MeyerFire
  • Blog
  • Forum
  • THE TOOLKIT
    • SUBMIT AN IDEA
    • BACKFLOW DATABASE*
    • CLEAN AGENT ESTIMATOR*
    • CLOUD CEILING CALCULATOR
    • DOMESTIC DEMAND*
    • FIRE FLOW CALCULATOR*
    • FIRE PUMP ANALYZER*
    • FIRE PUMP DATABASE*
    • FRICTION LOSS CALCULATOR
    • HANGER SPACER*
    • IBC TRANSLATOR*
    • K-FACTOR SELECTOR*
    • NFPA 13 EDITION TRANSLATOR ('19 ONLY)
    • NFPA 13 EDITION TRANSLATOR ('99-'22)*
    • LIQUIDS ANALYZER*
    • OBSTRUCTION CALCULATOR
    • OBSTRUCTIONS AGAINST WALL*
    • PLUMBING FIXTURE COUNTS
    • QUICK RESPONSE AREA REDUCTION
    • REMOTE AREA ANALYZER*
    • SPRINKLER DATABASE*
    • SPRINKLER FLOW*
    • SYSTEM ESTIMATOR*
    • TEST & DRAIN CALCULATOR
    • THRUST BLOCK CALCULATOR
    • TRAPEZE CALCULATOR
    • UNIT CONVERTER
    • VOLUME & COMPRESSOR CALCULATOR
    • WATER STORAGE*
    • WATER SUPPLY (US)
    • WATER SUPPLY (METRIC)
  • UNIVERSITY
    • About
    • Catalog
    • CONTENT LIBRARY
  • PE Exam
    • PE Forum & Errata
    • PE Store
    • PE Tools
    • PE Prep Series
    • PE 100-Day Marathon
  • LOGIN
  • PRICING
    • SOFTWARE & TRAINING
    • STORE
  • THE CAUSE
    • ABOUT US
    • BECOME AN INSTRUCTOR
    • HELP/SUPPORT
Picture

Study: Why Do People Go Into Fire Protection?

10/5/2022

 
We ran an open-ended study about the why and how fire protection professionals get into the industry and the roles they are currently in.

This is our fourth dive into that data. In the upcoming week or two we’ll summarize and offer tips for business owners, recruiters, and HR professionals on where to look for future talent and how best to “make the pitch”.

WHY EXPLORE THIS
For one, we need more talent in the industry. More quality people mean better overall advocacy for the industry. We will never be recognized at a major discipline if there are far too few people to speak up for fire protection, much less if there’s hardly anyone to do the work.

So then, if we’re actively looking for help and looking to spot future potential – how do we “make that pitch?”

WHAT'S THE ALLURE TO THE INDUSTRY
What should we celebrate about the industry to people that don’t know about it?

Well, like we explored before, the best way to answer that is looking backwards at why we got into the industry in the first place.
 
We asked - as an open-ended question – why did you go into fire protection?

THE RESPONSE
We received 297 unique responses to this question.

Many cited multiple reasons for entering the field. In total, we received 655 cited reasons why our group of 297 people entered the industry.

Now before we get to the full breakout, I’d like to offer a few special shout outs to unique reasons why some people got into the fire protection field. Here are a few of the favorites and important ones as well:

I went into fire protection because...
   ... of the TV Show “Emergency”.
   ... I wanted “to put the fire department out of business.”
   ...“of the beautiful receptionist at the company, whom I later dated.”
   ... “I visited an engineering firm and the engineers bored me to death. I didn’t want to go down that road so I checked into fire protection.”
   ... “after I broke up with the bosses daughter, I figured it was in my best interest to find other employment.” That’s why I got into fire protection.
 
Aside from unique causes, there are more noble ones that became a theme:
   “I wanted to contribute to safety for the people I was really passionate about, the elderly and kids.”
   “It was very interesting and is beneficial to society.”
   “I wanted to feel good about the work I did.”
   “Wanted to make a difference.”
   “I saw it as the way to make the greatest impact and least harm among other engineering disciplines.”
   “I wanted a career that matters.”
 
