The Blue Collar CEO wants more respect for the skilled trades and increased diversity within the industry.
Mandy Rennehan, aka the Blue Collar CEO, is the head of retail facilities construction firm Freshco. She closed out the Mechanical Contractors of ÌìĂÀÓ°Ôșâs annual conference in Nashville with a keynote about the social stigma attached to the trades and where the industry needs to go and who they need to hire to continue to prosper.
âWe have such a supply and demand issue in the industry as a whole, and the reason why is that kids and even at a lot of parents (when they were their kids age) really wanted to be working with their hands and minds together, they didnât want to go to university, but they felt obliged to go because thatâs what they were told to do,â Rennehan said.
Rennehan refers to the stigma surrounding a career in the trades as âtradeism,â and said sheâs spent the last 24 years watching how skilled artisans are treated in the industry.
âThey love you when they need you, but youâre not considered a professional like a lawyer, a doctor, or an accountant. Why? People go to school for four to five years and without them, you would not function as a human being, but yet theyâre told âif youâre charging me $55/hour, youâre high,â she said.
Rennehan implored the audience of construction leaders to do a better job of marketing themselves as an attractive career option and said, âwe give everything away because weâre nice.â She recently met with Prime Minister Justin Trudeau and his cabinet and said they agreed with her assertion that more can be done.
âThey agreed thereâs a lot of silos in the industry that are doing great things but arenât getting traction or impact because we donât have a collaborative system where weâre working as one. I explained from a business and entrepreneurial standpoint that if we were able to put together a campaign that brought together all of the shareholders and the assets of industry, we could really do some great damage and be a pioneer in this in North America to say âcome over here to this side, this is where you belong, and they got that,â she said.
Rennehan also pointed to not only the fact that women only make up four percent of the industry but that of that number many leave the industry.
âWhen you look at the size of the trade industry as a whole, itâs massive,â she said. âWhen you look at 96 per cent of those people being male, itâs daunting from a female perspective to think, how am I going to fit in here, and am I welcomed?â she said.
Rennehan added women who do join the industry see the majority of men are welcoming and appreciate the new perspective women bring, but many companies are not set up to understand that âwomen come with a different set of instructions.â
âIt shouldnât be how does a woman fit in a menâs workforce. Why are we not training the males in personal development curriculums on âhow to respect her being a minority here in the workplace?â Thereâs a lot of education that needs to happen on a common-sense level,â she said.
Rennehan said the industry has made efforts and is seeing progress in embracing a changing workforce and cited her own experiences.
âIâm a female, Iâm gay, and they donât care. But you have to realize this is an industry where minorities are going to say, âare they going to accept me?â Iâm saying to them just because that burly white guy over there is a plumber doesnât mean he isnât a wonderful human being. No judgment on either side and Iâm encouraging people of all minorities to know that weâre all the same, we just look different and really thereâs a place here if you want it,â she said. âBut when youâre met with letâs just say âdeflectionâ donât walk away, itâs everywhere, not just our industry.â
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