Trades Today Homebuilding

TRADES

TODAY

CAREER  OPPORTUNITIES  

IN SKILLED TRADES

CRAIG MANNING

JKR Ventures | Traverse City, Michigan

© 2025 Craig Manning

All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored

in a retrieval system, or transmitted in any form or by any means electronic,

mechanical, photocopying, recording, or otherwise without the prior

written permission of the publisher.

Published by

JKR Ventures | Traverse City, Michigan

Publisher’s Cataloging-in-Publication Data

Manning, Craig.

Trades today : career opportunities in skilled trades / Craig Manning. –

Traverse City, MI : JKR Ventures, LLC, 2024.

p. ; cm.

ISBN13: 978-0-9860850-8-6

1. Trade schools. 2.Vocational education. 3. Career education.

LC1043.M36 2024

370.113--dc23

Project coordination by

Jenkins Group, Inc. | www.jenkinsgroupinc.com

Design by Yvonne Fetig Roehler

Printed in the United States of America

29 28 27 26 25 • 5 4 3 2 1

To all of the hard-working men and women in

the skilled trades who keep the engine of the

American economy thriving. Thank you!

DEDICATION

TRADES

TODAY

CAREER  OPPORTUNITIES

 IN SKILLED TRADES

CONTENTS

INTRO

01

02

03

04

05

CONCLUSION

What Are the Skilled

Trades and Why Do

They Matter?

PAGE 1

Start Your Journey in the

Skilled Trades Today!

page 107

College: What You

Should Know and

What to Consider

page 41

Rewriting the

Narrative around

the Trades

page 51

Careers in the Trades

page 69

Defining the

Skilled Trades

PAGE 5

The 10 Biggest Myths

about the Skilled

Trades

page 23

VI

Did you know that the median annual salary for

an electrician or a plumber in the United States

is more than $61,000 a year? How about that

both careers can be accessed via non-tradi-

tional training pathways—such as trade school,

apprenticeships, or on-the-job training—rather

than through a four-year college degree

program?

These two career paths fall into the broader

category of “the skilled trades,” an often

misunderstood (and sometimes even stigma-

tized) umbrella of occupations. They are also

representative of what the skilled trades might

have to offer for high school students currently

considering their post-graduation plans. Many

skilled trades careers provide for generous

salaries and considerable opportunity for

growth and advancement—often with fewer

post-secondary schooling requirements than

other jobs.

INTRODUCTION

WHAT ARE THE

SKILLED TRADES

AND WHY DO THEY

MATTER?

Skilled trades professionals are also

in high demand: some sources indi-

cate that more than 2.5 million job

openings were expected in the skilled

trades in 2021 alone, with additional

growth projected for the years to

follow. As demand for these workers

grows, it is likely that pay, benefits,

and other job perks will follow.

For all these reasons and more,

there has never been a better time to

seriously consider a career path in the

skilled trades. While recent studies

have shown that as few as six percent

of high school students think about

the skilled trades as a post-graduation

path, the advantages of pursuing

a job in the trades only continue to

expand as college degrees become

more expensive and salaries for many

college grads continue to stay static.

In this guide, we will take a closer look

at the skilled trades, including the

career paths and industries that fall

into this category, the common skilled

trades “myths” that have frequently

stopped students from pursuing

trades careers in the past, and the

training paths, salaries, and job projec-

tions that different segments of the

trades may hold.

At its most simplified, a “skilled trade” is an

occupation that requires a specialized skill

or ability. Though the skilled trades are often

equated with physically demanding manual

labor, or with “blue collar” work, they are

actually broader in definition than many people

realize. In this chapter, we will explore the many

jobs and industries that form the framework

of the skilled trades as a broad workforce

classification.

There is some disagreement in the industry

about how many “categories” of skilled trades

there are. For our purposes, we will divide the

skilled trades into six categories: construction

trades, manufacturing and industrial trades,

transportation trades, energy trades, agricul-

ture, and skilled service trades.

