Having a comprehensive suite of data collection assets has led us to be engaged earlier and longer with customers. The key takeaway are these. We see the strongest bridge for revenue coming from mission-critical and adjacent energy infrastructure markets, along with transportation engineering and geospatial services. Our outlook for outsized organic growth this year is rooted in book backlog conversion and predictable booking levels that are supported by a strong pipeline, a broad and expanding portfolio of capabilities, and disciplined execution. Continuing to ensure we have the capacity to deliver, the discipline to convert demand into profitable revenue, and the tools to innovate remain our top operational priorities. With that, I will turn the call back to Bruce.
Bruce Labovitz, Chief Financial Officer, Bowman Consulting Group: Thanks, Dan. Before turning the call back to Gary, I want to briefly address the narrative surrounding AI and automation in engineering, specifically in the context of pricing margins and long-term customer engagement. During our year-end call, I said, and I quote myself, "We need to be sure we are prioritizing investments in processes and services relating to deliverables sold at stable values as opposed to efficiencies that merely cannibalize the value of work sold by the unit." That was true then, and it’s still true now. That was two months ago, a lifetime in this moment of technological change, and the message is expanding as we execute on our strategy. There’s a misconception in parts of the market that AI will cause an unsustainable compression in pricing and margins across all engineering services.
In a vacuum, without a broader understanding of what’s really happening inside the industry, the concern that AI leads to few hours, which equates to lower billable revenue sounds reasonable, but it’s not a plausible reality for established multidisciplinary engineering firms. Before we go any further, let’s acknowledge that engineers and infrastructure professionals operate in an environment where tolerance for error is non-existent, and where the deliverables are foundational to public safety and reliable infrastructure performance in the face of ever-changing environmental stresses. As a result, professional judgment, real-world experience, technical expertise, and accountability remain central to the engineering services value proposition, regardless of efficiencies employed in the workflow. It’s important to remember that this is not the first time technology has presented opportunity for process evolution in engineering. Our client engagements are not transactional. They’re relationship-oriented. That matters.
A majority of our assignments are priced on a fixed fee and not to exceed basis, where customers compensate us based on the value our deliverable produces over the entire life cycle of the asset. It’s rare that we’re engaged for one discrete individual hourly task. Where work remains on a cost plus or time and materials basis, it is generally with large public clients who prioritize professional inter-mediation and judgment over expedience and bargain hunting. These clients understand the inclusion of indirect costs, such as compute and processing on burdened rate structures, and are grounded in the long-standing foundations of professional accountability and dependability. It’s important to remember that engineering services represent a relatively small portion of total infrastructure project cost. The larger opportunity is combining AI-enabled automation with engineering know-how to help clients improve outcomes beyond construction to the broader asset life cycle.
As professional accountability, AI, process automation, and data analytics are becoming more intertwined, we believe the conversation shifts from the pricing of individual tasks to the value of better decisions, reduced risk, and improved asset performance. The tools we are building are based on both inference and deterministic routines. Without getting too technical, this architecture allows for the harnessing of decades of engineering, construction, and operating knowledge in a platform that facilitates leveraging the collective expertise of everyone in the value chain. To date, we have developed and introduced more than 25 proprietary tools to our operations, with additional capabilities in process that include an integrated operating environment designed to better connect us and the data embedded in all of our systems, both internally amongst ourselves and externally with our clients post-operationalization.
While our architecture is designed to minimize the operating cost of compute, the tools are focused on generating higher value deliverables to customers through better execution and faster delivery. With all that said, we do not view the impending wave of AI as a driver of commoditization. Rather, we see it as an opportunity to enhance differentiation for firms that invest in the right capabilities at the right cost structure and integrate the tools effectively into empowering operating environments. From where we sit, this is not a race to the bottom. To the contrary, it’s a race to the top. I’m going to now turn the call back over to Gary for concluding remarks.
Gary Bowman, Chief Executive Officer, Bowman Consulting Group: Great. Thank you, Bruce. Stepping back, what this quarter demonstrates is that our strategy is working. We’re building a business with strong visibility, diversified demand, and a scalable operating model that continues to deliver. The combination of record backlog, consistent growth across our end markets, and continued investment in our capabilities, whether through technology, integrated service delivery, or targeted acquisitions, positions us extremely well for the future. We’re seeing a clear path to sustained growth, margin expansion, and strong performance, not just through the balance of 2026, but into 2027 and beyond. With that, we’ll open the line up for questions.
