Where's The Careers Advice for the Roles That Build Britain
The Construction Skills Shortage and the Scaffolding Sector’s Missing Message
The UK’s housing targets are under pressure. The construction sector faces a growing skills shortage, and as the Chartered Institute of Building (CIOB) recently highlighted, one of the root causes is alarmingly simple: young people aren’t hearing about careers in construction.
But this problem runs even deeper than housebuilding.
At National Scaffolding Week, we see how the lack of construction-focused careers advice affects the entire scaffolding and access sector. Scaffolding is the backbone of construction — from maintenance on heritage buildings to the delivery of modern megaprojects — yet the pathway into our industry remains under-promoted and often misunderstood.
Breaking Down Barriers and Busting Myths
Despite offering structured training, clear progression routes, and a wealth of skilled and professional opportunities, scaffolding still suffers from outdated stereotypes. Too many young people, teachers, and even parents see it as just a stopgap job, not the highly technical, safety-critical profession that it is.
Scaffolding is so much more than tubes and boards. It's about design ingenuity, engineering precision, safety leadership, and project management excellence. It’s about problem-solving, teamwork, and making a visible difference to the world around us.
Why Early Engagement Matters
If we’re serious about tackling the skills shortage — and if we want to secure the future of the access and scaffolding sector — we need to start early. Careers advice in schools must reflect the real breadth of opportunities available across construction, including scaffolding.
That means:
- Embedding scaffolding into careers education programmes.
- Creating engaging, relatable role models who can share their stories with young people.
- Showing the exciting projects and life-changing infrastructure that scaffolders help to make possible.
National Scaffolding Week: Leading the Conversation
Our mission at National Scaffolding Week is to make scaffolding visible, accessible, and aspirational. We’re here to champion the essential role our sector plays in building Britain — and to ensure that scaffolding is part of the careers conversation in every school and college.
Because if young people can’t see it, they can’t be it.
Let’s work together to showcase the skills, passion, and pride that drive the scaffolding industry — and inspire the next generation to help us build the future.


