The Market Is Moving. Are You?
Australia's industrial sectors are deep into a hiring surge that shows no sign of slowing. From WA's first locally-built electric articulated buses rolling off the production line to MCi Carbon's world-first carbon refinery opening in Newcastle with up to 50 skilled jobs, and Austal backing additive manufacturing frameworks for maritime and defence — the opportunities are multiplying fast.
But here's the thing nobody tells you at the pub: a booming jobs market doesn't automatically mean you benefit. Workers who know how to position themselves — their tickets, their presentation, their timing — are the ones landing the better shifts, the permanent roles, and the pay rises. Workers who don't? They're stuck in the same loop, wondering why the good jobs keep going to someone else.
This guide is for the second group. Let's fix that.
Know What You're Worth (Then Ask for It)
One of the most common mistakes Australian trades and labour hire workers make is accepting whatever rate they're offered without knowing the market. Under the Fair Work Act 2009, every worker is entitled to at least the applicable Modern Award minimum — but in 2026, many employers are paying well above award rates to attract and keep good people.
Before your next conversation with a recruiter or employer, do your homework:
- Check your award. The Fair Work Commission publishes current pay rates for every Modern Award. Your classification matters — a Construction Worker Level 2 earns more than a Level 1, and that gap compounds over a career.
- Know your allowances. Industry allowances for leading hand, height, confined space, first aid, and tool use are often missed by workers who don't know to ask.
- Compare across industries. Logistics, construction, manufacturing, and mining all have different pay ceilings. If you hold tickets that transfer between sectors, you have more negotiating power than you realise.
For a current breakdown of what workers across your sector should be earning, check HBG's salary guide — it's updated regularly and covers construction, manufacturing, logistics, mining, and more.
Tickets Are Currency — Treat Them That Way
In Australian labour hire and trades, your licences and certifications are your most bankable asset. The right ticket opens doors that a great attitude alone cannot.
High-Value Tickets Worth Getting in 2026
- Construction Induction (White Card) — non-negotiable baseline for any site work
- Elevated Work Platform (EWP) — in demand across construction, warehousing, and maintenance
- Forklift Licence (LF) — still one of the highest-ROI tickets in logistics and manufacturing
- Dogman/Rigger — consistently among the highest-paid tickets on major civil and construction projects
- Confined Space and Working at Heights — increasingly required on industrial sites post–SafeWork audits
- Traffic Control — lower barrier to entry, strong demand, and often the foot in the door for broader site roles
With Australia's defence manufacturing sector expanding rapidly — as noted by Australian Manufacturing in coverage of Austal's additive manufacturing push — specialised certifications in welding, fitting, and precision manufacturing are also climbing in value.
Don't let your tickets expire. A lapsed white card or an out-of-date first aid certificate can cost you a shift — or worse, a job offer — at the worst possible time.
Labour Hire Isn't a Dead End — It's a Launch Pad
There's a persistent myth in the trades that labour hire is where careers go to stagnate. The reality in 2026 is the opposite.
Labour hire gives you:
Exposure across multiple sites and employers. In 12 months of labour hire work, you might build more practical experience — different equipment, different supervisors, different safety systems — than two years in a single permanent role.
The chance to audition. Most permanent placements in construction and manufacturing start as labour hire engagements. Showing up, performing well, and building relationships is how workers convert temporary gigs into long-term positions.
Flexibility with purpose. If you're upskilling or completing an apprenticeship, labour hire lets you maintain income while controlling your schedule in ways permanent employment often doesn't.
If you're ready to explore what's available right now, register as a candidate with Harrison Barratt Group to get matched with roles across NSW, QLD, VIC, WA, SA, and NZ.
What Stops Workers from Moving Up (And How to Fix It)
After placing thousands of workers across construction, manufacturing, logistics, and mining, HBG's recruiters see the same patterns repeatedly. Here are the career blockers that are entirely within your control:
1. No Paper Trail of Your Own Performance
Supervisors remember good workers, but they don't always pass that on. Start keeping a simple log of projects you've worked on, equipment you've operated, and supervisors who know your work. Reference names matter when you're going for a better role.
2. Showing Up to Inductions Unprepared
Induction failures are one of the most common reasons workers lose shifts before they've even started. Read the site-specific requirements before you arrive. Know your emergency procedures. Don't make the recruiter look bad — they control your next booking.
3. Not Telling Your Recruiter What You Actually Want
Recruiters can't read minds. If you want more hours, a specific industry, a role closer to home, or a pathway to permanent work — say so, directly. The workers who get the best opportunities are the ones who communicate clearly.
4. Treating Every Job as Temporary
Even in casual and labour hire roles, professionalism compounds. Foremen talk. Site managers compare notes. Your reputation in the industry is a long-running document that follows you from job to job.
The 2026 Sectors Worth Targeting
Not all growth is equal. Based on current project pipelines and hiring demand, these sectors are where Australian trades workers should be directing their attention:
- Construction and civil infrastructure — major public and private projects across every state, with NSW and QLD leading on pipeline volume
- Mining and resources — sustained demand, particularly in WA and QLD, with critical minerals projects adding new sites
- Defence and advanced manufacturing — a genuine long-term growth story, as Australian-made content requirements push local hiring
- Logistics and warehousing — e-commerce and supply chain reshoring continue to drive headcount across major distribution hubs
For workers considering a move into mining, HBG's mining workforce page outlines what qualifications and experience most employers are looking for right now.
What This Means for Your Career Right Now
- Audit your tickets today. Know what you hold, what's expiring, and what one new certification could unlock.
- Have a salary number in your head. Don't walk into a rate conversation cold. Know the award, know the market, and know your number.
- Use labour hire strategically. It's not a fallback — it's a tool. Use it to build experience, relationships, and options.
- Talk to your recruiter like a partner, not a service desk. The workers who move fastest are the ones who treat the relationship as two-way.
Harrison Barratt Group places trades and labour hire workers across construction, manufacturing, logistics, mining, and more — in every major Australian state and NZ. Whether you're chasing your next shift or planning your next career move, our team works to match you with employers where you'll actually thrive. Register as a candidate today, or explore our permanent recruitment options if you're ready for something more long-term.