Lowe's (LOW) CEO Marvin Ellison has a reality check for Silicon Valley. The home improvement chain is committing $250 million over the next 10 years to recruit and train 250,000 skilled tradespeople across plumbing, carpentry, and electrical work.
Ellison's pitch is short and sharp. "AI can't climb a ladder to change the batteries in your smoke detector," he told Fortune, adding that AI also cannot "change your furnace filter, clean your dryer vent, or repair a hole on your roof."
The Numbers Behind the Pitch
Associated Builders and Contractors, working with Bureau of Labor Statistics data, says the U.S. needs 349,000 new skilled trades workers just to meet 2026 demand. Since late 2024, specialty trade contractors have added only 95,000 jobs, which leaves a gap big enough to stall housing construction and home renovation projects.
By the numbers:
- 92% of construction firms say they are struggling to find qualified talent.
- 47% of skilled tradespeople now out-earn the median college graduate.
- $250 million is the size of Lowe's 10-year training commitment.
Ellison's Bigger Point
Ellison himself holds an MBA, which makes the framing more interesting. He said Lowe's "believes strongly in the future of AI," but in a world where administrative and analytical work gets automated, "the skilled trades initiative is going to be even more important here in the near future."
Some of Ellison's own executives are steering their kids toward trades to avoid student debt, according to his comments. That is a shift from five years ago, when a bachelor's degree was still the default path for most middle-class families.
Why It Matters for Markets
If Ellison is right, the next decade could reward physical skills more than degrees. That would support home improvement retailers, trade-focused staffing firms, and vocational education providers, while reshaping how Americans think about the "safe" career path.
Lowe's is not abandoning AI inside its own operations. The company is still using it for inventory, customer service, and supply chain planning, but its 10-year bet on people signals how management reads the labor market.
The Training Pipeline
The Lowe's Foundation will partner with technical colleges, high schools, and nonprofit trade organizations to route students into programs. Graduates will be steered toward both independent contractors and Lowe's own Pro network, which serves the customer base Lowe's most wants to grow.
That structure quietly turns the training investment into a long-term pipeline for Lowe's Pro sales, since trained contractors are more likely to buy supplies from the company that trained them. It is a decade-long customer acquisition play dressed up as workforce development.
What to Watch
The open question is how many of the 250,000 new tradespeople actually finish programs and reach the field. Completion rates in trade pipelines have historically been uneven, and that will determine whether this is a real labor-market move or a branding play.
Home Depot's response will also matter, because any matching commitment from its larger rival would reshape the training funding landscape overnight.
