Why Skilled Trades Are the Future: Alvin Townley on Scholarships, Workforce Gaps, and Building a Skilled Nation
In this episode of The Why We Build Podcast, host Greg Woleck talks with Alvin Townley, CEO of Skilled Nation, about the future of skilled trades, workforce development, and why career pathways in the trades deserve more respect, visibility, and support.
For years, the common message around success was simple: go to college, get a degree, and follow the traditional path. For some people, that path works. But for many others, it can lead to debt, uncertainty, and work that does not feel meaningful.
At the same time, industries like construction, remodeling, manufacturing, transportation, energy, and home services continue to need skilled people who can build, fix, install, create, and solve real problems.
Alvin shares how Skilled Nation is working to close that gap by providing scholarships for people pursuing training in high-demand skilled careers. These scholarships help cover more than tuition. They can also help with tools, transportation, childcare, and other real-life barriers that often prevent people from completing training.
Greg and Alvin also discuss the perception problem facing the trades. Too often, skilled careers are treated like a backup plan instead of a smart, honorable, and profitable path. But that conversation is beginning to change. More parents, students, educators, and employers are starting to recognize that skilled work offers dignity, stability, purpose, and opportunity.
The conversation also explores the impact of AI, the importance of better storytelling, and the responsibility industry leaders have to help build a stronger talent pipeline for the future.
Key Takeaways
The skilled trades are not a backup plan. They are honorable, needed, and often highly rewarding careers.
The workforce gap is also an awareness gap. Many people simply do not understand the opportunities available in skilled careers.
Scholarships can remove real barriers. For many students, the issue is not motivation. It is affordability and access.
Industry has a responsibility to help build the pipeline. Employers, educators, foundations, and trade partners all benefit when more people are trained and connected to meaningful work.
Technology will change the trades, but it will not eliminate the need for skilled people. AI may reshape the workforce, but hands-on skilled careers remain essential.
Featured Guest
Alvin Townley is the CEO of Skilled Nation, an organization focused on expanding access to skilled career training through scholarships and industry partnerships. Alvin is a social entrepreneur, author, fundraising executive, and storyteller who is passionate about helping people discover meaningful opportunities and build better futures through skilled careers.
Why This Episode Matters
For those of us in remodeling and construction, this conversation hits close to home. We do not just need more workers. We need more people who can see a future in this work.
That means better messaging. Better pathways. Better support. And a stronger commitment from business owners, educators, and industry leaders to tell the story of the trades with the respect it deserves.
The future of remodeling depends on the people willing to build, fix, solve, lead, and carry the work forward.
Resources Mentioned
Skilled Nation skilled-nation.org [http://skilled-nation.org]
Partners mentioned include The Home Depot Foundation, 3M, DeWalt, Ford Philanthropy, GE Vernova Foundation, Schneider Electric, Norfolk Southern, PulteGroup, Ball Corporation, and others.