『Everyone Talks About Supporting the Trades. SupplyHouse Actually Does It』のカバーアート

Everyone Talks About Supporting the Trades. SupplyHouse Actually Does It

Everyone Talks About Supporting the Trades. SupplyHouse Actually Does It

無料で聴く

ポッドキャストの詳細を見る

今ならプレミアムプランが3カ月 月額99円

2026年5月12日まで。4か月目以降は月額1,500円で自動更新します。

概要

The trades don’t have a shortage of interest — they have a bottleneck at the point of entry.Christine Boehm of SupplyHouse.com breaks down how skilled trades scholarships and trade school scholarships are removing the barriers most people never see — and opening doors that were never accessible to begin with.For years, workforce development in the trades has focused on awareness: getting more young people to consider careers in HVAC, electrical, plumbing, and construction. But interest isn’t the problem. The real gap shows up after someone decides they’re in — when cost, access, and lack of support stop them before they ever get started.Christine leads communications and content at SupplyHouse.com and works closely with the Supply House Foundation to expand access into the trades through scholarships, partnerships, and industry advocacy. Her work focuses on building a system that doesn’t just attract attention — but clears the path for people to actually enter, stay, and build long-term careers.This conversation is for contractors trying to hire in a tight labor market, for career changers looking for a real path into the trades, and for companies trying to understand what it takes to turn interest into a workforce.In This Episode(00:00) – Beyond AwarenessAndrew introduces Christine Boehm and reframes the trades conversation: the issue isn’t attention — it’s access.(05:18) – How the Scholarship Model StartedThe origin of SupplyHouse.com’s skilled trades scholarships and why financial barriers stop more people than lack of interest.(11:22) – The Access GapWhy career changers struggle to enter the trades — and how workforce development efforts often miss the people who need them most.(18:40) – Women in the TradesWhat’s driving growth, what’s still missing, and how representation directly connects to opportunity.(26:55) – Building an EcosystemHow the Supply House Foundation is expanding beyond trade school scholarships into partnerships, nonprofits, and long-term support.(36:10) – Mentorship and MomentumWhy mentorship, contractor involvement, and real-world guidance determine whether someone stays in the trades or leaves early.Key TakeawaysAccess — not awareness — is the real barrier into the trades.Interest in trades careers is growing, but without financial support and structured entry points like skilled trades scholarships and trade school scholarships, most potential workers never make it past step one.Workforce development requires more than recruitment.Bringing people into the trades is only the beginning — long-term success depends on support systems, mentorship, and clear pathways that help individuals build sustainable careers.Expanding participation strengthens the entire industry.Increasing representation, especially among women in the trades, is not just about inclusion — it directly impacts the size, resilience, and future of the workforce.Scholarships are a starting point, not the solution.Programs like the Supply House Foundation show that real impact comes from combining financial support with partnerships, education, and ongoing industry engagement.About the GuestChristine Boehm is the Communications and Content Team Lead at SupplyHouse.com, where she leads initiatives focused on strengthening the skilled trades through scholarships, storytelling, and workforce development programs. She works closely with the Supply House Foundation to expand access into the trades, support women entering the industry, and build partnerships that help the next generation of tradespeople succeed.Keywordsskilled trades scholarships, trade school scholarships, workforce development in the trades, Supply House Foundation, women in the trades, skilled trades, trades careers, contractors, workforce pipeline, advocacy, education, HVAC, electricians, plumbers, construction, craftsmanship, problem-solving, Andrew Brown, Christine Boehm, SupplyHouse.com, Lost Art of the Skilled TradesResource LinksLinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/christine-boehm-marketing/SupplyHouse.com: https://www.supplyhouse.comFoundation Contact: foundation@supplyhouse.comSupport the ShowIf you found value in this episode, please leave a review on Apple Podcasts and share it with someone who needs to hear it. Your support helps us keep telling the stories of the skilled trades.
まだレビューはありません