How To Select Apprenticeship Candidates in a Changing Market

By / Mark Breslin

en français

Mark Breslin

It is always hard to know how many apprentices to bring into the industry in changing market conditions. How many do we need? Will there be jobs for them for the next four years? How many might we lose in a market downturn? Job openings in the construction industry remain extremely high. Construction workers are still retiring and shifting to other industries. Unfilled job openings continue to impact contractors’ and unions’ ability to build critical infrastructure.

Now is the time to get rid of the outdated apprentice selection and hiring habits we acquired during the past decades before they sink the construction industry. We need to seriously reconsider recruitment and talent selection.

The key area for improvement is how we bring in apprentices. A huge effort is underway to get young people interested in our industry. Great. But we need to be more interested in getting the right young people, because every new apprentice we accept will become a part of our industry family for the next 25 to 30 years. We need to take selection much more seriously. To the extent we have standards for choosing apprenticeship candidates, they are often too informal.

The failure of contractors to address this problem is a staggering head scratcher, especially when you consider the following:

  1. In most cases, unions and employers will spend anywhere from $40,000 to $100,000 over the course of four or five years to train a single apprentice.
  2. Anywhere from 10% to 40% of accepted apprentice candidates end up washing out. That amounts to millions of dollars wasted on failing candidates every year. 
  3. The threshold for acceptance into a fully paid apprenticeship program is low. There might be a math test or a short interview at some point, but that’s about it. In other words, we commit to spend several years (and six figures) training someone we know hardly anything about. Contrast this with how most colleges recruit students. Every candidate must take the SAT or ACT and write an essay explaining why they deserve the opportunity to attend school—and if they’re accepted, they (or, more likely, their parents) are on the hook for tuition.

Before I give a few recommendations on how to improve recruitment, I would like to provide a case study in best practices. Here is a stark example of what it takes to succeed in today’s high-stakes business world.

My daughter’s fiancé is a nerd—a really, really smart one. He is currently working for Google. His application process at Google included 12 interviews and countless hard-ass problem-solving exercises. When he finally reached what they call the “hiring committee” stage, Google execs grinded through the “best of the best” to decide who was hired. That’s how it’s done. That’s the discipline and requirement to be a world-class organization. Google owns the world’s intellectual capital market, and it doesn’t settle on just “good” candidates. Ever. And neither should we.

My suggestions are short and sweet. This temporary moment of industry contraction gives us a perfect opportunity to redesign recruitment from scratch. Let’s start by doing the following:

  1. Every candidate entering a union apprentice program should undergo extensive, fair, and ranked testing and evaluation. If it’s good enough for colleges, it’s good enough for us.
  2. Our evaluation process should be similar to ones used by police and fire departments. Each candidate should be interviewed for at least half an hour by a team of professionals—including contractors.
  3. Apprentices who quit the program (not removed for cause) should be interviewed to find out what persuaded them to drop out. This information can be used to improve training and implement changes where necessary, ultimately saving hundreds of millions of dollars over the next decade.

The construction industry can’t afford average candidates to become our foundation of talent. Not everyone deserves the “free ride” treatment that our world-class training programs provide. We need to take a more proactive approach and get contractors much more involved in the evaluation process. In today’s job seekers’ labour market, compromising on talent is still flat-out unacceptable. It’s all up to us to commit to a new path forward. ■