Rivka, Conference Operator: Thank you. At this time, we will conduct the question and answer session. As a reminder, to ask a question, you’ll need to press star 11 on your telephone and wait for your name to be announced. To withdraw your question, please press star 11 again. Please stand by while we compile the Q&A roster. The first question comes from the line of Aaron Spychalla of Craig-Hallum Capital Group. Your line is now open.
Aaron Spychalla, Research Analyst, Craig-Hallum Capital Group: Yeah, good morning, Bruce, Gary, and Dan. Thanks for taking the questions. You know, first for me, any more details you can share on the government contract? You know, what you’re doing, kinda cadence of revenue. Sounds like a little higher, maybe subcontract mix or just, you know, confidence in execution there. Then just broadly, seems like you’re starting to see some larger awards. You know, can you talk to the scale and capability and just other drivers, you know, that are driving that?
Bruce Labovitz, Chief Financial Officer, Bowman Consulting Group: Yeah, Aaron, good morning. Hey, it’s Bruce. I’m gonna take the first question on the government contract and reply with there’s a limited amount of information that we can disclose based on non-disclosure agreements associated with the award. However, you are correct to infer from our commentary that it will operate at a slightly higher than average net-to-gross-- I’m sorry, lower than average net-to-gross ratio, higher than average gross spread. If you think about the math behind lowering it by five points or so, that would indicate probably somewhere in the 75-ish, you know, % range for net-to-gross spread there. And that contract, as we’ve talked about, has a 36-year term to it. It is on a-- What is it? I’m sorry, months.
Gary Bowman, Chief Executive Officer, Bowman Consulting Group: Yeah.
Bruce Labovitz, Chief Financial Officer, Bowman Consulting Group: Excuse me. 36-month term to it. You know, has a not to exceed value of in total about $177 million. We are mobilizing for it and have been mobilizing for increasing activity there, as we speak. As the commentary suggests, we would think that it would have most consequential impact on the second half of this year, and into next year.
Aaron Spychalla, Research Analyst, Craig-Hallum Capital Group: Okay. Thanks for that color and can appreciate that. You know, on the margin front, I mean, you just kinda touched on it sounds like, you know, a slow start to the year for a couple months there and then maybe ramp ahead of, you know, this and other projects. Just, you know, confidence in, you know, the outlook for margin improvement and, you know, just kinda thoughts going forward there as you invest for growth.
Bruce Labovitz, Chief Financial Officer, Bowman Consulting Group: Yeah. I think we’ve looked ahead at where revenue growth is gonna be and, you know, assessed that relative to overhead growth, right? The multipliers that we’ll be able to achieve on work in the second, you know, in the remaining three quarters of the year and feel confident that we will be able to deliver margins in excess of where the year guide is. In order to compensate for first quarter there, you know, those obviously have to be at a higher rate than the 17.2%-17.7% that we’ve guided to. You know, we think about it from the perspective of doesn’t take a whole lot more machine to necessarily generate to support the contribution margin that’s coming from incremental revenue.
It’s not a zero-sum game, but it’s a margin expanding exercise.
Aaron Spychalla, Research Analyst, Craig-Hallum Capital Group: All right. Thanks for taking the questions. I’ll turn it over.
Bruce Labovitz, Chief Financial Officer, Bowman Consulting Group: Thanks, Aaron.
Gary Bowman, Chief Executive Officer, Bowman Consulting Group: Thanks, Aaron.
Rivka, Conference Operator: One moment for our next question. Our next question comes from the line of Liam Burke of B. Riley Securities. Your line is now open.
Liam Burke, Research Analyst, B. Riley Securities: Thank you. Good morning, Gary, Dan, Bruce.
Bruce Labovitz, Chief Financial Officer, Bowman Consulting Group: Good morning.
Gary Bowman, Chief Executive Officer, Bowman Consulting Group: Morning.
Liam Burke, Research Analyst, B. Riley Securities: Bruce, I guess the fixed price contracts are a competitive advantage for you. It is also a nice source of a pretty consistent margin. If I look at your backlog, is there a larger percentage of fixed price contracts, or is the ratio pretty much the same?
Bruce Labovitz, Chief Financial Officer, Bowman Consulting Group: I think we’re seeing a migration to a higher percentage of fixed price contracts as the mix is changing a little bit. I wouldn’t characterize it as off the charts dramatic in its movement, but it is steady state moving. It’s also some industries we work in really just are resistant to that. It’s just the way it’s always been done. In any opportunity where we have a chance to price on a fixed price, that’s where we’re driving contracting.
Liam Burke, Research Analyst, B. Riley Securities: Great. On permitting, which is one of your competitive advantages, are you seeing any increase in that process to move projects along faster or is it pretty much the same?
