In the architecture, engineering and construction (AEC) world, the ribbon-cutting ceremony is often viewed as the finish line. For many firms, once the press release is issued and the social media post is published, they immediately move on to the next project.
But at Pierce PR, we view that milestone not as an end, but as a catalyst. Treating a project completion as a one-and-done event is one of the most common missed opportunities in the industry. To truly build a firm’s reputation and fuel business development, you must transition from a one-and-done mentality to an Always On PR model, one where continuous messaging builds trust, authority and longevity. By strategically navigating the four phases of the PR lifecycle, a single milestone can, and should, serve as the foundation for an extended cycle of high-level visibility.
The first phase is about the immediate splash. This is where we focus on earned media and community impact. It’s the traditional news cycle where we announce that a project has reached a critical stage or has officially opened its doors. The goal here is broad validation: letting the market know you are active, successful and delivering on your promises.
When BELL Construction completed the Project Soaring Eagle highway improvements in Lebanon, Tenn., a major infrastructure initiative tied to new retail development, we positioned the milestone for broader visibility beyond a basic announcement. Working with local media, we secured a feature story with City Now Next that highlighted the project’s impact on the community and regional growth, including job creation and improved connectivity. The placement included a quote from BELL’s civil division leadership that reinforced the company’s local commitment, along with project photography that brought the story to life.
One of the most high-value tactics in AEC PR is bringing journalists on-site, an experiential pitch. A press release can describe a feat of engineering, but it cannot replicate the experience of walking through a structure with the lead builder, architect or engineer. These site visits build deep media relationships and allow your firm principals to demonstrate expertise in a way that photos or written materials never could.
For the Nashville Youth Empowerment Campus (NYCE), the nation’s first trauma-informed youth justice campus, we moved beyond a traditional announcement and focused on creating an experiential media moment. At the project’s topping out ceremony, we arranged an on-site interview with BELL’s CEO for News Channel 5. Speaking directly with leadership brought the story to life in a way a written release could not, resulting in coverage that highlighted not only the project’s size and innovation, but also its community impact and mission-driven design. By pairing executive access with an in-person milestone, we helped position BELL as a trusted builder of transformative civic infrastructure while strengthening relationships with local media.
Once the initial news settles, the project enters the Authority Cycle. Here, we pivot from what you built to how you built it. This phase focuses on trade dominance and securing placement in AEC publications that your peers and potential clients read regularly. We leverage the learnings and insights: specific hurdles, innovative materials and complex logistics of the project to craft bylined articles that position your firm as a technical authority.
A strong example of the Authority Cycle in action is our work with Wold Architects and Engineers in the years following the firm’s completion of Centerview Elementary. Rather than letting the project fade after initial completion, we worked with the project team to extract deeper insights into the design: how learning environments are evolving, how flexibility and wellness were prioritized and how real-world constraints shaped decision-making. Those lessons became the foundation for a bylined article published in Learning By Design, a well-regarded education and AEC trade publication read by architects, school leaders and industry decision-makers. The placement positioned Wold not just as the project architect, but as a thought leader on next-generation learning spaces, extending the project’s visibility and reinforcing technical expertise long after the school opened.
The final phase ensures the project continues as a proof-of-concept. We lean into design excellence and client satisfaction from the milestone to fuel industry award submissions and speaking abstracts for national conferences. This third-party validation keeps your firm top of mind during the quieter periods between major groundbreakings or ribbon-cuttings.
For projects that move the needle, validation doesn’t stop at completion. Following the delivery of Wold Architects and Engineers’ Manzanola K-12 School project in Colorado, we shifted focus to industry recognition that reinforced both the quality of the work and the expertise behind it. The project earned multiple honors from the Association for Learning Environments (A4LE) Rocky Mountain Chapter, including the Educators’ Choice Award and Summit Merit Award, and Education Principal Josh Grenier was named Planner of the Year. This third-party recognition from a highly respected industry organization extended the life of the project story, keeping both the work and the leadership team visible and credible long after the project was complete.
The transition to an Always On model is a strategic shift in how a firm approaches its own success. When PR is no longer treated as a single moment of coverage, but as an ongoing opportunity to reinforce expertise, relationships and impact, project milestones become the foundation for sustained visibility rather than isolated announcements. There are countless ways to continue telling a project’s story over time, and the firms that do this well create lasting credibility in the markets they serve.
That’s where our team comes in. We don’t allow project milestones to exist in isolation. Instead, we help clients strategically highlight their work in multiple ways so projects continue to be seen, understood and celebrated long after completion. By the time the next opportunity emerges, your firm isn’t just a name on a bid. It’s a recognized authority with a proven track record of work and expertise already shaping the conversation.
Interested in exploring how to extend the lifecycle of your projects and build your reputation? Reach out to get the conversation going.
home
about
services
news
Careers
P.O. Box 3293
BRENTWOOD, tn, 37024
hello@pierce-pr.com
615-838-9092
Terms & Conditions
Brand & Web Design by Cember
Privacy
Copyright 2025 Pierce Public Relations
Blog
Pierce PR is the go-to PR and marketing partner for AEC and professional services firms
Contact
Case Studies
Specializing in
Construction
Engineering
Architecture
Professional Services
FAQ
PPR Master Plan™