Construction

Trades

It’s under the umbrella of construction trades

that many of the jobs most often associated

CHAPTER 1

DEFINING

THE SKILLED

TRADES

with the skilled trades fall. These jobs

include carpenters, electricians, plumbers,

pipefitters, bricklayers and masons, HVAC

technicians, roofers, drywallers, cement and

concrete workers, window installers, and

other professionals who could feasibly be

lumped into the catchall of “builders.” The

people who built your home, your school,

your favorite restaurant, the office where

your parents work? They were all part of the

skilled trades—and of the construction trades

specifically.

Skilled trades professionals in the construc-

tion trades work on projects to build new

structures, renovate or remodel old ones,

repair or service existing buildings, and more.

Typically, workers in the construction trades

specialize in a specific type of construction,

such as residential (typically single-family

homes), commercial, or industrial.

Jobs in this segment of the skilled trades

are usually very hands-on and may include

significant heavy lifting or other elements of

manual labor. However, construction trades-

people are also expected to bring a variety of

high-level skills and knowledge to the table,

ranging from specific building techniques to safety protocols to

cost estimating to general mathematics.

Because of the diversity of skills that are required in different

construction jobs, there are degree programs at many tradi-

tional colleges and universities focused on the construction

trades—specifically on construction management. Not every job

in construction requires a high-level degree, though. In fact, many

construction tradespeople get their start in the industry by working

as apprentices or simply learning key skills on the job.

While some employers in the construction industry will certainly

be looking for specific degrees and credentials, many others are

looking more for key attributes—a certain level of bodily strength, a

strong teamwork mentality, values such as punctuality, safety, and

reliability—that form the basis for employees who can be trusted

with the potentially dangerous work situations in which construc-

tion professionals are sometimes required to work. A common

mentality in the industry is that, if a candidate has these aforemen-

tioned qualities, some of the more specific “hard skills” required for

construction work can then be taught on the job.

Manufacturing

and Industrial

Trades

The manufacturing and industrial

segment of the skilled trades

includes professionals such as

welders, fabricators, tool and die

makers, machinists, industrial

mechanics, mechatronics profes-

sionals, and more. Tradespeople in

this part of the field are the key cogs

that keep manufacturing plants and

other aspects of the industrial world

up and running at all times.

It’s the people who work in this

part of the skilled trades who are

responsible for building so many of

the products, systems, or parts that

we use every day. From the assembly

line that builds the cars on the road

to the machines that manufacture

nails and screws in bulk, so much

of what we have or want is thanks

to the skills and smarts of manu-

facturing and industrial trades

professionals.

Many of the experts in this field work

on the machines or robots that build

the things we use. They design, build,

program, and maintain the automa-

tion systems that build our vehicles,

our cell phones, or the aircraft parts

that make aviation possible, and

the flat-packed parts and tools

that we build into our furniture.

These jobs aren’t going away.

Welders, for instance, play an

incredibly crucial role in fixing

cracks, holes, and other damage

in pipelines, power plants, bridges,

airplanes, ships, automobiles, and

much more; their skills will remain

important as long as we have

those types of structures that

need attention and care.

Furthermore, even as automation

continues to reshape industry and

render certain jobs obsolete, it’s

the manufacturing and industrial

tradespeople whose jobs might

be the most secure of all. Indeed,

it’s the machinists, industrial

mechanics, tool and die makers,

and mechatronics experts who

will be tasked with designing,

maintaining, and perhaps even

operating the robotic systems,

CNC (computer numerical control)

systems, assembly lines, comput-

er-driven machinery, and other

automated systems that will allow

future innovation and stream-

lining to reshape a whole host of

industries. These innovations, as

is often the case, rely on the work

ethic and skills of the people in

the trades.

10

Transportation Trades

The transportation trades incorporate a wide variety of jobs that

exist in and around the transportation industry. Most of these

jobs, similar to the construction trades, involve working with your

hands. Some of the most notable positions in this category might

include mechanics, automotive or motorcycle service technicians

(including auto body and paint repairers), or technicians who

service heavy equipment (such as construction machinery or

agricultural equipment).

11

Think of transportation tradespeople as the folks

who keep every vehicle you can think of up and

running and safe. They are the mechanics who

service our cars and fix issues under the hood, or

the auto body experts who can make a car look

brand new even after it’s been in a collision. They

are the technicians who attend to big tractor-trailer

fleets to ensure that those big semi-trucks are as

safe as possible on the road. They are the ones

who service bulldozers, excavators, tractors and

other agricultural equipment, backhoes, forklifts,

and other equipment that are vital to productive

construction sites, warehouses, factories, or farms.