Daniel Swayze, Chief Operating Officer, Bowman Consulting Group: Yeah, this is Dan Swayze speaking, Liam. Nice to talk with you.
Liam Burke, Research Analyst, B. Riley Securities: Thanks, Dan.
Daniel Swayze, Chief Operating Officer, Bowman Consulting Group: It’s generally the same. We are seeing some hints that people would like to move faster, but we’ve yet to see really a material shift that makes the permitting loose, you know, move faster than it is, where it’s been.
Liam Burke, Research Analyst, B. Riley Securities: Great. Thanks, Dan. Thanks, Bruce.
Bruce Labovitz, Chief Financial Officer, Bowman Consulting Group: again, that’s not necessarily a negative.
Daniel Swayze, Chief Operating Officer, Bowman Consulting Group: Yeah.
Bruce Labovitz, Chief Financial Officer, Bowman Consulting Group: Right? I mean.
Daniel Swayze, Chief Operating Officer, Bowman Consulting Group: Well.
Bruce Labovitz, Chief Financial Officer, Bowman Consulting Group: The effort involved is the service we provide, so it’s, you know, yes, we’d like to be able to do more of it more quickly, but it’s also yeah.
Daniel Swayze, Chief Operating Officer, Bowman Consulting Group: Yeah. We’re hopeful we do see a shift on the NEPA front related to NEPA-type permits in the future, but we’ve yet to see it.
Liam Burke, Research Analyst, B. Riley Securities: Okay, great. Thank you.
Rivka, Conference Operator: One moment for our next question.
Bruce Labovitz, Chief Financial Officer, Bowman Consulting Group: Thanks, Liam.
Rivka, Conference Operator: Our next question comes from the line of Tomohiko Sano of JP Morgan. Your line is now open.
Tomohiko Sano, Research Analyst, JP Morgan: Hi. Good morning, everyone.
Daniel Swayze, Chief Operating Officer, Bowman Consulting Group: Morning.
Bruce Labovitz, Chief Financial Officer, Bowman Consulting Group: Good morning, Tomo.
Tomohiko Sano, Research Analyst, JP Morgan: Thank you. I’d like to ask about the 6% organic net service billing growth. What is the contribution from pricing, volume, new clients, and deeper penetrations of existing clients? If you could touch about the how sustainable do you see this growth for the next couple quarters and so on, please.
Bruce Labovitz, Chief Financial Officer, Bowman Consulting Group: Yeah. Tomo, the organic growth that we’ve delivered historically is related to increased workload and not a function of pricing. I would say that it’s always a 0% contribution from pricing. There’s always some appreciation there. But when we look at the growth of our workforce and the sustained utilization of our workforce, we see that it is more people doing more work for more customers. It’s really about increased capacity, increased volume of assignments, increased wallet share with existing customers. When we look ahead at organic growth over the course of this year, we expect it to be in excess of 20%.
We don’t think that the 6% is unsustainable in any way. In fact, we think it’s, you know, we’re gonna achieve a significantly greater amount of organic growth this year.
Tomohiko Sano, Research Analyst, JP Morgan: Thank you. Follow up on the margins, especially SG&A as a percentage of the gross contract revenue, was up significantly year-over-year. What are the main causes and how will you control these costs? Also, Bruce, you talked about adopting AI. Do you see it becoming a key tool for improving SG&A efficiency going forward?
Bruce Labovitz, Chief Financial Officer, Bowman Consulting Group: Yeah. Tomo, I’ll start with the total cost of SG&A was about 50 basis points higher this quarter than last year’s first quarter. The absolute amount grew, but the percentage of revenue grew. We acknowledge that we think it will begin a downward trajectory again as higher revenue quarters absorb more of that overhead. There is a level of cost to run the machine. As we move forward to future quarters, we expect that to start coming down. As compared to sequentially to last quarter, it was up about 200 basis points. I think that’s really a function of revenue, not anything else. I’m sorry, I don’t remember what the second part of the question was.
Tomohiko Sano, Research Analyst, JP Morgan: Bruce, that is the AI. I was asking about the SG&A percent of GCR, which was 57.8% plus 730 basis points compared to last year.
Bruce Labovitz, Chief Financial Officer, Bowman Consulting Group: If you’re talking about COGS, we generally try to focus more on total SG&A costs because the way we allocate labor cost into the payroll line can vary from quarter to quarter based on how timesheets are allocated. I think movements there are less consequential than overall movements in the overall cost of labor and G&A.
