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if my strengths are my patience and time management how can i achieve something in welding and construction??

im strong willed and interested in welding


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Vianne’s Answer

Your skills are great for welding and construction. Patience is really important in welding because you can't hurry it—if you do, the weld might turn out messy or weak. You need to stay calm, focus, and sometimes redo things until they’re just right. In construction, managing your time is also crucial because you have to work with deadlines and keep everything on track without disrupting the project.

If I were you, I’d start with something simple, like taking a beginner welding class at a trade school or community college. You could also look for entry-level construction helper jobs where you learn on the job. Many people begin as laborers, then discover what they enjoy and move into a specific skill like welding. It’s a great path if you enjoy hands-on work, and the best part is you get to see what you’ve built at the end of the day, which is really satisfying.
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Liam’s Answer

Something that gets overlooked in construction is how much time management really matters in construction. Your foundation must be set first, the supporting walls must go up next, your roof then can go up. A construction job is essentially coordinating those three things along with a dozen other trades that will all build out one part of the building or building system. As a welder, you will likely be the second or third trade on the job. You will erect walls and structures and essentially pin them in place. You will likely be the one being told when it is ok to start your part of the job. As a foreman, coordinator, estimator, or project manager, you will likely be telling others when they can start a part of a job based on what your welders have done.
There is a high likeliness that you will do trade school to become a welder, I highly recommend getting a start there. When you are a welder, if you can manage your time well, get a construction management degree and start to try to move up within your company. When you learn how to run a job and you know how to move business as well, now you are in a real interesting and competitive space.
If you have patience, there is opportunity to help newer people enter the trades. I would recommend saving this for later in your career. Get your start in the union, finish trade school and get to a foreman level. Then get a degree or professional certificate. Then when you have made your money and want to have a slower exiting career, go back to the union and teach. I know many people that have had a career like this and are satisfied with where they ended up!
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