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Building a Skills Development Program That Actually Retains Construction Workers

The construction industry’s workforce crisis isn’t just about finding workers, it’s about keeping them. The real competitive advantage lies in developing the talent you already have. A structured skills development program does more than fill knowledge gaps; it transforms your workforce into engaged, loyal team members who see a future with your company. According to SHRM, 86% of HR managers believe training aids in retention and 83% said it’s a recruitment tool 

Here’s how to build a program that actually works. 

Benefits of Learning and Development 

Learning and development is a fundamental part of building up and engaging your workforce. It includes all processes that allow your employees to improve or learn specific skill sets to help drive better overall business performance. Coaching, mentoring, job shadowing, attending webinars and conferences, and online training courses are all types of development learning. 

Learning and development programs benefit your company in multiple ways. 

  • Happier employees. Dedicating resources to your employees and developing formal training makes them feel valued as individuals and as employees. Valued employees will be loyal to your company because they will feel you’ve invested in them, even when other opportunities present themselves. Plus, when you invest in your employees, they become invested in your company’s future success. 
  • Reduced hiring costs. Happier employees stay with a company longer, improving your retention rates. Hiring costs are reduced because there’s less turnover. And when you don’t have to devout as much time to hiring, you can focus on big picture items like strategic goals and initiatives. 
  • Quality that sells itself. Well-trained crews deliver higher-quality work, finish projects on time, and stay on budget. This reputation makes bidding easier and keeps clients coming back. 

Creating Structured Learning Paths 

Providing a structured learning plan can set a strong foundation for employee development that you can build on in the future. 

According to Indeed, there are five steps for creating a professional development plan.  

  1. Self-Assessment Ask employees to evaluate their current position and how their capabilities fit into their role. This process shines a light on areas where they need to improve and grow, while also helping them identify transferable skills, like communication, problem-solving, teamwork, and leadership that employers value across positions.  
  2. SMART Goals Use the SMART framework to develop clear goals: goals should be specific, measurable, achievable, results-based, and time-bound. For example, "Complete OSHA 30 certification by March 31st" or "Lead three projects independently within the next year." Goals should motivate but be realistic enough to attain. Most importantly, align individual goals with your company’s overall strategy so employees understand how their growth contributes to organizational success. 
  3. Tailored Strategies Each person learns differently. What works for a 22-year-old apprentice may not work for a 45-year-old project manager. Offer diverse options like one-on-one mentoring with experienced tradespeople, coaching from supervisors, job shadowing opportunities to learn new roles, online training modules for technical skills, webinars for industry trends, and conferences for networking and big-picture thinking.  
  4. Accessible Resources Support employees by providing the resources needed to develop. It could mean tuition reimbursement for courses at local community colleges or technical schools. Funding to join professional associations. Paid time to attend relevant conferences or sit in on industry webinars. And certification or specific license achievements.  
  5. Flexible Timelines Encourage employees to set short-term goals (3-6 months), medium-term goals (1-2 years), and long-term aspirations (3-5 years), but build in flexibility. Industries evolve, company needs shift, and personal circumstances change. Review and update development plans at least quarterly, and be willing to adjust when strategies aren’t working or when new opportunities emerge. This flexibility shows employees that you’re invested in their actual growth, not just checking a box for HR compliance. 

Choosing the Right Technology 

The right learning management system (LMS) can dramatically enhance your development program’s effectiveness and reach. Here’s what to look for: 

  • Accommodates different learning styles. Choose an LMS that tracks both online and in-person training, giving you a complete picture of each employee’s development journey regardless of how they prefer to learn. 
  • Works on mobile devices. An effective LMS must have robust mobile capabilities that allow your employees to complete and track their training sessions from the job site, the office, or at home. This flexibility is especially important for hourly workers who may not want to stay after their shift to sit at a desktop computer.  
  • Allows customization for your specific needs. Your LMS needs to do double duty. It should include standard, off-the-shelf training courses that every company needs - sexual harassment prevention, cybersecurity awareness, and compliance training - but it also needs to let you upload customizable content. The ability to blend standard and custom content is essential for a truly effective development program. 

Building a skills development program isn’t just good HR practice, it’s a competitive necessity in today’s construction labor market. In an industry where skilled workers are hard to find and harder to keep, companies that invest in developing their people will win the war for talent.  

Arcoro’s Grow platform includes both an LMS and performance management, providing a complete development solution designed for the unique challenges of construction. If you’re looking to boost your development program in 2026, contact us today. We can answer your questions and provide a free demo of the platform. 

See a demo of how HR technology can help your construction business.