We all know that the ongoing skilled worker shortage in the construction industry does not have one simple solution but will need to be addressed in multiple ways. A new study from Dodge Construction Network (Dodge) examines one part of that solution: attracting more people into the pipeline of potential workers. The findings reveal both a strong potential to draw more people into the industry, but also some challenges which the industry will need to address to make the industry more compelling to a larger set of potential workers.
Dodge Workforce Study
Dodge surveyed the potential workforce for construction, including over 1,000 people from ages 14 to 44 who are students, jobseekers or people currently employed who would consider changing careers. Contractors were surveyed as well, and 263 people in leadership roles at either the project or company-level responded from general and specialty trade contracting companies.
Good News: Construction Has the Potential to Attract Many More People to Its Ranks
Openness to Working in Construction
When presented with a standard list of careers and asked which they are actively considering working in, only 7% of the potential workforce said that they were considering a job in construction.
Later in the survey, all the potential workforce respondents were asked to rate the likelihood that they would consider pursuing a job in construction.
- 28% of jobseekers and those employed in other industries and 31% of students said that they were at least somewhat likely to do so.
- Promisingly, nearly a third more said that they were neither likely nor unlikely to do so.
- For jobseekers, there is a 30-point gap between those who use social media to find out about career options in general (61%) and those who use it to find out about construction (31%).
- There is nearly as big of a gap (22 points) for students in their use of online sources other than social media for information about careers (51%) versus information about construction (29%).
By Donna Laquidara-Carr | 2025-08-13

