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The Apprenticeship

For those just starting out

The Apprenticeship

You're new. Everyone was. Here's what the experienced guys know that nobody bothered to tell you — until now.

A Message to the New Ones

Being an apprentice is one of the most exciting and most humbling things you can do. You're learning a real skill. You're earning real money while you do it. And you're building the foundation of a career that can last a lifetime — if you play it right.

Most apprentices fail not because they can't do the work. They fail because they don't understand the unwritten rules. The stuff nobody puts in the handbook. That's what this page is for. Read it. Take notes. Come back to it.

14 Things You Need to Know

01

Be Punctual and Reliable

Show up on time. Every day. In the trades, your reputation for reliability is worth more than almost any skill you can have. Nobody wants to work with someone they can't count on.

02

Listen First, Talk Second

Pay close attention to experienced tradespeople. Not just the what — the why. Understanding why a technique works is how you build real skill, not just muscle memory. You have two ears and one mouth for a reason.

03

Ask Questions — The Right Way

There are no stupid questions, but there is a stupid time to ask them. Don't interrupt a guy mid-task. Wait for a break, ask clearly, and listen to the answer. Asking is how you learn. Guessing wrong is how you waste everyone's time.

04

Take Initiative

When you finish what you're doing, don't stand there waiting to be told what's next. Look around. See what needs doing. Grab a broom. Hand someone a tool they're about to reach for. That kind of hustle gets noticed fast.

05

Master the Basics First

Don't try to run before you can walk. Get the foundational skills dialed in. Rushing past the basics is how you develop bad habits that take years to undo.

06

Safety Is Not Optional

This one's not negotiable. Learn proper tool use. Wear your PPE. Don't take shortcuts on safety because someone else is. The job site will forgive a lot of mistakes — but some of them you don't get to recover from.

07

Build a Strong Work Ethic

Give full effort even when you're tired, even when it's hot, even when nobody is watching. Especially when nobody is watching. That's the real test of character.

08

Build Your Network

The people you work alongside today are your future references, your leads on jobs, your professional family. The trades world is smaller than you think — your reputation travels ahead of you.

09

Stay Organized

Know where your tools are. Keep your workspace clean. A cluttered job site isn't just inefficient — it's dangerous. Develop the habit of organization now and you'll save yourself countless hours of frustration.

10

Embrace Feedback

When a journeyman corrects you, that's not an attack — it's an investment. Receive it with gratitude, apply it immediately, and you'll earn their respect far faster than someone who gets defensive.

11

Invest in Quality Tools

As you grow, start investing in your own quality tools. A craftsman's tools are an extension of their skill. Buy the best you can afford. Cheap tools cost you more in the long run.

12

Keep Learning — Always

The trades evolve. New materials. New techniques. New codes. The journeyman who stopped learning five years ago is already behind. Stay curious. The learning never stops, and that's a good thing.

13

Document Your Work

Take photos of your projects. Keep notes on challenges you faced and how you solved them. Being able to show your work and your growth is more powerful than any resume.

14

Set Goals and Write Them Down

Where do you want to be in one year? Five years? The trades reward people who are intentional about their careers, not just people who show up and wait.

CAUTION  ·  CAUTION  ·  CAUTION  ·  CAUTION  ·  CAUTION  ·  CAUTION  ·  CAUTION
"Becoming skilled in the trades takes time and dedication. There are no shortcuts. But every hard day gets you further — if you're paying attention." — the BizzL

Ready for the Next Level?

Check out the Safety Tips section — because none of the advice above means anything if you don't make it home in one piece.

Go to Safety Tips →
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