Tomohiko Sano, Research Analyst, JP Morgan: Okay, that’s clear. Thank you. Any comments on AI with SG&A opportunity?
Bruce Labovitz, Chief Financial Officer, Bowman Consulting Group: Certainly, I think that part of what we’re building are tools that will make operations back office and front office, you know, more efficient. So yeah, I think that technology continues to provide process improvement opportunities throughout the business. I think that’s gonna be a natural evolution of technology. The higher value orientation is really towards client engagement, client assignment, and client connectivity. We’re not interested in what’s gonna happen in the back office. Yes, I think there’s some points of improvement to be had there, but our primary focus is really on the front office.
Gary Bowman, Chief Executive Officer, Bowman Consulting Group: Thank you. Appreciate it.
Rivka, Conference Operator: One moment for our next question. Our next question comes from the line of Min Cho of Texas Capital Securities. Your line is now open.
Min Cho, Research Analyst, Texas Capital Securities: Great. Good morning.
Bruce Labovitz, Chief Financial Officer, Bowman Consulting Group: Good morning, Min.
Min Cho, Research Analyst, Texas Capital Securities: Thank you for taking my question. Hey, Bruce. You’d mentioned that data centers were about 6% of revenue. Can you remind us how many data center projects you’ve worked on in the past and what that looks like today? Can you talk about kinda data center in your current backlog?
Bruce Labovitz, Chief Financial Officer, Bowman Consulting Group: I’m not sure any of us could give you an exact number of how many data center projects. Other than to say that the fact that we don’t know exactly how many means it’s a lot, right?
Gary Bowman, Chief Executive Officer, Bowman Consulting Group: Yeah.
Bruce Labovitz, Chief Financial Officer, Bowman Consulting Group: We can’t remember every one by name. That means that there’s been a lot of them.
Gary Bowman, Chief Executive Officer, Bowman Consulting Group: I would also add that many of the data center clients are very strict about non-disclosure, so it’s hard for us to talk about a specific project.
Bruce Labovitz, Chief Financial Officer, Bowman Consulting Group: I think when you aggregate all of the experiences that, you know, the collective here has had between us getting into data centers early in the Northern Virginia cycle and extending that to what is now really a power solutions play for data centers, the intersection with data centers that we have has grown faster than the number of projects-
you know, has grown, right? We’re doing more for more data centers, including existing clients. I’d say that even where the project is the same, we’re doing more things for the project today. I would say that it is relatively aligned in our backlog, maybe slightly disproportionate to recognized revenue, right? Because we see that as a continually growing space. Particularly, you know, coming off of the e3i, and Lazen and RPT acquisitions, there’s just so much momentum in the space surrounding energy consumption, not just data centers, but other large scale utility consumers, utility size consumers. That it’s a growing portion of our backlog. Dan?
Gary Bowman, Chief Executive Officer, Bowman Consulting Group: Just to add one thing. From an operational perspective, there isn’t a week that goes by where we’re not trying to shift resources to accommodate additional data center work. It’s continuing to come in, and it’s quite a substantial portion of our growth.
Min Cho, Research Analyst, Texas Capital Securities: Perfect. Thank you. Also, you know, you announced the smaller acquisition of Smith & Associates. Can you just talk about how that fits into your broader geographic and service expansion plan? If you can talk more broadly about M&A, kind of how the pipeline is looking, if you’re still looking at the smaller or larger projects, and any change in valuations recently.
Gary Bowman, Chief Executive Officer, Bowman Consulting Group: Hey, Min, this is Gary. On Smith & Associates, the play was really adding talent and productive capability to an existing big client we have in that geography. In addition to expanding into the geography. We already had a small presence in Vegas. The client was demanding a lot more, so it was a production capability play. Pipeline is still robust. We are evolving to be more narrow-focused and strategic in what we’re looking at. We continue to have a look at a mix of large and the small ones. As the, as we go to more strategic, the market is not driving multiples up. We see that fairly steady.
As we go to more strategic targets, the multiples are going up a bit because of the high demand in the energy markets, the utility markets and so forth.
Bruce Labovitz, Chief Financial Officer, Bowman Consulting Group: Yeah, I think Smith’s a good example of we acquire to generate organic growth.
Gary Bowman, Chief Executive Officer, Bowman Consulting Group: Yeah.
Bruce Labovitz, Chief Financial Officer, Bowman Consulting Group: Right? It’s a little bit of one of those conundrums of, yes, it’s acquired, but it is for an organic opportunity.
