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A Profession at a Crossroads ā Too Few Recruits, Too Many Barriers
Thereās a storm quietly brewing in land surveyingāand it has nothing to do with weather. Itās the professionās slow-burning crisis: a pipeline thatās running dry. Across the country, surveying firms are struggling to find new talent. Technical schools are reporting low enrollment in geomatics programs. Licensure numbers are stagnatingāor declining. And the hard truth is this: if we donāt lower the drawbridge, the next generation simply wonāt cross into the field.
The demand for surveyors is real and rising. Infrastructure is aging. Boundaries are being challenged in growing numbers. Land development is accelerating. Municipalities are digitizing records and modernizing mapping systems. The opportunities are thereābut the workforce isnāt. And itās not because young people donāt want to work. Itās because surveying has quietly become one of the most expensive and convoluted professions to break intoāwithout the financial upside that justifies the cost.
Letās start with the basics. The path to becoming a licensed land surveyor is long, costly, and, in many states, inflexible. Youāll need a degreeāoften a four-year oneāfollowed by years of documented experience, multiple exams, and thousands in fees before youāre allowed to stamp your first plat. Add to that the cost of specialized software, field gear, and continuing education, and youāre looking at a career that asks for a heavy upfront investment. And whatās the starting pay in many regions? Just barely higher than entry-level construction or utility workādespite the responsibility and liability that comes with the job.
Meanwhile, the world has changed. Young professionals today are weighing career paths not just by prestige, but by accessibility, salary trajectory, and flexibility. They see that tech and engineering jobs offer faster entry, better pay, and fewer licensing barriers. So they follow the incentivesāand surveying gets left behind.
Thereās also a visibility problem. Ask the average high school student what a surveyor does, and youāre likely to get a blank stareāor a vague mention of construction. Surveying hasnāt told its story well. It hasnāt marketed itself as the high-tech, high-impact, future-facing profession that it actually is. And as a result, itās getting edged out in the talent war by flashier, better-funded industries.
But hereās the kicker: the surveying profession didnāt mean to build these barriers. They were erected over timeāpiece by piece, in the name of quality, safety, and professional rigor. And in many cases, those standards are essential. We canāt afford to lose accuracy, ethics, or expertise. But we can afford to rethink the journey it takes to get there.
Thatās where efforts like the LEARN platform come ināa system built specifically to lower the cost of entry, open up flexible learning paths, and connect aspiring surveyors with mentors who can guide them through the maze. LEARN isnāt just an education platformāitās a strategy for rebuilding the pipeline.
Surveying is at a crossroads. Either we make the profession more accessibleāor we watch it age out of existence. The next generation isnāt the problem. The barriers are. And now is the time to start tearing them down.
Sticker Shock ā The Financial Burden of Becoming a Surveyor
Ask any young person considering a career in land surveying whatās stopping them, and sooner or later the same issue comes up: cost. Not just tuition. Not just fees. The total price of admissionāeducation, equipment, software, licensing, certifications, and staying currentāadds up quickly. And when the return on investment doesnāt compare to what other fields offer? Thatās a deal-breaker.
Letās break it down.
First, thereās education. In many states, becoming a licensed surveyor requires a four-year degree in geomatics or a related field. In others, itās a two-year degree paired with several years of field experience. Either way, college costs moneyāa lot of it. With tuition, books, and living expenses, students can walk away with tens of thousands of dollars in debt before theyāve earned a dime. And unlike other professions with clearer pipelines to six-figure salaries, surveying rarely offers that kind of financial reboundāespecially early on.
Then come the licensing costs. The FS (Fundamentals of Surveying) exam. Application fees. State board registrations. The PS exam. Study materials. In total, these can run well over $2,000, depending on the state. And that doesnāt include travel, time off work to study, or the possibility of needing to retake an exam. Thatās a heavy lift for someone working entry-level wages just to stay afloat.
But the spending doesnāt stop once youāve passed the test. Surveyors are expected to maintain continuing education, pay for software licenses (which can run into the thousands annually), keep up with hardware upgrades, andāif youāre independent or running your own crewācover costs for liability insurance, vehicle maintenance, field gear, and data storage.
And letās not forget that many new surveyors are also required to purchase or at least become proficient with high-end software like AutoCAD Civil 3D, Trimble Business Center, or ESRIās ArcGISātools that often come with a learning curve and a hefty price tag.
Compare that to a young coder or GIS analyst who can learn tools online for free, get certified in months, and land a job paying $65K with zero licensure barriersāand you start to see why weāre losing the recruitment battle.
Hereās the painful irony: many of the most promising potential surveyors arenāt walking away because the work is unappealing. Theyāre walking away because the math doesnāt work. The cost of getting into the profession outweighs the benefitsāat least in the short term.
