Walk into almost any plumbing, electrical, or HVAC company in the country and you’ll find the same thing: steady demand, loyal customers, healthy margins, and a back office still held together by paper invoices, a whiteboard schedule, and a dispatcher who keeps the whole operation straight from memory.
The skilled trades have spent decades being waved off by the people who move serious money. Too small, too fragmented, too unscalable. That assumption is now coming apart, and the reason has little to do with the work itself. It has to do with everything that was never built around it.
Why Capital Is Suddenly Paying Attention
The people who keep America’s buildings running are retiring faster than anyone is replacing them. The average tradesperson is now north of forty-five, and industry estimates suggest roughly 40% of the current skilled workforce will leave the field within a decade.
For nearly thirty years, students were nudged toward four-year degrees and away from vocational training, which left a thin bench behind the boomers heading for the door.
The buildout fueling artificial intelligence runs on physical infrastructure, and that infrastructure cannot wire or cool itself. According to CNBC’s reporting on the data center boom, demand for robotic technicians climbed 107% between 2022 and 2026, while listings for HVAC engineers rose 67%.
The U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics projects that electrician employment will grow 9% through 2034, with about 81,000 openings a year, most of them driven by the need to replace workers who exit the trade or retire. Electrification, domestic manufacturing, grid upgrades, and reshoring are all pulling in the same direction at once
The pay is following the math. As Fortune documented, six-figure salaries are now common in trades that a decade ago were dismissed as fallback work, because supply simply hasn’t kept up, with roughly 102 workers leaving manufacturing for every 100 who enter.
When the work resists automation, sits on top of nondiscretionary spending, and faces a structural labor shortfall, you have the kind of durable tailwind that’s hard to engineer in most asset classes.
The Real Inefficiency Isn’t Labor. It’s Software.
The deeper inefficiency in a typical home service business isn’t the number of technicians. It’s that the business runs with almost no operating system. Pricing is guesswork. Scheduling is reactive. Marketing is word of mouth. Follow-up barely exists. A company can do four million in revenue and still have no reliable way to tell you which jobs make money.
This is the gap, and it’s enormous. A wave of vertical software and AI platforms for home service businesses has started filling it, handling the unglamorous work of dispatching crews, quoting jobs, chasing invoices, and answering the phone at ten at night.
Online communities and resource hubs built around Blue Collar Builders have become a surprisingly accurate read on which tools owners actually adopt and which ones quietly gather dust on a shelf. The winners aren’t the businesses with the most technicians, they’re the ones that wrapped a modern operating layer around the same crew.
Coruzant Technologies makes a similar observation about the broader sector, noting that contractors using digital-first strategies to scale home improvement businesses can increase project volume without sacrificing service quality, largely by automating intake, communication, and scheduling.
A Simple Framework For Evaluating The Opportunity
The first is the demographic layer. Aging owners create a steady supply of acquisition targets, often founders in their sixties with no succession plan and no buyer lined up. That’s the deal flow.
The second is the demand layer. Electrification, data centers, and reshoring guarantee the underlying work isn’t going anywhere for a generation. That’s the moat against cyclicality.
The third, and the one most investors underweight, is the technology layer. This is where return on capital actually lives. Buying a cash-flowing trades business at a reasonable multiple is fine. Buying it, installing a real operating system, and lifting margins by ten points is where the math gets interesting.
What This Means For Family Offices And Private Investors
None of this is theoretical anymore. Private equity has been rolling up HVAC and plumbing companies for years, and the smart consolidators aren’t competing on price. They’re competing on infrastructure, buying scattered operators and connecting them to shared software, centralized dispatch, and disciplined pricing.
Family offices are well positioned here, arguably better positioned than the funds. The same patience that lets them outmaneuver institutional buyers in commercial real estate, where they can hold quality assets for decades rather than racing a fund clock, applies cleanly to trades businesses. These are long-duration, cash-generative, tangible operations.
As Impact Wealth has noted in its coverage of navigating the complex world of alternative investments, manager and operator selection drives outcomes far more than the asset label does. The questions that matter are practical ones:
- Does the business have any usable data, or is everything in someone’s head?
- How dependent is it on the founder personally?
- Is there a credible plan to install systems after the deal closes, and someone capable of running that playbook?
- A trades roll-up without an operating partner who understands software is just a pile of small companies.
For investors who prefer exposure without the operational lift, the more accessible entry points are the platforms and service layers underneath the sector rather than the contractors themselves. The tooling, in many cases, is the more scalable bet than any single shop.
The Window Won’t Stay Open
Search interest is rising, consolidators are circling, and the multiples on the best operators have already started to drift up from where they sat a few years ago. The combination that makes this attractive – real demand, scarce labor, and a sector still running on outdated tools – is exactly the combination that draws crowds once it’s named out loud.
The advantage still belongs to whoever moves while the technology layer is early. The demographic and demand stories are now widely understood. The software story is not, at least not yet, which is precisely why it’s where the edge remains.
Conclusion
The skilled trades have been hiding in plain sight, dismissed as too unglamorous to bother with by people managing portfolios full of far more fragile assets. The irony is that this corner of the real economy offers what most allocators claim to want: durable demand, defensible cash flow, and a clear, repeatable lever for improving returns.
It’s the modern operating layer the sector has gone without for decades. Investors who recognize that the opportunity is a technology gap rather than a labor problem, and who act before the rest of the market catches up, are likely to look back on this period as a rare and underpriced window.
















