
What changed • Who it affects • Why it matters
Statewide Business Pulse
▲ Moving: Construction, Agriculture, Retail, Oilfield Services
▬ Stable: Energy Production, Professional Services
Watch: Workforce Availability, Fuel Costs, Logistics Capacity
Today’s Signals
Delayed Materials Hit All at Once
Construction inputs that were delayed earlier this spring are arriving simultaneously across the state.
Why it matters: Contractors face compressed timelines and immediate labor competition.
Source: https://www.agc.org/news
Planting Progress Uneven by Field
Eastern North Dakota conditions remain inconsistent, creating staggered but overlapping planting windows.
Why it matters: Demand for fuel, repairs, and inputs will spike in short bursts instead of staying steady.
Source: https://www.nass.usda.gov
Logistics Pressure Building in Oil Patch
Activity near Williston remains steady, but transport and scheduling are tightening ahead of summer demand.
Why it matters: Even minor delays in transport can disrupt delivery timing and cash flow.
Source: https://www.eia.gov
Foot Traffic Rising, Staffing Still Lagging
Retail activity is increasing in Minot and Grand Forks as weather improves.
Why it matters: Businesses may lose revenue if they cannot match demand with staffing.
Source: https://www.census.gov/retail
Post-Tax Planning Window Opens
Professional service firms are shifting into advisory mode as clients begin mid-year planning.
Why it matters: Early engagement now will shape second-half business decisions.
Source: https://www.irs.gov
Industry Scan
Construction: Project starts are clustering, increasing demand for labor and coordination.
Agriculture: Planting variability is driving uneven but intense demand for inputs.
Energy: Production steady, but logistics capacity is tightening.
Retail: Customer traffic rising faster than staffing levels.
Hospitality: Weekend demand improving with seasonal movement.
Professional Services: Advisory demand beginning to build post-tax season.
Dates / Watchlist
May 15 — ND seasonal road restrictions fully lifted in most regions
Source: https://www.dot.nd.gov
May 27 — USDA crop progress update (regional impact)
Source: https://www.nass.usda.gov
Two Numbers & a Nudge
10–14 days — Window where construction activity will surge
2–3 weeks — Period of peak planting variability and input demand
Nudge: Lock in labor, confirm deliveries, and prepare for short bursts of demand instead of steady flow.
Risk / Opportunity
Risk: Multiple industries competing for the same limited labor and logistics resources.
Opportunity: Early coordination and flexibility will create smoother operations and capture more demand.

