The career arc in electrical is hardwired: apprentice, journeyman, master electrician, business owner. The master electrician license is simultaneously a professional credential and a business license - the incentive structure pushes the best operators toward independence, not platform employment. This is not a cultural quirk. It is a structural fact. The sector produces approximately 239,000 electrician-owned businesses. It produces very few institutional leaders.
At the same time, the demand story is unlike anything in the trades. Microsoft's president called the electrician shortage the number one problem slowing data center expansion. Data center power demand is set to nearly triple by 2030. The CHIPS Act has catalysed $400 billion in semiconductor manufacturing - each new fab requires electrical infrastructure equivalent to a small city. Grid modernisation, EV infrastructure, and reshoring are running simultaneously. The platforms that own licensed electricians at scale own the infrastructure build of this decade.
PE knows this. Financial buyers now account for 75 percent of all electrical contractor M&A - up from 52 percent in 2019. Yet consolidation is still in its earliest stages: the top 50 firms control less than 20 percent of a $200 billion market. The runway is measured in decades. The bottleneck is not capital or deal flow. It is finding leaders who can bridge trade culture and institutional execution at PE speed.