In addition to these technicians and repairers,

though, the transportation trades can also include

the people who operate many of these vehicles.

While you aren’t part of the skilled trades just for

driving your car to school, or even for taking on a

delivery driver role for a local restaurant, there are

many people out on the roads who are working

jobs that can fairly be classified as skilled trades

careers.

Truck drivers and bus drivers, for instance, are

charged with operating big, heavy, hard-to-drive

vehicles and must hold specific high-level drivers’

licenses to do so—notable “skills” that render their jobs as clear

skilled trades positions. The same is true for the people who

operate the heavy machinery on a farm or construction site.

This category might also be thought to house the marine trades—

though some people separate those into their own category

entirely. For our purposes, we will consider the marine trades as

part of the transportation trades, given that these jobs—which

range from boatbuilding to boat maintenance to marine construc-

tion to maritime/seafaring roles—have clear corollaries in other

segments of the transportation trades.

12

Energy Trades

The energy trades, collectively, are what we can thank for the

power that flows into our homes, schools, and businesses. The

people in this segment of the skilled trades operate our power

plants, maintain our utility lines, hook up our buildings to electricity,

and design and maintain the electrical work that keeps the lights

on. They are also right at the forefront of the renewable energy

revolution, which means they will continue to play an important

(and well-compensated) role in our society going forward.

Specific jobs in the energy trades include

electrical line workers, utility technicians,

power plant operators, renewable energy

service technicians (for solar panels, wind

turbines, and hydro-electric installations,

among other innovations), and more.

Though electricians are often lumped into the

construction trades, they can also be catego-

rized here, as their work can go well beyond

construction. Indeed, electricians aren’t just

hired to wire new houses or fix the electrical

work at commercial buildings but are also

entrusted with the wiring of airplanes, ships,

cars, data and cable lines, and more. Electri-

cians who do this type of work fit more snugly

into the energy trades than they do into the

construction field.

Electricians can even work as part of the

performing arts. Pay attention to the credits

for your favorite movie or TV show and you’ll

surely see someone credited as the produc-

tion’s “gaffer.” Gaffer is an entertainment

industry term for the head electrician or

lighting technician on a film or TV production.

13

This person is responsible for the lighting design of a

cinematic project, which in turn makes it possible to

see all the details playing out on screen of our favorite

filmed entertainments. People with electrical skills can

also often find work in theater (as part of the stagecraft

teams on Broadway and elsewhere) and in the live music

industry. Some people categorize these types of enter-

tainment-centric jobs as being separate from the energy

trades, but they revolve around similar skillsets as other

electrical jobs and therefore certainly bear mentioning.

14

Agriculture

Careers in agriculture are not always thought of as being part

of the skilled trades, but many of the jobs that exist in this

extremely important industry are highly technical roles that bear

much kinship with the other categories we have discussed so

far.

Agriculture, of course, is the broad term that describes the

practice of cultivating plants and livestock to provide food,

clothing, and other vital products. We see, enjoy, and survive off

the spoils of agriculture every day. From the food on your table

to the sweater you wear when it gets cold, so much of what we

need to survive is thanks to farmers and agriculture operations.

Skilled trades jobs in agriculture include farmers, animal

husbandry experts, nursery and greenhouse professionals,

landscape architects, ag equipment operators, precision agricul-

tural specialists, and more. In addition, many of the jobs we have

discussed as part of other skilled trades categories can overlap

into agriculture, from welders (who might play roles in building

or servicing farming machinery, dairy equipment, grain storage

silos, and more) to electricians (who might assist farmers in

designing, implementing, and servicing equipment that allows

for greater efficiency and automation of crop care, cultivation,

and harvesting).

Agriculture is an inviting pathway for skilled trades students for

a lot of reasons. The first and foremost is that this career path

is largely future-proof. While ag has evolved over the years (and

will continue to evolve in the future), there will never come a

time when our society does not require the services that farms

provide. There will always be a need for people who understand

the science of soil, plants, and animals.

Agriculture is also evolving, with new precision technologies,

sustainable farming techniques, innovations in indoor farming,

and other trends paving the way toward a future where the food

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