Government funding is obviously important but it is only by going into schools, mentoring potential recruits and making practical experience more widely available alongside formal education that the construction industry will change perceptions and open up the sector to the talent of the future 

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Trainee QS Elliot Smith and Dan Lewis, construction director at The Momentum Group

With £600m pledged to train 60,000 workers by 2029, the construction industry has a chance to close its widening skills gap. But funding alone is not enough, and real change must come from within.

Dan Lewis, construction director at The Momentum Group, heading up Momentum Build, has built his career through hands-on training and now champions industry outreach, teaching students about careers in construction. He was joined by Elliot Smith, a university student and trainee quantity surveyor at The Momentum Group, who blends academic learning with practical site experience.

Together, they discussed why the sector itself must generate the momentum for change.

Dan Lewis, construction director, The Momentum Group, writes…

This year, the chancellor Rachel Reeves announced a £600m investment in the construction sector, aimed at training 60,000 skilled workers by 2029. This move acknowledges a pressing issue: the shortage of skilled labour, which is a major barrier to fulfilling the government’s pledge to “get Britain building again”. Thousands of job vacancies remain unfilled, a situation worsened by the lingering impact of covid and the UK’s ongoing housing shortage.

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Dan Lewis is construction director at Momentum Build. His career has been shaped by hands-on training and a clear progression pathway through the industry

While this investment will be vital, especially as the industry recovers from recent challenges, we must first address something more foundational: the narrative surrounding construction. Before any money can be effectively injected, we need to rebuild how people view the sector.

As someone who has spent their entire career in construction, I know the difference that mentoring and practical experience can make. I began my journey at 16 with a mentor who guided me through a two-year ONC (National Certificate in Construction) course, a two-year HNC course and a three-year project management degree – all on a day-release basis while I worked on site.

What the industry needs now is not just funding – it’s mentorships, practical training, and a grassroots shift in perception. The narrative around construction must be led from within, by industry leaders at every level

Dan Lewis

I didn’t begin with a degree; I started on-site, and that’s where I truly learnt. That kind of grounded introduction is what inspired me to stay in this industry. It’s a model that works, but it’s one that we risk losing if we don’t make it visible and accessible to young people.

What the industry needs now is not just funding – it’s mentorships, practical training, and a grassroots shift in perception. The narrative around construction must be led from within, by industry leaders at every level.

More conversations, more visibility, more storytelling – that’s how we start engaging young people with apprenticeships and career opportunities. It’s not just the government’s role to promote these paths. It’s also ours.

At The Momentum Group, this is a responsibility we have embraced. We have partnered with Southport College, attended school fairs, offered on-site experiences, and created placements for students from underprivileged backgrounds or who are neurodivergent through our partnership with Strawberry Field.

We bring this narrative to life internally too through “Young Momentum”, our initiative in which younger team members share their career journeys and growth in the industry.

Why do we do this? Because this is how we change perceptions. If we want to secure the future of UK construction, we need to inspire the next generation. That means walking into schools and showing students that construction is not just about hard hats and muddy boots.

Once we have built this understanding and inspired a new wave of talent, only then should we talk about wider government investment. Because, when the sector itself leads the charge, that investment will be far more impactful.

Elliot Smith, trainee quantity surveyor, The Momentum Group, writes…

When I first started thinking about career options, construction was not even on my radar. Like many people my age, when I thought of construction, I pictured the usual stereotype – hard hats and tools. I had no idea what a quantity surveyor even did. It took a suggestion from my chemistry tutor for me to even investigate it.

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Elliott Smith is a trainee quantity surveyor at the Momentum Group who is currently combining university study with practical training

What was missing for me was exposure. I had not been shown what the industry offered or the variety of roles available. And, more importantly, I hadn’t heard a narrative from anyone in the sector. I knew nothing about the pathways, apprenticeships or career possibilities that existed within construction.

When I reached out to The Momentum Group for experience, everything changed. They were quick to respond and offered real-world exposure and mentorship from Dan.

No lecture compares to standing within a live site, engaging with clients and seeing how decisions affect a build in real time. It gave purpose to my education

Elliot Smith

Now, I am a university student training with The Momentum Group, balancing academic study with practical industry experience. My placement year has completely transformed how I see the sector.

No lecture compares to standing within a live site, engaging with clients and seeing how decisions affect a build in real time. It gave purpose to my education.

This experience – getting thrown into the deep end – was key to reshaping my perception of construction. I saw that quantity surveying and the industry are filled with potential that I never knew existed.

Mentorship and peer support also showed me how important it is for the industry to make itself more visible. Momentum’s outreach is great, but we need more companies to follow that lead.

Government funding is valuable, but it cannot work in isolation. We need industry leaders to drive visibility and inspire the next generation.

As I grow in this industry and hopefully mentor others one day, I want to see a shared effort, not just in terms of funding, but in cultural change. With stronger school partnerships, practical training and more visible role models, we can make construction a career of choice, not a fallback.