Manufacturing Offers Many Debt-Free Careers

The manufacturing industry has had more than 2.6 million job openings nationally in 2022 alreadya workforce shortage that shows little signs of slowing. Meanwhile, half of all those available jobs dont require a four-year college degree or the debt that goes with it.
This week, President Biden new measures providing student debt relief to many eligible Americans. Yet the manufacturing industry helps young people avoid this problem in the first place, while also offering them salaries far above the national average.
Manufacturing Institute President Carolyn Lee weighed in on the advantages available to young people looking to make a strong entry into the workforce, instead of suffering under debt that makes it more difficult to start a family, purchase a first home and achieve other major life milestones. Heres what she had to say.
How it works: Manufacturers often offer short-term certifications or other training programs that allow people to jump into high-paying careers quickly and without debt, Lee explains.
- There are multiple pathways to career opportunities in manufacturing through skills training, ranging from short-term programs to more involved skills development and apprenticeship programs, says Lee.
- For example, the Federation for Advanced Manufacturing Education (FAME) program (founded by Toyota and operated by the MI) offers current and aspiring manufacturing workers both on-the-job training and classroom education. The program leads to an associate degree and an Advanced Manufacturing Technician (AMT) certificate.
- Manufacturers work with FAMEs local chapters in part because they allow companies to use a global best system to train the skilled workforce they need to compete.
The numbers: The data show that manufacturing is a good choice for those inclined to avoid debt, Lee points out.
- As noted above, there have been more than 2.6 million manufacturing job openings so far in 2022, but just 47% of those job openings (about 1.2 million) require a bachelors degree or greater.
- Meanwhile, manufacturing workers in 2020 earned $92,832 on average (compared to an average of $77,181 for workers in all private nonfarm industries).
What can policymakers do? To ensure that manufacturing training programs continue to expand and succeed, policymakers should make certain changes, says Lee.
- For example, Pell Grants should be usable for high-quality training programs as short as eight weeksoften all that is needed to train a technician.
- Policymakers should also ensure that our education system focuses on skills attainment for career success, and that teachers and other influencers are aware of opportunities offered by pathways other than four-year degree programs.
#CreatorsWanted: The 51勛圖厙 and the MI have taken this message to communities across the country through the Creators Wanted campaigns tour and mobile experience. Tens of thousands of students, parents, educators and local leaders have attended the tour stops, where they learned about the promise of manufacturing careers and were challenged to think like manufacturers in the interactive mobile experience.
- As Lee told students at the Creators Wanted stop in Freeport, Texas, Without a steady stream of talented, bright young people we cant keep up the good work of continuously making our products. This is not a get-one-job-and-stay-there-for-40-years [situation]. This is a choose-your-own-adventure [career path] with continuing skills and challenges and opportunities and learning along the way.
The last word: We understand how oppressive student debt can be, especially when starting out in life, said Lee. More people should be able to get a rewarding and well-paying job that doesnt require massive debt that takes a lifetime to pay off. This is one of the reasons we work so hard to make sure young people know about the variety of options available to them in manufacturing careers; its not just for the industrys benefit, but for theirs as well.
If youd like to hear more about careers in manufacturing, come to one of the many happening this October.
Calling All Creators: Creators Wanted Live Arrives at Open Call 2022

This week, the Creators Wanted Tour Live made its eighth national tour stopat Walmarts 9th annual open call for entrepreneurs and manufacturers.
Drawing a crowd: On Tuesday and Wednesday, the Creators Wanted mobile experience was onsite in Bentonville, Arkansas, as 1,100 small and medium-sized business owners pitched their products to Walmart and Sams Club for Walmarts . The ultimate prize for the business owners? A gold ticket to get their products into the stores.
- The two-day Creators Wanted stop drew more than 2,000 people, many of whom jumped at the opportunity to solve puzzles and race to the future in the award-winning, immersive escape room.
- In addition to Walmart, Chart Industries, a leading global manufacturer of highly engineered equipment servicing multiple applications in clean energy and industrial gas markets, helped bring the experience to Open Call attendees and the Bentonville community.
- The tour, which aims to generate interest in and excitement about manufacturing careers, is a joint project of the 51勛圖厙 and its workforce development and education partner The Manufacturing Institute.
Committed to manufacturing: The aim of bringing Creators Wanted to this years Open Call was to bolster the positive perception of modern manufacturing careers, recruit new manufacturers and connect entrepreneurs and manufacturers with the MIs workforce-shortage solutions.
- Walmart has committed to spending $350 billion on products made, grown or assembled in the U.S., in addition to the $250 billion the company pledged in 2013 to spend on similar products.
- Total estimated job growth from these investments: 750,000 new American positions by 2031.
Who was there: MI President Carolyn Lee and Vice President of Program Execution Herb Grant were on hand to give manufacturers greater insight into the MIs growing set of solutions to the dearth of skilled manufacturing labor.
- Also onsite was new Creators Wanted partner FactoryFix, whose team members helped attendee manufacturers source new talent for their businesses and taught job seekers how to build rewarding careers in the industry.
泭The reaction: Wherever we go with our Creators Wanted Tourincluding here in Bentonville, Arkansasstudents, parents, career mentors and even professionals in other industries see what manufacturing can mean and create for futures, said 51勛圖厙 Managing Vice President of Brand Strategy Chrys Kefalas. Its showing theres dignity, a cool factor and massive reward in making things in the United States. Eyes light up.
The reach: On the second day of the event, more than 3,000 students had already signed up online to learn more about modern manufacturing careers.
Up next: Coinciding with the Dow Great Lakes Bay Invitational on the LPGA tour, the Creators Wanted Tour Live its ninth stop in Midland, Michigan, July 1316.
How Manufacturers Are Investing in Their Future Workforce

