What if the real workforce problem isn't recruiting — it's that we're handing young people tools before we've taught them how to live? Herb Sargent, recently retired CEO and Board Chair of Sargent Corporation, has spent decades proving there's a better way.
Herb watched a man named Freedom — a 70-year-old truck driver shuffling between offices and a trailer he lived in — and made a decision: nobody who works for Sargent Corporation would retire without dignity. That commitment turned into a full workforce development system that teaches budgeting, retirement planning, soft skills, and career pathways — before a single shovel hits the ground.
Herb Sargent is the recently retired CEO and Board Chair of Sargent Corporation, a 100% employee-owned civil construction company founded in Maine in 1926. Under his leadership, Sargent grew to 550+ employee-owners, built a construction academy that helped grow their under-25 workforce from 10% to 25%, and achieved 1 million injury-free man-hours through a single five-second mindset shift.
If you lead a trades company, run a workforce development program, or are trying to recruit and retain Gen Z workers, this conversation is exactly what you need to hear.
IN THIS EPISODE
(00:00) – Legacy Before We Begin: Herb opens with the question he asks every veteran worker — what do you want your legacy to be — and it reframes the entire episode.
(06:00) – Life Skills Before Job Skills: Herb explains how COVID exposed a generation that never worked at McDonald's, and why Sargent Corporation decided to meet new hires where they are — budgeting, financial literacy, and retirement planning first.
(13:00) – The Freedom Story: The truck driver named Freedom — shuffling to his trailer at 70 years old — became the moment that defined Herb's mission to ensure every employee retires with dignity.
(20:00) – Take Five: How one question ("what else could I do that takes the guesswork out of it?") transformed Sargent's safety culture and drove a full million man-hours without a lost time injury.
(30:00) – Welcome vs. Belonging: There's a difference between showing someone where the fridge is and making them feel like they belong. Herb explains the onboarding and mentorship system that keeps Gen Z workers engaged and growing.
(42:00) – Sources, Not Resources: Herb shares how reframing veteran operators as sources — not just resources — and asking them about their legacy turned the most resistant employees into the best mentors on the jobsite.
Key Takeaways
Teaching life skills — budgeting, financial planning, how to show up — before job skills is not soft, it's strategic: workers who understand how to build a life stay longer, perform better, and retire with dignity.
The "Take Five" approach — asking workers to pause five seconds and ask "what else could I do that removes the guesswork?" — is simple enough to use every day and powerful enough to drive one million injury-free man-hours.
Welcome and belonging are not the same thing: welcome is showing someone where the fridge is, belonging is sharing expectations, giving them a voice, and checking in at 30, 60, and 90 days so they always know where they stand.
Legacy framing transforms resistant veterans into invested mentors — when you ask an experienced operator what they want their legacy to be, most have never thought about it, and the answer changes how they show up for the next generation.
About the Guest
Herb Sargent is the recently retired CEO and Board Chair of Sargent Corporation, a civil construction company founded by his grandfather in Orono, Maine in 1926. Over his career, Herb worked every role in the company before eventually buying it back and transitioning it to 100% employee ownership. Under his leadership, Sargent grew to 550+ employee-owners and became recognized across the Northeast for its workforce development and safety culture.
Herb is the creator of Sargent's Construction Academy and the "Take Five" safety program, and has dedicated the later part of his career to ensuring every tradesperson — from laborer to superintendent — has the life skills, financial literacy, and mentorship they need to build a meaningful career and retire with dignity.
Keywords
skilled trades workforce, construction workforce development, life skills for trades workers, Gen Z in construction, trades mentorship, employee ownership, construction safety, workforce pipeline, career pathways in construction, trades career development, labor shortage, jobsite culture, apprenticeship, employee retention, Herb Sargent, Sargent Corporation, The Lost Art of the Skilled Trades
RESOURCE LINKS
Herb Sargent on LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/herb-sargent-29a791152/
Sargent Corporation Website: https://www.sargent.us
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