Thatās where initiatives like the LEARN platform come into play. By offering affordable, modular courses, PDH-certified content, and eventually free or discounted access to tools and simulators, LEARN is lowering the barrier to skill-building without saddling newcomers with unmanageable debt. Combined with mentorship opportunities and career path guidance, it provides an alternative routeāone thatās flexible, practical, and financially realistic.
If we want the next generation to join us, we have to make the numbers work. Because right now, surveying looks like an expensive uphill climb next to a dozen easier roads. And if weāre honest, thatās a problem we builtāand one we can fix.
Outpaced by Tech Fields ā Why Young Professionals Are Choosing Other Paths
If you were a 22-year-old with a knack for spatial thinking, a love for maps, and a desire to build the world around youāwhere would you go? Surveying might sound like a good fit. But when you weigh it against careers in software, GIS, or civil engineering, the decision becomes obvious to many: choose the path with higher pay, faster advancement, and fewer regulatory headaches.
In short, surveying is getting outcompeted.
The competition isnāt coming from where it used toāarchitecture, construction, or drafting. Itās coming from the exploding world of tech. Careers in GIS, remote sensing, UX design, and data visualization all appeal to the same skill sets as surveyingābut with better pay, faster growth, and modern workplace culture.
A GIS analyst can land a job after a 12-week bootcamp or a certificate from Coursera. A junior developer can learn Python and land a remote job with a flexible schedule and stock options. Civil engineers start with higher salaries and have a streamlined licensing path with stronger employer support. Surveying? It still tells young professionals to āpay your dues,ā āwork your way up,ā and wait five to seven years before theyāre allowed to make real decisions.
That doesnāt fly anymore.
The modern workforce is motivated by autonomy, mentorship, and momentum. They want a career where they can grow, make an impact, and feel respected from day one. Surveying, for all its technical brilliance and importance, often fails to project that image. Instead, itās seen as slow to evolve, overly bureaucratic, andāletās be honestāunderpaid.
This isnāt just perception. The data backs it up. Entry-level wages for survey techs often lag behind comparable tech jobs by $10Kā$20K annually. Licensing adds years to the timeline before one can fully practice, with little pay increase to show for it. And while modern surveyors do use cutting-edge toolsāGNSS, drones, LiDAR, 3D modelingāoutsiders rarely know that. Surveyingās image remains stuck in the 1980s.
And letās not forget diversity. Surveying has struggled to attract women, people of color, and first-generation professionals, in part because the profession hasnāt invested in outreach or partnerships that reflect the changing face of the workforce. Meanwhile, tech fields are actively recruiting diverse candidatesāand offering better pathways for them to thrive.
So how do we shift the momentum?
First, we need to tell a better story. Surveying is high-tech, impactful, and essential to everything from infrastructure to environmental protection. Itās a career that blends problem-solving with the outdoors, precision with purpose. But that message isnāt reaching classrooms, guidance counselors, or career changers.
Second, we need platforms that modernize accessālike LEARN. Through immersive, flexible, low-cost training, LEARN is helping new professionals experience the high-tech side of surveying early on. With AI-integrated simulators and tools designed to mimic real workflows, it brings surveying into the digital age without the red tape.
The next generation isnāt avoiding surveying because itās boring.
Theyāre avoiding it because weāve made it harder to access, harder to grow in, and harder to justify. If we want to change that, we need to act like the profession we really areānot the one the world thinks we still are.
Licensing Limbo ā When the Rules Push People Out
If you asked a room full of aspiring surveyors what part of the profession confuses or frustrates them the most, youād hear the same word over and over again: licensure. Not because they donāt believe in the need for professional standardsāmost understand and respect that. The frustration comes from the fact that the system is inconsistent, unclear, and, in many cases, outdated. What should be a clear pathway to becoming a licensed professional is more like an obstacle course full of gatekeeping, conflicting state requirements, and bureaucratic traps.
Letās start with the basics. In some states, you need a four-year degree in surveying or geomatics. In others, you can substitute a combination of experience and education. Some states require additional coursework in law or business. Others accept apprenticeships. Reciprocity between states? Spotty at best. And none of this includes the actual exams, which often vary in format, frequency, and focus depending on where you live.
Whatās worse is the sheer amount of time it takes. Many licensing paths require yearsāyearsāof supervised experience before youāre even allowed to sit for the Principles and Practice of Surveying (PS) exam. That means highly motivated professionals are left in limbo: skilled, working, and committedābut not officially licensed. Theyāre stuck in a holding pattern, often underpaid and undervalued, simply waiting to jump through one more hoop.
