A mentor who says 'I don't have a role for you, but come in and we'll figure it out' can change your entire career trajectory — maintain the relationship from first contact.
“he said i don't have a role for you but come in we're gonna figure it out”
Starting in small-jobs construction forces you to estimate, manage, and supervise simultaneously, building a broader skill base than specialising on large projects from day one.
“you ate what you killed right so you really had to be estimating managing supervising whatever you're wearing so many different hats”
Take every CANS (Construction Association of Nova Scotia) course available early in your career — they count toward Gold Seal and compound into a recognized credential without a formal degree.
“every cans course i took over those years all counted”
Gold Seal certification resolves the credibility gap for blue-collar operators who lack a university degree — it 'puts a stamp on it' that peers and clients respect.
“i was always concerned with not having the schooling background and just having boots on the ground background that i wouldn't be taken serious”
In Atlantic Canada's small-market construction scene, your professional network is stickier than any credential — it's what keeps people from leaving the region.
“it's hard to leave when you start building a network because the thought goes where do you what do you do next”
Recasting a 'small jobs division' as a 'custom projects division' changed client perception and attracted first-time business owners willing to spend their life savings — naming matters.
“people were kind of getting taken back by why am i dealing with a small jobs division this is my life savings”
COVID-era renovation demand (tenants adapting existing spaces rather than building new) is a legitimate market entry window for a small-jobs construction firm.
“instead of opening new locations they were looking to renovate put a little bit of money staying where they are adapt to covid”
Bundling leasing, construction, and property management under one contact eliminates the landlord–tenant–contractor triangle of confusion and becomes a genuine competitive moat.
“we're the one contact the tenant is dealing with us on the leasing side and the landlord the developers dealing with us on all the server side”
Business owners should delegate property maintenance and small construction to a specialist so their mental energy stays on revenue-generating work.
“they should or can be making money doing what they're really good at and then hand it off to us”
Young people entering construction should work one summer on-site before choosing an education path — direct exposure to site dynamics is irreplaceable orientation.
“work a summer job get on as a laborer be a sponge take it all in and see every aspect of it”
The construction industry in Atlantic Canada uniquely fuses white-collar and blue-collar roles — neither exists without the other — and both sides experience imposter syndrome.
“you got a real unique enmeshment of like white collar and blue collar and one doesn't happen without the other”
Targeting clients who will have multiple locations or recurring construction needs is more valuable than one-off fit-ups — sell the relationship, not the project.
“our goal is never one project it's not get in the door and do one little fit up and we're out it's the next one”