Trades Today Career Opportunities

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never hear from that particular person again.

Still, this contract-based or job-based structure doesn’t necessarily

hurt the consistency of skilled trades employment. For instance, a

major homebuilding company will be bidding projects on a consis-

tent basis to line up a pipeline of work, which means an employee

for that business will usually just be moving on to another project

as soon as the work on the previous one is done.

As for more independent tradespeople, like plumbers or electricians

who own their own businesses, the work is important precisely

because their services are available to a lot of different clients or

customers. Most people don’t need plumbing or electrical work

on a regular basis, but lots of people require those services on an

occasional or emergency basis. Offering your electrical or plumbing

services across a sizable geographic radius and then building a

reputation for quality work will net you a consistent flow of work—

even if you are working with different customers every day.

Finally, regarding seasonality, there’s really no skilled trade job that

stops being important in the winter or the summer. Energy and

electricity will always be important. Freight and logistics will always

be important. Manufacturing will always be important. Even agri-

culture in parts of the country that have harsh, long winters tends

to be a more four-season career than many people realize, with

farmers increasingly using greenhouses and hoop houses to grow

crops and plants outside of the normal growing season.

Some industries do fluctuate a bit in terms of how many jobs

are available or how much work is being done, depending on the

season. However, that doesn’t mean careers in those trades aren’t

reliable. Landscaping professionals, for instance, will usually have

an extremely busy summer, to the point where most professionals

in those trades make the majority of their money in the warmer

months. Still, landscapers can find plenty of work in the spring and

fall—from removing dead plants to winterizing sprinkler systems—

and even often stay busy in the winter by offering snow removal

services.