Full-Time

Manager – Construction Delay

Secretariat

Secretariat

1,001-5,000 employees

Independent arbitration and litigation consulting experts

No salary listed

Atlanta, GA, USA

In Person

Category
Engineering Management (1)
Requirements
  • Bachelor’s degree in building construction, engineering, or related field; Master’s degree preferred
  • 4-8 years experience working in a relevant construction project management, scheduling, or cost controls capacity
  • Strong skills using relevant software tools: MS Office Suite (Word, Excel, PowerPoint, Access)
  • Experience with construction scheduling programs (Primavera P6 or Microsoft Project)
  • Experience with construction claims and disputes, including mediation, arbitration, or litigation
  • Ability to travel as needed (generally under 25% but may vary)
  • Technical knowledge and experience with applying industry-accepted standards and forensic schedule analysis techniques (e.g., AACE International, Society of Construction Law)
  • Excellent written and verbal skills including experience (ability to write and conduct business in English)
  • Strong interpersonal skills and ability to work as a member of a team
  • Flexible, creative problem-solving skills
  • Authorized to work in the US without the need for sponsorship in the future
Responsibilities
  • Research and fact-finding: Supervise and manage staff in reviewing technical and non-technical documentation (construction schedules, blueprints and technical engineering drawing, reports, correspondence, market data, weather reports, financial data, etc.) to identify key details and metrics used to develop expert reports
  • Research and fact-finding: Through research, develop keen understanding of all relevant information pertaining to disputes regarding largescale construction projects
  • Detailed data analysis: The ability to work, supervise, and manage staff to develop and complete client deliverables
  • Detailed data analysis: Review large datasets using multiple analytical methods and tools for efficient analysis
  • Detailed data analysis: Prepare detailed, comprehensive analysis, narratives, presentation and other deliverables for clients
  • Quantification of delays and damages: Analyze project schedules to identify and quantify schedule delays
  • Quantification of delays and damages: Identify labor inefficiencies and analysis of loss of labour productivity claims
  • Quantification of delays and damages: Analyze project costs and areas of construction cost growth
  • Quantification of delays and damages: Assist in drafting expert reports, presentations, and other deliverables to clients
  • Quantification of delays and damages: Clearly and concisely present findings to clients, when applicable
  • Management: Manage facets of small to medium sized engagements, or components of large engagements, including staff supervision, client interaction and relationship building
  • Business Development: Assist in the creation of proposals, client presentations, and other business development activities as needed
Desired Qualifications
  • Master’s degree preferred

Secretariat provides independent expert services and litigation consulting worldwide, focusing on international arbitration, litigation, large construction disputes (delay and quantum analysis), forensic accounting, economic damages, and government contracting. Its work combines data-driven analysis and clear written reports plus testimony: teams collect project data, perform delay and quantum calculations, assess damages, and prepare expert reports and testimony to support clients in disputes. What sets Secretariat apart is its deep, hands-on experience and stable, client-focused relationships—clients feel trusted, especially under pressure—which comes from experienced professionals and an independent, objective stance. The goal is to help clients win disputes and reduce risk by delivering precise analyses and credible expert testimony when it matters most.

Company Size

1,001-5,000

Company Stage

N/A

Total Funding

N/A

Headquarters

Atlanta, Georgia

Founded

2008

Simplify Jobs

Simplify's Take

What believers are saying

  • GenAI reduces eDiscovery costs and enhances analytics for complex collaboration platform data.
  • Lsquare Consulting acquisition adds three EMEA offices, expanding international arbitration capabilities.
  • Specialized advisor roles strengthen sector-specific consulting in higher education and economic damages.

What critics are saying

  • GenAI platforms automate predictive coding, eroding core eDiscovery and document review revenue.
  • NERA and Cornerstone Research capture economic damages mandates through superior data science teams.
  • JLL Partners may divest or merge Secretariat, diluting brand independence clients value.

What makes Secretariat unique

  • 90% of testifying experts recognized by Who's Who Legal across 27 global offices.
  • Integrated expertise spanning arbitration, forensic accounting, and emerging AI-driven eDiscovery analytics.
  • Deep sector specialization in construction delays, economic damages, and government contracting disputes.

