Skip to content
MarketScale
‹ Back to IndustriesEngineering & Construction

Connecting Tradespeople in the Skilled Trade Industry

With 650,000 available jobs in the construction industry alone, the skilled trade labor shortage is considered one of the biggest challenges facing the U.S. economy. To complicate the situation further, fewer than 16% of young people claimed they would consider a skilled trade career in a recent research study by Stanley Black & Decker. With…

This story was produced through MarketScale. See how Engineering & Construction teams put it to work with Partner & Channel Enablement.

Promoted content from Straight Outta Crumpton on MarketScale.

Share

With 650,000 available jobs in the construction industry alone, the skilled trade labor shortage is considered one of the biggest challenges facing the U.S. economy. To complicate the situation further, fewer than 16% of young people claimed they would consider a skilled trade career in a recent research study by Stanley Black & Decker. With the cards already stacked against the industry, what happens when the traditional routes used to find employees, such as Indeed, are failing to connect companies with tradespeople?

That’s what Tyler Kern and Straight Outta Crumpton’s Greg Crumpton discussed with co-founders of BlueRecruit, Gina and Rich Camacho. The idea for BlueRecruit came from Gina’s father, an autobody shop owner, who posted an autobody painter job on Indeed and received resumes for house painters. Noticing this gap in the market, the Camachos founded BlueRecruit with the goal of connecting tradespeople with hiring companies.

Crumpton and the Camachos discuss…

● Fewer people want to get into blue collar work

● BlueRecruit is aimed at attracting potential blue-collar workers

● What makes BlueRecruit different from other job searching sites

“We jokingly say that we’ve become the match.com for plumbers,” Rich laughed.

Starting the business three years ago, BlueRecruit made it through the pandemic and is looking forward to expanding the business further. Currently, Gina is using data to give companies insight into their job requirements to ensure the company can recruit the right talent.

“We found that the typical trades job requires four times more hard skills than your average white-collar role,” Rich said. “So, while a resume or LinkedIn might be great to get somebody a sales job… that’s why we said ‘you know what? We need something specifically for the blue- collar industry.’”

Straight Outta Crumpton

Part of this channel

Straight Outta Crumpton

Greg Crumpton on why relationships are the foundation of business

Visit the channel →

Engineering & Construction: are you visible to AI?

Before they reach out, Engineering & Construction buyers ask AI engines which vendors to trust. See how AI describes your company today, and where competitors show up instead.

Free workspace

You just read one expert. Imagine publishing your whole team.

This article was produced through MarketScale. Create a free workspace and turn your own team's expertise into articles, video, and social posts. No credit card, no demo required.

NPS +73 · 1,000+ creators · 38+ countries

What you get, free

Your own MarketScale Studio workspace
One video edit a month, on us
AI writing, editing, and publishing tools
In-platform coaching to learn the system

More Engineering & Construction Insights

AI moves from back office to job site in construction's next build-out

AI moves from back office to job site in construction's next build-out

McCarthy Building Companies has entered a multimillion-dollar agreement with Palantir to enhance AI adoption. However, RICS experts highlight that data readiness and organizational culture pose significant challenges. This development signals a shift in integrating AI within construction sectors.

  • 01McCarthy Building Cos. signs a major deal with Palantir.
  • 02Data readiness is a critical hurdle for AI integration.
  • 03Organizational culture impacts AI adoption in construction.

Jul 11, 2026

South Korea commits $7.5 billion to AI-autonomous manufacturing as smart factory count hits 30,000

South Korea commits $7.5 billion to AI-autonomous manufacturing as smart factory count hits 30,000

South Korea is investing $7.5 billion in advancing AI-autonomous manufacturing, with a significant increase in smart factories, now totaling 30,000. The initiative also targets the development of 100 AI manufacturing zones throughout the country.

  • 01South Korea invests $7.5 billion in AI-autonomous manufacturing.
  • 02There are currently 30,000 smart factories in South Korea.
  • 03The government aims to develop 100 AI manufacturing zones.

Jul 11, 2026

Construction's productivity crisis: why ML cost forecasting and off-site methods are converging

Construction's productivity crisis: why ML cost forecasting and off-site methods are converging

U.S. construction productivity has decreased since 1968. Machine learning models and off-site construction methods are becoming pivotal in bridging this productivity gap by providing accurate cost forecasting and efficient building practices.

  • 01U.S. construction productivity has been declining since 1968.
  • 02Machine learning models offer enhanced cost forecasting capabilities.
  • 03Off-site construction methods contribute to improved project efficiency.

Jul 10, 2026

Explore More Engineering & Construction Insights

Read more expert perspectives from across Engineering & Construction.

Browse Engineering & Construction Hub

For B2B teams

Your experts could be publishing here

Stories like this one run on content MarketScale captures from real practitioners. See how your team's expertise becomes coverage in Engineering & Construction and beyond.

Book a 15-minute demo

Or call us. No forms required. We pick up. 214-945-2512