2026-03-12

Reason #64: Four Years of Calculus to Stand Next to a Plumber

Earlier this year Sander van't Noordende, global CEO of Randstad, the largest staffing company on earth, told Fortune that young people should stop chasing office careers and learn a trade instead. When he listed the roles in demand, he named "skilled trades, mechanical engineers, machine operators, maintenance engineers, forklift drivers, truck drivers" (Royle, 2026). One list. One breath. No comma separating you from the forklift driver.

That is how the world's biggest labor clearinghouse categorizes your profession. Not alongside software engineers or data scientists. Between skilled trades and machine operators. See Reason #16. The man whose company places half a million workers a week filed your degree in the same demand bucket as jobs that require a CDL or a two-year apprenticeship. His advice to young people was blunt: stop following your passions, learn a craft or a trade, make a living. He was not talking about your profession as separate from that advice. He was including it.

He is not wrong about the demand. He is revealing how employers see you. The engineering staffing segment alone is a $10.4 billion market, and the temporary and contract share of all U.S. recruitment revenue sits near 89% (PGC Group, 2024). ASME has noted that mechanical engineering is "particularly well suited to contract placements" because projects surge and recede (Puente, 2023). That is not how you describe a profession. That is how you describe a trade with seasonal swings. See Reason #45.

The physical reality matches the classification. Your work is plant-bound, shift-adjacent, and tied to production calendars, see Reason #20. The dedicated technician layer that once separated the engineer from the floor is thinning. Companies that used to keep a tech on the fixture and an engineer on the drawing now want one person doing both. You troubleshoot the rig, then write the deviation, then update the model, then argue about the torque table. The hands-on work that belonged to a two-year graduate is now folded into your job description, but your salary does not reflect a second role. It reflects a plateau, see Reason #27.

Meanwhile the trades are closing the gap from below. A master plumber in a mid-cost metro clears $85,000 with zero tuition debt and a two-year ramp. A journeyman electrician on a data center corridor pushes past $100,000 with overtime. You spent four years on thermodynamics and $120,000 in tuition to land in the same demand bracket, on the same style of contract, listed on the same staffing requisition next to the same set of trades.

Nobody held a meeting and voted to reclassify mechanical engineering. It happened one requisition at a time. Hourly postings where salary used to be. Contract terms where permanent used to be. Hands on the fixture where a tech used to be. The CEO of Randstad did not cause this. He just said it out loud.


References: 

PGC Group. (2024, December 3). US staffing industry 2023 in review & trends to watch in 2024. https://pgcgroup.com/blog/us-staffing-industry-2023-in-review-and-trends-to-watch-in-2024

Puente, J. (2023, December 21). Contract staffing is popular, but has its downsides. ASME. https://www.asme.org/topics-resources/content/contract-staffing-is-popular%2C-but-has-its-downsides

Royle, O. R. (2026, January 6). The college-to-office path is dead: CEO of the world's biggest recruiter says Gen Z grads need to consider trade and hospitality jobs that don't even require degrees. Fortune. https://fortune.com/2026/01/06/college-to-office-path-dead-ceo-randstad-recruiter-gen-z-millennial-grads-trade-jobs/


A 1930s sedan with brooms lashed to its front bumper as a makeshift street sweeper, a man watching and grinning.


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Reason #64: Four Years of Calculus to Stand Next to a Plumber

Earlier this year Sander van't Noordende, global CEO of Randstad, the largest staffing company on earth, told Fortune that young people ...