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Company News

Consultancy.eu
Jun 2nd, 2025
Secretariat adds dispute resolution boutique Lsquare Consulting

Secretariat has strengthened its capabilities in dispute resolution through the purchase of Lsquare Consulting, a boutique consultancy with three offices in the EMEA region.

Secretariat
Apr 17th, 2025
Paris Arbitration Week 2025 Recap

On the final day, Secretariat Intl were honored to be recognized as the #1 Expert Witness Firm in the GAR 100 Expert Witness Firms' Power Index 2025.

Legal IT Insider
Aug 28th, 2024
Guest Post: The Post Office Horizon Inquiry – A Digital Forensics Masterclass

By Jon Fowler, Managing Director, Data Solutions at SecretariatThe ongoing Post Office Horizon Inquiry stands as a landmark case that showcases the power of modern digital forensics in answering a critical question: Who knew what and when? At the heart of the inquiry lies the fundamental need to understand if and at what point senior Post Office officials became aware of the flaws within the Horizon IT system.AdvertisementTraditionally, digital forensics has focused on proving digital events – a website visit, a file modification, or a device connection. While it excels at establishing “what happened,” it does not definitively answer “who did it?” This is where eDiscovery and communication analysis comes in, bridging the gap between digital activity and human involvement. Techniques like communications mapping visualize communication networks, a cornerstone of modern eDiscovery. Creating a diagram where nodes represent individuals and connections signify email exchanges. This means investigators can track conversation threads, identify key participants, and potentially reveal who knew what and when.Another crucial aspect in the Horizon case is digital forensics’ ability to recover deleted communications. Deleted emails may not be truly gone—their remnants might linger within an organization’s storage systems

Legal IT Insider
May 20th, 2024
Guest Post: How Lessons From Predictive Coding Can Guide The Ediscovery Ecosystem’S Adoption Of Generative Ai

Jon Fowler, managing director of data solutions at SecretariatThe eDiscovery ecosystem, once dominated by manual document reviews and endless paperwork, has undergone a dramatic transformation due to artificial intelligence (AI). Generative AI, a particularly innovative branch that creates entirely new text, emails, or code based on existing data, offers immense potential yet faces complex challenges. By reflecting on the adoption journey of predictive coding, the first major AI tool in document review, we can glean valuable lessons for integrating generative AI responsibly and effectively.AdvertisementPredictive Coding: A Catalyst for ChangeBefore predictive coding, sifting through mountains of documents for relevant information was a labour-intensive, time-consuming, and costly process. Predictive coding introduced a paradigm shift, empowering users to train AI models to filter and rank documents based on predefined relevance criteria. This resulted in:AdvertisementIncreased Efficiency: Reviewers focused on a smaller, pre-classified pool of documents, significantly reducing time and cost.Improved Accuracy: Over time, trained models learned to identify relevant documents more accurately than manual methods.Enhanced Scalability: Large and complex data sets became manageable through AI-powered triage.However, the adoption of predictive coding had its challenges. Many lawyers expressed concerns that AI would replace human judgment and the nuanced decision-making skills they had honed through years of legal training

Artificial Lawyer
May 17th, 2024
Al Asks Secretariat: How Will Genai Change Ediscovery?

eDiscovery is a significant part of the legal tech world. How will GenAI change it? Artificial Lawyer caught up with Jon Fowler, Managing Director of litigation consulting group Secretariat, to hear what the new wave of AI will mean for eDiscovery, whether deep fakes will become an issue, how this field has evolved over the years, and about what Secretariat does for law firms and inhouse teams.–How has eDiscovery changed since you came into the field?The eDiscovery landscape has dramatically transformed since I started in 2007. This is due to several factors:Increasingly complex types of disputesTechnological advancementsThe sheer volume of data involvedThe emergence of entirely new data typesData processing used to be a significant cost driver, but prices have plummeted as the industry matured. So, differentiation now comes from expertise in analytics and emerging data types.In those days, eDiscovery primarily dealt with emails, documents, and occasionally audio recordings in complex financial cases. While audio solutions existed, they weren’t particularly sophisticated and heavily relied on manual intervention.Today, the rise of collaboration platforms and chat applications has blurred the lines between structured and unstructured data. Thankfully, technology has caught up, offering seamless collection and processing for these diverse data types.Predictive coding emerged as a game-changer, fundamentally altering how large-scale document reviews are conducted