The Industry Doesn’t Just Need Installers — It Needs Technicians
The commercial fire alarm industry is facing a growing shortage of qualified technicians.
Most companies already know this.
What many companies are only beginning to realize is that the problem may not simply be hiring — it may be development.
There is a major difference between:
- installing systems
- understanding systems
A real fire alarm technician eventually learns:
- troubleshooting methodology
- supervision concepts
- system behavior
- code awareness
- documentation discipline
- diagnostic thinking
- how to remain calm during complex service situations
These skills are rarely developed overnight.
They are usually built through:
- field experience
- mentorship
- repetition
- accountability
- exposure to real-world problems
Unfortunately, many companies no longer have enough experienced mentors to consistently develop the next generation of technicians.
At the same time, many strong technical candidates may not come directly from fire alarm backgrounds.
Some may come from:
- security systems
- industrial maintenance
- controls
- electrical
- networking
- low voltage technologies
The most important trait is often not existing fire alarm experience.
It is mindset.
The people worth investing in are usually the ones who:
- want to understand WHY
- take pride in workmanship
- troubleshoot logically
- ask questions
- stay calm under pressure
- care about doing things correctly
- are honest about what they know — and what they still need to learn
The life safety industry does not simply need more installers.
It needs more technicians.
And the companies that successfully mentor and develop technical talent internally will likely have a major advantage in the years ahead.
— BDT