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Lauri Rollings worked as a lawyer for 20 years before ending up in trade associations completely by accident.
A family member of a colleague was in need of emergency help with labor negotiations and she took the job not knowing anything about construction or apprenticeships.
What she found surprised her people learning skilled trades while getting paid, graduating with zero debt, and making six figures with benefits. She couldn't figure out why more people didn't know this path existed.
After running contractor associations in Milwaukee and Portland for a decade, she started consulting on leadership development because like many industries, nobody was training people to become the next leaders.
We talk about why the biggest myth she fights is that young people don't want to work hard, how skills from unexpected places like video games or music transfer to trades work, and why asking different interview questions reveals talent that doesn't fit the farm kid stereotype.
Highlights:Make sure to subscribe to Blue Collar BS where we explore how different generations approach work, leadership, and building careers in the trades. Every episode tackles the gap between what you're told should work and what actually works when you're running a business in the real world.
Get in touch with Lauri:
Website
Youtube
Get in touch with us:
Check out the Blue Collar BS website.
Steve Doyle:
Website
Brad Herda:
Website
By Brad Herda and Steve Doyle5
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Lauri Rollings worked as a lawyer for 20 years before ending up in trade associations completely by accident.
A family member of a colleague was in need of emergency help with labor negotiations and she took the job not knowing anything about construction or apprenticeships.
What she found surprised her people learning skilled trades while getting paid, graduating with zero debt, and making six figures with benefits. She couldn't figure out why more people didn't know this path existed.
After running contractor associations in Milwaukee and Portland for a decade, she started consulting on leadership development because like many industries, nobody was training people to become the next leaders.
We talk about why the biggest myth she fights is that young people don't want to work hard, how skills from unexpected places like video games or music transfer to trades work, and why asking different interview questions reveals talent that doesn't fit the farm kid stereotype.
Highlights:Make sure to subscribe to Blue Collar BS where we explore how different generations approach work, leadership, and building careers in the trades. Every episode tackles the gap between what you're told should work and what actually works when you're running a business in the real world.
Get in touch with Lauri:
Website
Youtube
Get in touch with us:
Check out the Blue Collar BS website.
Steve Doyle:
Website
Brad Herda:
Website