At Docketbook, we talk a lot about the importance of industry collaboration, shared platforms, and a unified version of the commercial truth. In construction, we’re still wrestling with siloed systems, “not invented here” syndrome, and a heavy preference for bespoke solutions. But other industries have overcome similar barriers. One great example? Payment gateways and international money transfers.
So, what’s different about payments?
Ten years ago, international payments were slow, opaque, and riddled with hidden costs. Banks developed their own proprietary systems and rarely shared data or standards. It was normal for funds to take days to clear, with multiple intermediaries clipping the ticket along the way. Sound familiar?
Fast forward to today, and we have near real-time international money transfers via the SWIFT gpi network, near-universal support for ISO 20022 payment standards, and seamless user experiences through platforms like PayPal, Stripe, and Wise. What changed?
Rather than building their own competing solutions, financial institutions aligned on shared protocols and infrastructure. Here’s what made the shift possible:
In construction, we still see adversarial contracts, disconnected systems, and bespoke tools for every project. Everyone’s solving the same problem differently. Imagine if every bank had its own proprietary payment standard. That’s how construction looks from the outside.
To change that, we need to:
In payments, the industry aligned around a common truth: customers just wanted money to move quickly, securely and transparently. The players who embraced shared infrastructure didn’t lose their competitive edge — they gained trust, speed, and scale.
In construction, we have the same opportunity. If we can align on the facts, we can focus on the fix. That means fewer disputes, faster payments, and more value for everyone.
Let’s stop reinventing the wheel and start building the road together.