Architecture Social works because it sits between jobs, advice, podcast conversations and community, not as one more job board. In this conversation with Herbie Hudson and Hayden Day, Stephen Drew explains how the platform grew from a recruitment gap into a place for architecture people to find help, visibility and connection.
The useful lesson is simple: architecture careers are easier to navigate when people can see real examples, hear honest conversations and find the right route into work without pretending the industry is simpler than it is.
Watch: Stephen Drew on Architecture Social
This conversation sets up the bigger point: Architecture Social is part recruitment platform, part community and part place to learn how the industry actually works.
Listen: building a digital architecture community
Prefer audio? The episode gives the longer version of Stephen’s route through architecture, recruitment and community building.
You can also open the related Architecture Social podcast page.
Why community matters in architecture
Architecture can feel fragmented. Students are trying to understand practice, candidates are trying to stand out, employers are trying to explain roles properly, and smaller studios often do not have a huge marketing machine behind them.
A good community reduces that friction. It gives people a place to ask questions, share work, watch useful conversations and find opportunities without everything feeling like a cold transaction.
What candidates can take from the conversation
- You do not need a perfectly linear career story to be useful to a practice.
- Showing initiative matters, especially when your CV or portfolio does not explain the full picture on its own.
- Community visibility can help people understand your interests before a formal application arrives.
- The best career moves usually come from a mix of evidence, relationships and timing.
What employers can learn from it
For employers, the lesson is that hiring is not only about posting a vacancy. Strong candidates are often watching how a practice communicates before they apply. If the story is vague, the role is vague, or the salary is hidden, good people can quietly move on.
Content, community and recruitment sit together. A practice that explains its work, values, expectations and progression properly makes it easier for the right people to trust the opportunity.
Useful routes through Architecture Social
- Use jobs when you are actively applying.
- Use resources when your CV, portfolio or interview preparation needs work.
- Use the podcast when you want wider industry context.
- Use the Club when you want to stay connected between moves.
Architecture Social view
Stephen’s recruiter view is that recruitment works better when trust exists before the vacancy appears. Candidates who understand the platform, listen to the conversations and use the resources usually make sharper decisions.
Next step
Pick the route that matches your current problem: jobs if you are applying, resources if you need to sharpen your presentation, podcast if you want context, or the Club if you want to stay connected between moves.
Join the Architecture Social community
Use the community to keep close to jobs, advice, events, conversations and people across architecture.
- Stay visible between applications.
- Learn from practical career conversations.
- Connect the content with real opportunities.



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