This extended timeline has consequences. Some drop out of the profession entirely, frustrated by the lack of upward mobility. Others pivot to adjacent fieldsāGIS, civil engineering, or even real estateāwhere they can advance faster and earn more without the red tape. And while we lose them, the profession loses diversity, youth, and the momentum it needs to thrive in the next decade.
Itās not about lowering the bar. Itās about making the process transparent, fair, and efficient. Licensure should reflect competency, not just time served. There should be multiple pathways for people with different backgroundsāveterans, tradespeople, autodidactsāto gain licensure through demonstrated skill and verified training. And states need to do a better job aligning their requirements so that professionals arenāt penalized for mobility.
This is where the LEARN platform offers a crucial solution. Rather than forcing aspiring professionals to wait years for institutional recognition, LEARN creates micro-credentials, field simulators, and guided learning tracks that provide practical training and validation of skills in real time. Itās not a replacement for licensureābut it fills the massive void between interest and authorization. It empowers learners, connects them with mentors, and builds a portfolio of real-world competencies that employers and boards can recognize and respect.
LEARN also functions as a kind of āpre-licensure acceleratorāāhelping candidates prepare for exams, understand the legal landscape, and navigate the idiosyncrasies of state requirements. It provides continuity in a process that too often breaks down.
Licensure is supposed to protect the public. But when the system becomes so convoluted that it pushes good people away, itās not protecting anyone.
Itās time we admit that the path to becoming a licensed surveyor is unnecessarily complexāand start building bridges instead of barriers.
The Experience Trap ā āNo Field Time, No Jobā vs. āNo Job, No Field Timeā
Itās one of the most common and demoralizing roadblocks for early-career surveyors: you need experience to get hired, but you need to get hired to gain experience. Welcome to the experience trapāthe paradox that keeps passionate, capable newcomers from ever gaining traction in the profession. And itās costing surveying more talent than we realize.
The message young professionals often hear goes something like this:
āYouāre not ready for fieldwork until youāve spent time in the field.ā
Read that again.
It sounds absurd because it is. But itās baked into the hiring culture of many firms. Managers want party chiefs who already know how to navigate terrain, operate total stations, troubleshoot GNSS hiccups, and manage field logistics. Understandable. But theyāre unwillingāor unequippedāto train the people who could become those experts in the first place. And so the cycle repeats: firms only hire experienced workers, and new professionals are forced to look elsewhere.
Meanwhile, field experience remains one of the most critical components of becoming a competent surveyor. No amount of coursework or software training can replace the lessons learned while setting up in the mud, chasing line-of-sight through the brush, or adjusting to shifting environmental conditions. These arenāt just skillsātheyāre instincts. And they canāt be gained in a classroom or a YouTube tutorial alone.
So where does that leave new entrants? Often frustrated. Theyāre left with unpaid internships, occasional ride-alongs, or entry-level positions that offer no path to meaningful field time. Worse, some are told to āgo get experienceā before applyingāwithout being told how or where to do that affordably. Itās no wonder many drift away from the profession entirely.
This is a failure of imagination, not capability. The profession needs to create structured, accessible, and intentional training opportunities for those who want to get their boots dirtyābut donāt know where to start.
Thatās why the LEARN platform is placing such a strong emphasis on field simulators and interactive fieldwork modules. These tools allow learners to practice everything from leveling routines to boundary line reconāwithout needing access to expensive equipment or job site liability waivers. Itās not just theoryāitās guided, replicable practice that prepares them for real-world conditions.
LEARN also connects learners with seasoned mentors and working surveyors who can provide opportunities to shadow, ask questions, and learn the ropes in a structured way. These micro-apprenticeships help fill the void where formal internships or training programs donāt exist. It turns passive learners into active apprenticesāeven if theyāre 1,000 miles from the nearest surveying school.
But the industry needs to do its part, too. Firms must recognize the long-term value of investing in green workers. That means creating entry-level roles that include deliberate field exposureānot just grunt work. It means rewarding those who teach, not just those who produce.
Surveying is a learn-by-doing profession. But when we block access to ādoing,ā we choke off the next generation before they even get started.
The talent is out there. Whatās missing is the pathway.
Fixing the Pipeline ā What the Profession Must Do Differently
Letās stop pretending the next generation is the problem. The interest is there. The capability is there. Whatās missing is a profession-wide commitment to meeting them where they are, and then building a bridge to where we want them to go. If weāre serious about saving surveying from a slow fade into obscurity, we need to fix the pipelineāintentionally, urgently, and with long-term vision.
So what does that actually look like?