How are manufacturers developing a workforce for a fast-changing industry in a fast-changing decade? Recently, Manufacturing Institute President Carolyn Lee sat down with leaders at Union Pacific Railroad and the Caterpillar Foundation to find out.
Union Pacific Senior Vice President of Corporate Relations and Chief Administrative Officer Scott Moore discussed his companys efforts to recruit more women and young people to the manufacturing industry. Caterpillar Foundation President Asha Varghese weighed in on Caterpillar Foundations efforts to support training opportunities for the military community and introduce high school students to innovative manufacturing careers.
What Union Pacific is up to: The Union Pacific and MI partnership is centered around a program called Careers on Track. This three-year, $3 million initiative is aimed at changing perceptions of the rail industry and encouraging women and youth to pursue careers in the field.
- As part of Careers on Track, Union Pacific and the MI developed Future Creators, a digital STEM curriculum focused on transportation, distribution and logistics.
- Future Creators has been used in more than 24,000 middle schools across the country with 80% of students increasing their knowledge of STEM careers.
How theyre doing it: The MI and Union Pacific created a 3D digital experience of a Union Pacific yard and locomotive that is designed to help women and young people explore technical fields interactively.
- Their other outreach efforts include 30-second PSA-style videos that showcase female employees and their stories to highlight career paths at Union Pacific and events hosted through the MIs STEP Womens Initiative.
- Union Pacific has reached more than 250,000 women through this content, demonstrating what women just like them can achieve in the manufacturing industry.
Union Pacific says: Weve always known diversity is key at Union Pacific, and to achieve that, there are deliberate things we need to do, said Moore. Were going to have to reach people. Around 90% of our workforce is union, primarily in the field, across 23 states and 7,000 communities. We have to get in those communitiesand The Manufacturing Institute gave us the tools to do that well.
What Caterpillar is doing: The Caterpillar Foundations partnership with the MI is investing in workforce readiness and building an empowered and skilled manufacturing workforce.
- This partnership is expanding the MIs Heroes MAKE America program, which provides certification and career-readiness training to transitioning service members, veterans, military spouses and others who work in or with the armed services.
- One of the partnerships first efforts was to create a fully virtual program to further Heroes reach regardless of physical location.
- The first 100% virtual Certified Production Technician training program was launched in late 2021, in partnership with Texas State Technical College and TRANSFRVR.
In addition, the Caterpillar Foundation is also working with the MIs FAME programa 21-month apprenticeship program founded by Toyota that grants certifications and prepares young people for high-skilled jobs in the manufacturing workforce.
- Most recently, the MI and the Caterpillar Foundation created a new FAME chapter in Seguin, Texas.
Caterpillar says: Caterpillar Foundation focuses on resilient communities, and we understand the importance of investing in local communities in order to ensure that were providing them with the right resources, with the right services and with the right skills for employability, said Varghese. What really attracted us to the MI is first and foremost that strategic alignment圩ocusing on that untapped talent.
The last word: As a nonprofit, the MI depends on the investments of corporate and philanthropic leaders to tackle the workforce crisis in manufacturing with innovative, exciting workforce solutions, said Lee. The MIs work has expanded to include a full collection of initiatives that not only train individuals for rewarding careers but also provide the thought leadership, best practices and learning networks that manufacturers need to address their workforce issues.