ENR reports on Structured AI's $4.2m fundraise and partnership with Syska Hennessy

Education

How to Prioritize Findings by Severity

Getting Started

Getting good at prioritize findings by severity is mostly about consistency: applying the same careful process every time, not just when there is extra time in the schedule.

Start by being specific about what you are actually checking for, rather than a vague intention to review carefully. A clear, written standard for prioritize findings by severity gives everyone on the team the same target to check against.

A Practical Approach

Once a clear standard and a scheduled checkpoint exist, the actual review benefits from systematic, traceable checking rather than a single read-through. Compare Versions, which automatically detects and visualizes changes between any two versions of a drawing set is directly relevant here, since it addresses this specific need without requiring a separate manual process layered on top of existing workflows.

Checks like GEN-2 Drawing Index Check give a concrete, checkable reference point, returning findings tied to an exact page and location rather than a general impression of whether things look right.

Making It Stick

The habits that make this work over time are usually simple: a named owner, a scheduled checkpoint, and a clear, written standard that does not depend on any one person's memory. Firms that treat this as a one-time setup rather than an ongoing practice tend to see it drift out of date as projects, standards, and team composition change.

FAQ

How long does it typically take to get this right on a new project? This depends heavily on project complexity and team familiarity with the process, though most teams see meaningful improvement within their first few projects once a consistent approach is in place.

Does this require special software or can it be done manually? It can be done manually, though systematic, automated checking tends to catch more consistently across a large drawing set than manual review alone, particularly for issues that live at the boundary between disciplines or documents.

Who should be responsible for this on a project team? This varies by firm, though having a clearly named owner, rather than leaving it as a shared, undefined responsibility, tends to produce more consistent results.

See It on Your Own Drawings

Book a demo and watch Structured review a real drawing set: every finding with the exact page, location, issue, and fix.

Book a Demo