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Your name moves faster than your resume in construction, and that truth can either build your future or quietly close doors behind you. We dive into the art of climbing without burning bridges—how to pursue responsibility, income, and influence while protecting the relationships that outlast every project.
We start by separating gratitude from loyalty. You do not owe a company forever, but you do owe people respect for the role they played in your growth. From there, we unpack the most common ways bridges burn—messy exits, public complaints, and mishandled client transitions—and offer practical tools to avoid them. You will hear why becoming undeniable in your current role beats chasing a title, how to recognize informal power on a job, and the difference between rising from strength versus running from frustration.
We also explore leverage the right way. Recruiters will call and owners will hint at advancement, but measured choices keep your runway clear. We talk about building horizontal relationships—peer respect among superintendents, PMs, and field crews—so your base is wide, not wobbly. When it is time to move, you will know how to give notice, manage handoffs, protect clients, and thank the people who mattered. And if you stay, we name the traits that actually get you promoted: reliability, clear communication, calm problem solving, and true ownership.
By the end, you will have a playbook for reputation equity—the quiet currency that gets your name requested on bids and projects. Ambition is welcome here; carelessness is not. Subscribe, share with a teammate who is eyeing their next step, and leave a review with your best tip for leaving well. What do you wish you had done differently on your last move?
If you're a military veteran in the construction industry, or you're in the construction industry and support our military vets, and you'd like to be a guest on the podcast you can find me at [email protected] , or send me a message on LinkedIn. You can find me there at Scott Friend. Let's share the stories and motivate others!
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By The Construction Veteran5
99 ratings
Send us a Message!
Your name moves faster than your resume in construction, and that truth can either build your future or quietly close doors behind you. We dive into the art of climbing without burning bridges—how to pursue responsibility, income, and influence while protecting the relationships that outlast every project.
We start by separating gratitude from loyalty. You do not owe a company forever, but you do owe people respect for the role they played in your growth. From there, we unpack the most common ways bridges burn—messy exits, public complaints, and mishandled client transitions—and offer practical tools to avoid them. You will hear why becoming undeniable in your current role beats chasing a title, how to recognize informal power on a job, and the difference between rising from strength versus running from frustration.
We also explore leverage the right way. Recruiters will call and owners will hint at advancement, but measured choices keep your runway clear. We talk about building horizontal relationships—peer respect among superintendents, PMs, and field crews—so your base is wide, not wobbly. When it is time to move, you will know how to give notice, manage handoffs, protect clients, and thank the people who mattered. And if you stay, we name the traits that actually get you promoted: reliability, clear communication, calm problem solving, and true ownership.
By the end, you will have a playbook for reputation equity—the quiet currency that gets your name requested on bids and projects. Ambition is welcome here; carelessness is not. Subscribe, share with a teammate who is eyeing their next step, and leave a review with your best tip for leaving well. What do you wish you had done differently on your last move?
If you're a military veteran in the construction industry, or you're in the construction industry and support our military vets, and you'd like to be a guest on the podcast you can find me at [email protected] , or send me a message on LinkedIn. You can find me there at Scott Friend. Let's share the stories and motivate others!
Support the show