There were plenty of ‘nerdy’ responses (I say this being a part of that crowd):
   “I enjoyed hydraulic calculations.”
 
There were reasons related to people in the industry:
   “FPE students had a spirit of cooperation that was nonexistent in electrical engineering.”
   “The family, community spirit” of the industry.
 
There were also tragic reasons:
   “When I was 8-years old the house down from us burned down and a great family lost their home.”
   “Lost a brother and father to fire-related deaths.”
   “Our house burned down.”
 
THIRTY REASONS
In all, we could generally categorize each response in one of thirty categories. Many responses cited multiple reasons, so we categorized those under both.

Here are the top 15 reasons why people went into fire protection, broken down by the different industries.

ARCHITECTURAL & ENGINEERING
143 Responses; 229 reasons "why" they went into fire protection.
Top 15 Reasons Why Professionals in Architectural and/or Engineering Firms Went into Fire Protection:
Reason #
Reason for Going Into Fire Protection
No. Mentions (% Cited)
#1
Sounded Interesting
34 (24%)
#2
Open Job / Needed Job
27 (19%)
#3
Career / Advancement Opportunity
22 (15%)
#4
Make an Impact / Save Lives
19 (13%)
#5
Fun / Enjoyable / Rewarding
14 (10%)
#6
Job Requirement / Part of Job Responsibility
14 (10%)
#7
In-Demand Industry / Industry Needed People
11 (8%)
#8
Aligned with My Skillset
11 (8%)
#9
Unique / Niche / Specialized Industry
10 (7%)
#10
Money / Pay
9 (6%)
#11
By Accident
8 (6%)
#12
Job Security / Stability
8 (6%)
#13
Impact the Industry / Improve the Industry
5 (3%)
#14
Challenge / Challenging
4 (3%)
#15
By Recommendation
4 (3%)
-
Other Reasons
29 (< 3% each)
CONTRACTORS
178 Responses; 238 reasons.

Top 15 Reasons Why Professionals in Contracting Went into Fire Protection:
Reason #
Reason for Going Into Fire Protection
No. Mentions (% Cited)
#1
Open Job / Needed Job
52 (29%)
#2
Sounded Interesting
26 (15%)
#3
Career / Advancement Opportunity
20 (11%)
#4
​Fun / Enjoyable / Rewarding
16 (9%)
#5
Money / Pay
14 (8%)
#6
Because of Family
13 (7%)
#7
Aligned with My Skillset
12 (7%)
#8
By Recommendation
9 (5%)
#9
Needed New Career Path
8 (4%)
#10
Job Security / Stability
8 (4%)
#11
Challenge / Challenging
7 (4%)
#12
Make an Impact / Save Lives
7 (4%)
#13
Unique / Niche / Specialized Industry
7 (4%)
#14
Avoiding Other Jobs
6 (3%)
#15
Job Requirement / Part of Job Responsibility
6 (3%)
-
Other Reasons
27 (< 3% each)

If you recall back to the first couple parts of this study, you can see the influence of family (24%), friends (19%) as reasons people first heard about fire protection. If that’s a big contributor for awareness of the industry, then it would also jive that many in contracting got into the industry because of these same influences. "Because of Family" ranked as the #6 reasons why those in contracting got into fire protection, which didn't show up at all in Architectural and/or Engineering firm circles.

