If 2025 was about hanging on through cost pressure, 2026 is shaping up as something more deliberate: optimisation.
The State of the SMB Fabrication Industry survey frames it clearly: the “growth at all costs” mindset is fading, replaced by a pragmatic focus on profitability, efficiency, and getting more out of what’s already on the shop floor.
The most important tension in the data is this:
What are your business priorities for the next 12 months?
That mismatch is the story. It’s also the fastest path to margin improvement for most shops.
The survey paints 2025 as a year where many shops didn’t hit the number, but also didn’t fold.
The 2025 performance distribution shows a majority either fell short or met expectations, with only a smaller portion exceeding targets.
How has your business performed in the past 12 months compared to your expectations?
What’s notable is that the top challenges weren’t demand-side. They were margin-side.
What are the biggest challenges your business is currently facing?
Busy is not the same as profitable. The survey reflects that reality.
One of the clearest charts in the report is also one of the most familiar.
What tools or systems do you currently use to manage your jobs and operations?
So you end up with a business where:
That’s not a judgement. It’s the bottleneck.
If your strategic priority is profitability, your highest leverage point is the part of the business where cost is created: the shop floor.
The report is blunt: tech providers scored 4.9 out of 10 in how well they serve SMB fabricators
The qualitative feedback is consistent:
When asked what matters in software selection, usability is more important
How important are the following factors when choosing technology solutions for your business
The “fundamentals over buzzwords” point is explicit: fabricators want solutions, not experiments.
Fabricators rated how well outsiders understand the industry at a paltry 4.0 out of 10!
This isn’t just frustration. It affects margins.
When customers underestimate complexity and time, you get:
A useful way to think about it:
You need both.
If you want a simple lens for 2026, use this.
Pick one leakage source and tighten it:
Not “perfect”. Trackable.
Minimum viable upgrade:
If customers do not understand the work, you will always be compared on price.
Create a standard way to explain:
The report’s operational self-assessment is revealing:
How would you rate your team's performance?
Use this as a simple internal prompt:
If you had to improve only one thing this quarter, what would most directly increase profit?
Then work backward: what system, habit, or role change would make that improvement unavoidable?
Do this monthly for a quarter and you will usually see real margin movement.
SMB fabrication is entering 2026 with a clear stance: bet on efficiency, not austerity.
Shops are willing to hire and invest, but they want simpler, fabrication-aware tools and better ways to protect margin in a world where costs and customer expectations are still under pressure (Summary, page 20).
If you want one takeaway:
Your biggest profitability upside is closing the gap between a digital back office and an analogue shop floor.
Source: State of the SMB Fabrication Industry Report (2025–2026), Factory.app