MYTH #3

MANUFACTURING MYTH SERIES

“A Stepping Stone, Not a Dead End” — The Truth About Manufacturing Careers

Manufacturing careers lack upward mobility and are for people with no other options

REALITY

Advanced manufacturing creates clear career pathways through apprenticeships, credentials, and industry partnerships — opening doors to long-term advancement

PICTURED HERE:

America’s Cutting Edge Machine Tool Technology Training Program. (Source: IACMI/NIST)

The Stereotype

Persistent Perception: Manufacturing jobs are for people who are not able to do anything else — low-skill, low-wage, with little or limited career paths. School guidance counselors steer students away from manufacturing jobs towards more scholarly careers. Parents encourage other options. The word “manufacturing” rarely appears in college preparedness conversations. This narrative has calcified into conventional wisdom even as the underlying reality has fundamentally shifted and significant pathways exist for professional career opportunities.

 

The Reality

Advanced manufacturing careers today offer competitive wages, meaningful technical work, and structured advancement pathways — often without requiring a four-year degree. Apprenticeships, stackable credentials, and industry-recognized certifications create clear ladders from entry-level technician roles to senior engineer and leadership positions in advanced manufacturing. The sector’s workforce development infrastructure has been quietly and systematically rebuilt — and Manufacturing USA Institutes are at the center of that effort.

 

What the Network Is Building

Across the 17 Institutes, workforce development goes hand-in-hand with technology development. The correlation is straightforward: a breakthrough technology is only as valuable as the workforce capable of deploying it. These are a few examples that Manufacturing USA Institutes are leading.

  • IACMI (Knoxville, TN) runs the America’s Cutting Edge (ACE) machine tool training program — a DOW-backed initiative that has enrolled more than 3,500 students and industry participants across all 50 states. ACE expanded from a single pilot site to more than 15 machine tool training centers nationwide, partnering with community colleges and universities to bring advanced tooling skills directly to workers in their regions.
  • America Makes (Youngstown, OH) has built one of the most comprehensive additive manufacturing workforce programs in the country, offering standardized training and certification pathways for workers entering 3D printing and advanced fabrication roles. Its Workforce Development Summit brought together DOL, DOE, and institute partners to map a 10-year strategy for the field.
  • REMADE Institute (Rochester, NY) offers over 100 hours of online training through REMADE Academy, covering topics from fundamentals of remanufacturing to critical minerals recovery and recycling. More than 4,000participants have completed REMADE Academy training — and the institute is also developing new training in electronics recycling in partnership with the Recycled Materials Association, electronics recyclers, and workforce investment boards linking micro-credential training to real employer pipelines.
  • PowerAmerica (Raleigh, NC) has trained more than 420 master’s and PhD students in wide bandgap semiconductor technologies since its founding — building a pipeline of advanced engineers in a field with critical applications for electric vehicles, power grids, and defense electronics. PowerAmerica’s university partnerships span 25 institutions, creating a national network of semiconductor talent development.
  • LIFT (Detroit, MI) houses the LIFT Learning Lab which provides students with an immersive view to advanced manufacturing techniques and equipment along with LIFT’s IGNITE: Mastering Manufacturing® high school curriculum and Operation Next® adult certification program, both of which are teaching students across the nation.
  • MxD (Chicago, IL) has trained more than 40,000 learners with its MxD Virtual Training Center, an all-in-one virtual platform designed to train and future-proof the manufacturing workforce. The platform offers thousands of courses for in-demand jobs in cybersecurity, AI/machine learning, digital manufacturing, supply chain and operations. Developed with industry partners, the courses provide real-world, industry-aligned curriculum designed for both entry-level and experienced professionals.

Why It Matters

The skills gap in advanced manufacturing is real and growing. By some estimates, the U.S. will need to fill 3.8 million manufacturing jobs by 2033, with nearly half going unfilled due to a shortage of skilled workers. The bottleneck is not jobs — it is the pipeline to fill them. Every Institute workforce program is a direct investment in closing that gap.

Manufacturing careers are not a fallback. They are a foundation — offering technical mastery, economic security, and the satisfaction of building things that matter now and for the future – and economic security is national security.

Manufacturing USA network FY2023: 130,286 students engaged (up 64% year over year); 17,071 credential completions; 216 workforce development projects. Source: NIST AMS 600-19.