1. Start Early and Often
If kids donāt hear the word āsurveyingā until theyāre 20, weāve already lost them. Outreach needs to begin in middle and high schools, using modern language and technology to show students that this isnāt some dusty legacy careerāitās a cutting-edge blend of engineering, data science, outdoor adventure, and legal detective work. Programs like LEARN can partner with educators to offer virtual workshops, gamified field modules, and youth-oriented āday in the lifeā content to demystify the field and spark curiosity early.
2. Break Down Financial Barriers
Weāve covered the cost problemāand now we need to solve it. That means more scholarships, more firm-sponsored stipends, and partnerships with state boards to subsidize licensing fees for those in their first five years. Companies should also offer loan repayment assistance or paid study time as incentives to keep talent in-house. Meanwhile, platforms like LEARN offer affordable alternatives to traditional coursework, slashing the financial burden of continuing education and professional development.
3. Create Clear, Flexible Career Paths
Not everyone enters the profession through the same doorāand thatās okay. The field needs multiple on-ramps: technical certifications, apprenticeships, degree-based programs, and military-to-career pathways. LEARNās modular credentialing allows newcomers to stack real skills and knowledge while still exploring where they fit within the profession. That flexibility is critical for attracting career changers, veterans, and those without access to four-year programs.
4. Invest in Mentorship, Not Just Manpower
The most powerful recruitment tool we have isnāt a job boardāitās a mentor. Experienced surveyors need to be empowered and incentivized to teach, train, and invest in the next wave. Firms should bake mentorship into performance reviews, bonuses, and culture. Platforms like LEARN can serve as a digital bridgeāpairing mentors with learners across regions and time zones, removing the limitations of geography from professional growth.
5. Redefine What Entry-Level Looks Like
Entry-level doesnāt mean expendable. It doesnāt mean āgo hold the rod for two years and maybe weāll teach you something.ā Entry-level means investment, direction, and challenge. If new hires feel like theyāre learning, growing, and contributingātheyāll stay. If not, theyāll find a faster-moving profession that values their time and energy.
6. Tell the Real Story of Surveying
Surveyors shape the built world. We define borders, keep construction honest, and protect property rights. Thatās noble, essential workāand we need to say so. The profession must rebrand, not just for clients, but for future recruits. That means smarter marketing, public education, and a collective effort to broadcast our value.
This pipeline problem is solvable. But only if we stop hoping young people find us by accidentāand start making sure they see surveying as a calling worth answering.
Make Surveying Make Sense ā Rebuilding the Case for the Next Generation
If we want the next generation to choose surveying, we have to make it make senseānot just logically, but emotionally,Ā financially, and professionally. We need to tell a better story and back it up with real changes. Because hereās the reality: most of the barriers standing in the way of new surveyors werenāt put there maliciously. They were built slowly, unintentionally, by a profession that didnāt adapt as the world changed.
Now, we have the chance to change that. But it starts by looking at the profession through the eyes of someone just starting out.
Imagine being 19 or 22, passionate about maps and technology, hungry for purpose. You want a job that matters. You want to work outside, solve problems, and build things. You want flexibility and growth. You want to belong to something that has history and future at the same time. Surveying has all of thatābut it doesnāt look like it from the outside.
From the outside, surveying looks complicated, expensive, and slow to reward. It looks like gatekeeping and outdated systems. It looks like a career stuck between eras. And until we change that perceptionāand the reality behind itāweāll keep losing talent to industries that simply do a better job selling themselves.
So how do we rebuild the case?
We start by emphasizing purpose. Surveying isnāt just a jobāitās a mission. You are the person who ensures a building sits where itās supposed to. You define legal reality. You protect property rights and public safety. In an age of digital abstraction, surveyors still deal in ground truth. Thatās powerful. That matters.
Next, we must highlight the technology. The equipment we use is bleeding-edgeādrones, GNSS, laser scanning, 3D modeling, AI-powered workflows. Surveyors work at the intersection of engineering, geography, and data science. Thatās not legacy workāitās future work.
And most critically, we must offer a clear path forward. Thatās what the LEARN platform was built to do:
- Make entry affordable.
- Make learning modular and practical.
- Make mentorship accessible.
- Make it possible for someone with no connections, no equipment, and no traditional degree to still become a surveyor.
- Make this profession something that welcomes new blood instead of waiting for it to arrive by accident.
We donāt need to lower standardsāwe need to raise our support systems. We need to show new professionals that surveying isnāt just a fallback career or an overlooked tradeāitās a dynamic, high-impact field that desperately needs smart, driven people.
And that canāt just be a pitch. It has to be the truth they experience from the moment they first show interestāthrough onboarding, training, career growth, and community. Surveying has too much at stake to leave the future up to chance.
So letās give the next generation a reason to believe in this profession.
Letās make surveying make senseāagain.
Thoughts