AHJ & GOVERNMENT
64 respondents, 178 reasons.
Top 15 Reasons Why AHJ & Government Roles Went into Fire Protection:
Reason #
Reason for Going Into Fire Protection
No. Mentions (% Cited)
#1
Make an Impact / Save Lives
15 (23%)
#2
Sounded Interesting
12 (19%)
#3
Career / Advancement Opportunity
10 (16%)
#4
Aligned with My Skillset
9 (14%)
#5
Open Job / Needed Job
8 (13%)
#6
​Fun / Enjoyable / Rewarding
7 (11%)
#7
Couldn't Get Job of Choice
7 (11%)
#8
Needed New Career Path
6 (9%)
#9
​Challenge / Challenging
5 (8%)
#10
Job Requirement / Part of Job Responsibility
5 (8%)
#11
Wanted to Serve
3 (5%)
#12
Money / Pay
2 (3%)
#13
By Recommendation
2 (3%)
#14
Job Security / Stability
2 (3%)
#15
To Learn New Things
2 (3%)
-
Other Reasons
13 (< 3% each)
TAKEAWAYS

#1 Wide-Range of Responses
I think my favorite part of combing through this was seeing the variety of reasons why people went into fire protection. I would have guessed that the reasoning could have been categorized in maybe five or six reasons, but it's much more nuanced than that. 

In reading through responses, things like "the challenge" versus "learning something new" and "sounded interesting" are very much in the same vein, or similar source, but they're different and a little more nuanced than that.

Things like "job security" and "job stability" can be tied together, they're very related, but many people cited how the industry is "unique", "niche", and "specialized". That's different than saying the industry is "diverse" or "has a wide range of work". 

What were the others reasons that didn't crack the Top 15 lists? They were:
  • Because of Location / Didn't Want to Move / Wanted Remote Work
  • Passionate / Cooperative People
  • There was Little Training Required
  • Diverse / Wide Range of Work
  • Job Benefits
  • Personal Loss
  • To Preserve Old Buildings
  • Because of a TV Show
  • Wanted to Date Someone

#2 Many Motivators Other than Money
To be honest, I thought career potential, salary and benefits would rank a whole lot higher than they have. Job benefits didn't crack the Top 15 reasons for any group, and Money / Pay only ever reached as high as Reason #5 why people entered fire protection. I would have guessed it to rank much higher. 

#3 Think about "The Pitch"
Think about the opportunity you might have to talk to someone new about going into fire protection.

What 'angle' do you take?

What reasons resonate for you? Do those reasons match up with the majority?

If you're looking to craft your reasoning why someone should hop into fire protection - wherever that happens to be - consider first where you are (what type of organization you're in), and then check out the top reasons. Chances are if you can quickly cite those top three-to-five reasons why people go into fire protection, then you may have that 'hook' that helps your case.


I hope this has been interesting. Feel free to shoot me an email or comment below with your own thoughts & takeaways. 

- Joe
    Picture
    Why Sponsor?

    ALL-ACCESS

    Picture
    GET THE TOOLKIT

    SUBSCRIBE

    Get Free Articles via Email:
    + Get calculators, tools, resources and articles
    + Get our PDF Flowchart for Canopy & Overhang Requirements instantly
    Picture
    + No spam
    ​+ Unsubscribe anytime
    I'm Interested In:

    AUTHOR

    Joe Meyer, PE, is a Fire Protection Engineer out of St. Louis, Missouri who writes & develops resources for Fire Protection Professionals. See bio here: About


    FILTERS

    All
    Announcements
    Book Review
    Calculators
    Career
    Course
    Design Challenge
    Fire Alarm
    Fire Events
    Fire Suppression
    Flammable & Combustible Liquids
    Flexible Drops
    Floor Control Valve
    Life Safety
    News
    NICET
    Passive Fire Protection
    PE Exam
    Products
    Site Updates
    Special Hazards
    Sprinkler Systems
    Standpipes
    Tools
    Videos


