On the road a little or maybe a lot (but the cool kind of road)
Lets paint the picture:
Someone walks into a conference room.
They hit a button.
The screens light up. The sound is perfect. Everything just works.
Magic?
Nope. That was you.
Whats in it for you?
Competitive pay (you wont be installing systems for free) Medical, dental, vision, life insurance PTO + paid holidays Travel per diem (because gas station snacks add up) 401k with matching Paid training + industry certifications Real career growth (not just a good luck out t) What youll actually do:
Pull, terminate, and organize cables like a true professional (goodbye spaghetti mess) Build racks, patch bays, and AV systems that actually make sense Install LED/LCD video walls, speakers, touch panels, and more Make sure everything connects, communicates, and cooperates Use tools, solder, crimp, and occasionally question why one cable fixes everything Travel?
Oh yeah.
Youll travel across the U.S., sometimes overnight.
Youll see places mostly job sites but still, technically traveling.
Youll fit in if you:
Show up on time and do what you say youll do (rare, we know) Like working with your hands and building things Can handle a construction environment without losing your mind Know your way around toolsor are ready to learn fast Have AV, low-voltage, stagehand, or electrical experience (bonus points) Have a valid drivers license and a clean record
Bonus Level:
OSHA 10 certified? Nice. Not yet? Well help you get t.
Real Talk:
This isnt a desk job.
You will sweat. You will lift things. You will occasionally crawl under something and wonder how you got t.
But at the end of the day, youll be able to point at something and say:
Yeah I built that.
Final Thought:
If you like working with your hands, traveling, and turning a pile of parts into something impressive
This job might be exactly what youre looking for.
if youre ready to build something that actually works.