If you’re a project manager in commercial construction, you already know the skilled labor shortage isn’t just slowing things down—it’s threatening your budget, schedule, and success. Crews are stretched thin, delays are compounding, and you’re left managing chaos that wasn’t in the plans.
At Harold Brothers, we’ve supported hundreds of complex commercial builds across Massachusetts and New England. With over 250 full-time, highly trained technicians, we’ve seen firsthand how labor challenges can derail even the best-laid plans—and how the right strategy can prevent that from happening.
In this article, you’ll learn how today’s labor shortage impacts construction projects, what red flags to watch for, and how early manpower planning can keep your schedule—and sanity—intact.
Over the past few years, the construction industry has seen a major shift. While demand for new buildings has stayed strong, the number of trained workers hasn’t kept up. Skilled tradespeople are retiring faster than they’re being replaced, and younger workers are entering the field more slowly.
This gap is creating problems across the board:
This isn’t just happening on huge, multi-million-dollar jobs. It’s happening on schools, healthcare facilities, retail projects—everywhere. And it’s forcing project managers to rethink how and when they plan for labor.
Most project managers start thinking about staffing after subcontractors are awarded. But in today’s labor market, that might be too late.
You should begin labor conversations during the preconstruction phase—when you’re reviewing bids and finalizing scopes. Why? Because if a subcontractor can’t promise enough manpower to meet your schedule, you need to know before you commit to them.
Here are a few smart questions to ask early:
Asking these questions early helps uncover potential problems before they affect your timeline. It also shows subcontractors that you’re thinking ahead and expecting them to do the same.
Not all subcontractors are struggling. Some have done the hard work to build strong, reliable crews, and those are the partners you want on your job.
So, what does strong staffing look like?
When a subcontractor shows up with a full, experienced team, it’s a win for everyone. The job moves faster, coordination between trades is easier, and the quality of work goes up. It also creates a safer site, because crews aren’t being rushed or overworked.
As a project manager, you can’t control the labor market, but you can adjust your approach to reduce risk.
Here are a few things you can do:
Don’t wait until construction starts to ask about manpower. Bring it up during bid reviews and interviews.
Ask about average crew size, backup labor sources, and current workload. Subcontractors who can’t answer these questions clearly may not be ready to take on your project.
Ask each awarded subcontractor to provide a staffing forecast before mobilization. This helps identify whether the project is likely to be understaffed, and gives you time to adjust.
Subcontractors who train apprentices, offer career growth, and treat employees well are more likely to keep their best people—and send them to your job.
Yes, labor is tight. But that doesn’t mean you need to accept poor planning or unkept promises. Be clear about expectations and hold subcontractors accountable for the staffing they commit to.
Let’s be honest: in today’s construction world, it’s rare for every trade to show up with a full crew, on time, every time. But there’s a difference between reasonable adjustments and avoidable chaos.
You want subcontractors who:
And as a PM, you want to be able to flag problems early, set realistic expectations, and build schedules that match the actual labor available, not the ideal one on paper.
When a subcontractor is well-staffed and organized, they reduce risk, not add to it. You get:
That’s why labor planning isn’t just a hiring conversation—it’s a project strategy. And the best project managers know how to spot a sub that brings more than just bodies to the job—they bring certainty.
The skilled labor shortage isn’t going away, but your project doesn’t have to suffer because of it. By planning ahead and working with subcontractors who prioritize workforce development, you reduce delays, improve jobsite safety, and protect your timeline.
Smart project managers are shifting how they think about labor—treating it as a core risk factor to be managed from day one, not a line item to check off later. The good news? You don’t have to do it alone.
At Harold Brothers, we believe that manpower planning starts in preconstruction. Our Design-Build and Design-Assist services allow us to coordinate staffing early, build realistic schedules, and follow through with the people we promise—every time.
Want to avoid the staffing surprises that hold up your project?
Request a quote or explore our Design-Build services to see how Harold Brothers can keep your next job moving smoothly.