    ARCHIVES

    January 2023
    December 2022
    November 2022
    October 2022
    September 2022
    August 2022
    May 2022
    April 2022
    March 2022
    February 2022
    January 2022
    November 2021
    October 2021
    September 2021
    August 2021
    July 2021
    June 2021
    May 2021
    April 2021
    March 2021
    February 2021
    December 2020
    November 2020
    October 2020
    August 2020
    July 2020
    June 2020
    May 2020
    April 2020
    March 2020
    February 2020
    January 2020
    December 2019
    November 2019
    October 2019
    September 2019
    August 2019
    July 2019
    June 2019
    May 2019
    April 2019
    March 2019
    February 2019
    January 2019
    December 2018
    November 2018
    October 2018
    September 2018
    August 2018
    July 2018
    June 2018
    May 2018
    April 2018
    March 2018
    February 2018
    January 2018
    December 2017
    November 2017
    October 2017
    September 2017
    August 2017
    July 2017
    May 2017
    April 2017
    September 2016
    August 2016
    July 2016
    June 2016
    July 2015
    June 2015
    May 2015

    RSS Feed

Picture
​Home
Our Cause
The Blog
The Forum
PE Exam Prep
The Toolkit

MeyerFire University
​Pricing
Login
​Support
Contact Us
Picture

MeyerFire.com is a startup community built to help fire protection professionals shine.
Our goal is to improve fire protection practices worldwide. We promote the industry by creating helpful tools and resources, and by bringing together industry professionals to share their expertise.

​MeyerFire, LLC is an International Code Council Preferred Education Provider.

All text, images, and media ​Copyright © 2022 MeyerFire, LLC

We respect your privacy and personal data. See our Privacy Policy and Terms of Service. 
The views, opinions, and information found on this site represent solely the author and do not represent the opinions of any other party, nor does the presented material assume responsibility for its use. Fire protection and life safety systems constitute a critical component for public health and safety and you should consult with a licensed professional for proper design and code adherence.

Discussions are solely for the purpose of peer review and the exchange of ideas. All comments are reviewed. Comments which do not contribute, are not relevant, are spam, or are disrespectful in nature may be removed. Information presented and opinions expressed should not be relied upon as a replacement for consulting services. Some (not all) outbound links on this website, such as Amazon links, are affiliate-based where we receive a small commission for orders placed elsewhere.

  • Blog
  • Forum
  • THE TOOLKIT
    • SUBMIT AN IDEA
    • BACKFLOW DATABASE*
    • CLEAN AGENT ESTIMATOR*
    • CLOUD CEILING CALCULATOR
    • DOMESTIC DEMAND*
    • FIRE FLOW CALCULATOR*
    • FIRE PUMP ANALYZER*
    • FIRE PUMP DATABASE*
    • FRICTION LOSS CALCULATOR
    • HANGER SPACER*
    • IBC TRANSLATOR*
    • K-FACTOR SELECTOR*
    • NFPA 13 EDITION TRANSLATOR ('19 ONLY)
    • NFPA 13 EDITION TRANSLATOR ('99-'22)*
    • LIQUIDS ANALYZER*
    • OBSTRUCTION CALCULATOR
    • OBSTRUCTIONS AGAINST WALL*
    • PLUMBING FIXTURE COUNTS
    • QUICK RESPONSE AREA REDUCTION
    • REMOTE AREA ANALYZER*
    • SPRINKLER DATABASE*
    • SPRINKLER FLOW*
    • SYSTEM ESTIMATOR*
    • TEST & DRAIN CALCULATOR
    • THRUST BLOCK CALCULATOR
    • TRAPEZE CALCULATOR
    • UNIT CONVERTER
    • VOLUME & COMPRESSOR CALCULATOR
    • WATER STORAGE*
    • WATER SUPPLY (US)
    • WATER SUPPLY (METRIC)
  • UNIVERSITY
    • About
    • Catalog
    • CONTENT LIBRARY
  • PE Exam
    • PE Forum & Errata
    • PE Store
    • PE Tools
    • PE Prep Series
    • PE 100-Day Marathon
  • LOGIN
  • PRICING
    • SOFTWARE & TRAINING
    • STORE
  • THE CAUSE
    • ABOUT US
    • BECOME AN INSTRUCTOR
    • HELP/SUPPORT