Build Your Career
On A Real Ladder
Anvil Edge runs electrical crews on commercial and infrastructure projects across the Northeast and Mid-Atlantic. Come in as an apprentice — every rank above you is a promotion you can actually earn.
View Open PositionsGrowing Crews. Real Advancement.
We’re expanding our footprint across New Jersey, New York, Pennsylvania, Delaware, Maryland, Connecticut, and beyond, and every new job site means more room to move up. Every foreman and general foreman on our crews today started as a tradesman on the tools.
If you want to learn a trade with structure — clear ranks, clear pay steps, and a straight line to leadership — this is that job.
What you’re stepping into
Multi-State Operations
Standing crews across NJ, NY, PA, DE, MD, and CT — not one job at a time.
Steady Pipeline
Repeat commercial and infrastructure clients keep the schedule full year-round.
Built-In-House Tools
Scheduling, time tracking, and job costing run through systems we built ourselves — less paperwork, more tools time.
Apprentice Electrician
Year 1Junior Mechanic
Year 2–3Journeyman
Licensed & running your own tasksForeman
Running a crew on siteGeneral Foreman
Overseeing multiple crewsProject Manager
Client, budget, and schedule ownershipSix ranks. No guessing where you stand.
Every rank has a clear set of skills and time-in-role expected to get there. No politics, no waiting on a headcount freeze — you move up when you’re ready and we have the sites to put you on.
See Open RolesThe full climb, rank by rank
Every rank below is one we actively promote into — this isn’t an org chart for show.
Apprentice Electrician
Year one on the tools, learning the trade directly from journeymen on live commercial sites.
Junior Mechanic
Years two and three — more independence, more complex tasks, prepping for your journeyman card.
Journeyman
Licensed and running independent scope — the backbone of every crew.
Foreman
Owns a crew’s daily execution, quality, and safety on a single site.
General Foreman
Coordinates multiple foremen and crews across a larger or multi-phase job.
Project Manager
Owns the client relationship, budget, and job costing from bid to closeout.
