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CallisonRTKL buoyed by overseas demand

Coronavirus

CallisonRTKL buoyed by overseas demand

Customer service across the globe remains No. 1 priority, says new CFO.


By John Caulfield, Senior Editor | April 3, 2020

Ashraf Fahmy, CallisonRTKL's chief financial officer, comes to the position at a time when the firm is focused on greater leveraging of its offices worldwide. Image: CallisonRTKL

Earlier this week, Ashraf Fahmy, CallisonRTKLā€™s new Chief Financial Officer, was up till midnight going over project proposals with his firmā€™s team in China.

Despite the spread of the novel coronavirus worldwide, CallisonRTKLā€”which operates seven of its 21 offices outside of the United Statesā€”has seen an uptick in business lately from China and the Middle East, and from the healthcare sector in the U.S.

The firm, a subsidiary of Arcadis NV, is in the midst of implementing an operating model to improve profitability, whose priority is strengthening business development, client engagement, and talent investment. Last year, CallisonRTKLā€™s gross revenue was flat at 301 million British pounds (US$399 million), its net revenue was up 1% to Ā£222 million, and its cash flow was off 3% to Ā£16.7 million.

Fahmy asserts the company is in good shape financially, with a ā€œstrongā€ balance sheet. Its agenda, he says, continues to be to expand its global footprint. ā€œThat hasnā€™t changed, and the virus has brought it to the forefront.ā€

He elaborates that CRTKL is leveraging its global network of offices ā€œand our expansive resources.ā€ This model allows CRTKL professionals to work effortlessly across the firm as a platform and allows its partners to connect at any intersection.Ā Ā Ā 

CallisonRTKL lately is refocusing its resources on markets and sectors that are recovering or have remained strong. Fahmy points out that CallisonRTKLā€™s offices have multiple practices, which they can switch into as demand warrants.

Fahmy previously worked for CHA Consulting, a small engineering consultant, where he was Senior Vice President of Finance; and for Amec Foster Wheeler, where he was CFO. He says he joined CallisonRTKL because of its practice diversification, its geographic reach, and its ā€œdynamicā€ senior management team led by president/CEO Kelly Farrell, who was hired in 2018. ā€œOur management is not afraid of making decisions,ā€ he says.

To stay ahead of the coronavirusā€™ impact on the construction industry, CallisonRTKLā€™s ā€œNo. 1 priority,ā€ says Fahmy, is to provide services to its clients across the globe. While its employees are all working from home at the moment, ā€œweā€™ve never lost communication with our clients,ā€ even when thatā€™s meant providing services in China with ā€œminimum exposureā€ to its associates.

One of CallisonRTKLā€™s major business sectors is retail, which the virusā€™ spread has destabilized. Fahmy couldnā€™t say what retailā€™s future might be as a result. The same is true of hospitality.

That being said, CallisonRTKL, says Fahmy, is working on a solutions that include converting hotels and convention centers into temporary healthcare facilities. Other initiatives revolve around wellbeing in hospitals and offices, resilience and sustainability, mobility, and ā€œhuman centricā€ design. ā€œThese are the four pillars of all of our practices,ā€ he says

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