Min Cho, Research Analyst, Texas Capital Securities: Got it. Okay. Let’s see. We talked about backlog. I think that does it for me right now. Thank you very much.
Gary Bowman, Chief Executive Officer, Bowman Consulting Group: Thanks, Min.
Bruce Labovitz, Chief Financial Officer, Bowman Consulting Group: Terrific, Min. Thanks.
Rivka, Conference Operator: As a reminder, to ask a question, you’ll need to press star 11 on your telephone and wait for your name to be announced. One moment for our next question. Our next question comes from the line of Jeff Martin of ROTH Capital Partners. Your line is now open.
Jeff Martin, Research Analyst, ROTH Capital Partners: Thanks. Good morning, guys.
Bruce Labovitz, Chief Financial Officer, Bowman Consulting Group: Morning, Jeff.
Gary Bowman, Chief Executive Officer, Bowman Consulting Group: Hey, Jeff.
Jeff Martin, Research Analyst, ROTH Capital Partners: Wanted to dive into, you know, the decision that went into going after this large government contract. It’s not the norm for Bowman to pursue something like this. If you could walk us through kind of the thought process and the, you know, the competitive approach that you went in pursuing this contract. Secondarily, is this something that we could anticipate becoming more frequent in the future?
Bruce Labovitz, Chief Financial Officer, Bowman Consulting Group: Yeah, Jeff, part of what happens is as you ascend through the tiers of size, opportunities present themselves to you that might not have otherwise presented themselves to you. I guess I wouldn’t characterize this as a deliberate multi-year, you know, chase for an opportunity. It was, we had assembled the right capabilities in the right place at the right time to meet the demand that a client had for work. It was opportunistic, but it wasn’t accidental, right? That it happened. In terms of size contracts like it in the future, we certainly hope so, right? I think this establishes a precedent. It establishes a foundation and a threshold for the kinds of work that we can accept and complete.
While I don’t know that there is one in particular of like size, like kind sitting in our pipeline today, that doesn’t mean that there won’t be tomorrow.
Daniel Swayze, Chief Operating Officer, Bowman Consulting Group: Yeah, just to, you know, further expand what Bruce was saying, this contract and the reach-out that occurred to us aligns directly with some of our strengths and our core services. This was not a reach at all for us to submit a proposal, provide the required scope, and meet their objectives because it’s the core services that we provide and that we’re really good at.
Gary Bowman, Chief Executive Officer, Bowman Consulting Group: Hey, Jeff, this is Gary speaking. From a broad point of view, this contract, it really expands our paradigm internally of what we can do and what we go after. It has very intangible, cultural, positive cultural effect that’s really cool to see.
Jeff Martin, Research Analyst, ROTH Capital Partners: Well, congratulations on the contract. Bruce, wanted to kind of dig in on, you know, the scaling up for, you know, the resources that you need to execute on this contract. Is there any short-term margin impact that, you know, comes back to you in the back half of the year? How should we think about, you know, the utilization? You know, ’cause I know in the past you’ve staffed up in anticipation for contracts coming on. Is that the case in this situation?
Bruce Labovitz, Chief Financial Officer, Bowman Consulting Group: Yeah. As we’ve talked about, margin in the business can be a little bit of a rollercoaster based on the timing of notice to proceed and the accumulation of the resources needed. We don’t capitalize any costs associated with future work in anticipation of it. It just gets expensed as incurred. There was definitely, you know, staffing up for the project. It’s gonna be consequential enough through the rest of the year that we’re not really calling it out as anything particular other than to point out that sure, the revenue that we’re gonna deliver through the rest of the year that’s in backlog, you know, does take staffing in real time. It does have, you know, some drag on Q1 from, let’s call it from a multiplier, you know, across the portfolio, right?
Because there’s labor that wasn’t as productive as it will be. That is a, absolutely a variable in the margin expansion equation is this labor. Not just for that project, but for some other projects that, you know, this wasn’t just a one trick kind of, you know, kind of quarter. You know, backlog grew, you know, another, you know, 5%, independent of it. That also is suggestive of having to staff up for growing revenue.
Jeff Martin, Research Analyst, ROTH Capital Partners: Appreciate the time.
Bruce Labovitz, Chief Financial Officer, Bowman Consulting Group: Thanks, Jeff. Appreciate you working it in.
Rivka, Conference Operator: Ladies and gentlemen, as there are no further questions, we will conclude today’s conference call. Thank you for joining.
Bruce Labovitz, Chief Financial Officer, Bowman Consulting Group: Thank you.
Daniel Swayze, Chief Operating Officer, Bowman Consulting Group: Thanks.