UK construction output improved in February, and companies are putting more emphasis on upskilling existing staff than on relying on recruitment alone. The output increase suggests activity is still moving forward in a market that remains demanding.
Construction firms are increasingly treating upskilling as a practical operating choice rather than a secondary workforce issue. Hiring remains important, but recruitment in a tight market is expensive, slow and uncertain. New hires can also take time to integrate into site processes, compliance frameworks and delivery teams. Training existing staff is often a more direct way to fill capability gaps. It gives employers a better chance of improving productivity without adding the same level of execution risk.
Demand still exists across housing, infrastructure and retrofit work, but project delivery now sits alongside tighter expectations around quality, safety and compliance. Companies with stronger internal skills pipelines are likely to be better placed to meet deadlines, manage standards and protect client confidence.
Repeated external recruitment can push up labour costs without guaranteeing better delivery. Upskilling requires investment as well, but it can support retention, reduce churn and improve the usefulness of the workforce already in place. Over time, that can help companies defend margins more effectively than a constant search for new hires in a constrained market.
Hercules plc (LON:HERC) is a collaborative, innovative company delivering services of the highest standards within the Civil Engineering sector of the construction industry. Hercules Academy provides a comprehensive range of courses designed to equip individuals with the essential skills and knowledge required for a long and successful career in the construction industry.




































