Your full path, from day one to Field Manager Level 3.
Pick a level to see every skill, the training material required, and the proof you'll submit to pass.
Field Technician
New hire. First 90 days.
The entry level of the RNC career path. Every field technician completes Level 1 within their first 90 days. It covers Aeroseal's mission, the High 5s for the role, OSHA safety, envelope-leakage fundamentals, cold-weather ops, jobsite prep, and foam gun operation.
Technician in Training
Earning consideration for Lead Tech.
Level 2 builds on the Field Technician foundation with Envelope Sealing Manual sections 3-6, equipment maintenance, plan reading, personal finance fundamentals, time management, building science, and critical thinking.
Lead Site Technician
Runs the crew on site.
Level 3 transitions the technician from executing to leading on site. Adds in-person BPI certification, CPR, plan takeoffs, product submittals, case study awareness, and the overview-level understanding of the Aeroseal Health and Safety Plan.
Field Manager (Level 1)
Leadership foundation.
Level 4 is the step into leadership. The technician becomes a Field Manager, adding OSHA 30, Aeroseal's decision framework, leadership communication, Simon Sinek's Leaders Eat Last, combustion safety, emergency response, and HR procedure depth.
Field Manager (Level 2)
Operational depth.
Level 5 deepens operational range. Adds RESNET, multifamily plan reading, mobilization guidelines by builder type, the sales-to-operations handoff, multi-family application best practices, financial and operational KPIs, Gawande's Checklist Manifesto, certified payroll and prevailing wages, and a deeper cut at time management.
Field Manager (Level 3)
Mastery, strategy, and pre-Ops-Manager readiness.
Level 6 is the final Field Manager tier before advancement to Divisional Operations Manager. Adds the Residential Energy Inspector / Plans Examiner certification, pre-construction meeting facilitation, Rumelt's Good Strategy Bad Strategy, advanced BPI certification, mastery of the site-specific Health and Safety Program, construction contracts, and the discipline of reporting up.