experience, but after three years that company unfortunately shut down their operations in Canada. Tamer moved again to a different company, which he found to be an “even better fit,” and his experience and industry connections continued to deepen and evolve. After starting work on his MBA with Jack Welch Management Institute, he had the confidence he needed to strike out on his own and start Global Formwork. The timing of that launch – May 2020, in the depths of the pandemic – might have given a less determined entrepreneur pause. But Tamer had spent nearly two decades building the knowledge, relationships, and professional credibility that would allow Global Formwork to hit the ground running. The foundation he had laid across multiple companies and roles meant that clients and collaborators already knew his name, his work ethic, and the value of his word. “After 20 years in the industry, I have really good relationships with my colleagues, my suppliers, my customers,” Tamer says. “People tend to have trust in me and in what I do, and I try to earn that trust by delivering more than what they expect and trying to find the most beneficial solution for them, so they can finish their work and be safe and be productive.” That philosophy guides each and every aspect of Global Formwork’s operations. The company specializes in formwork and shoring – the temporary support systems used in concrete MAY 2026
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