Industry leaders focus on talent acquisition and retention as the manufacturing sector grows.

Twenty years ago, Matt Eggemeyer never dreamed that he would develop a career in the manufacturing business. With a bachelor’s degree in history, he thought a desk job in banking awaited him. However, when his mother urged him to give his family’s custom manufacturing business a try, he honored her wishes. Today, he is chief operating officer of Keats Manufacturing just outside Chicago, and his greatest pleasure is engaging young people in the career that has become his passion. In the decades since Eggemeyer began his career in the family business, technology has invigorated his company and enriched his professional life. For example, this year, Keats is investing in a system that can provide 100 different views of the precision metal parts it makes to improve its production. This kind of technology gives Keats a competitive advantage and provides Eggemeyer and his colleagues with a learning opportunity. Eggemeyer is not an isolated example. The 1,200 American manufacturers who responded to ThomasNet.com’s latest Industry Market Barometer survey on their growth and outlook are effusive in describing how technological advances are improving their companies and invigorating their work life. As a result, they are growing, hiring and increasing their production capacity to meet future demand. These manufacturers say their employees, market leadership, technology and innovation will help them continue to compete. Nearly seven out of 10 (67 percent) will focus on introducing new or innovative products/services this year.

An SKF Solution Factory employee checks an interface before continuing his work.
However, at a time when innovations—such as additive manufacturing or robotics—are opening new opportunities for manufacturers, a crack is slowly forming in this positive picture. Research reveals a lack of talent from new generations that threatens this sector’s future.

The Numbers

The companies surveyed are representative of today’s manufacturing workforce, which is heavily populated by employees who are 45 and older. With Generation Y (18 to 32 years old) expected to make up 75 percent of the workforce by 2025 and baby boomers retiring in droves, the time is now for the manufacturing industry to acquire, train and retain a talented workforce to support the industry. A closer look at the findings reveals a possible disconnect between the growth of these manufacturers and their lack of urgency in recruiting fresh talent to learn the business before older generations exit. Eight out of 10 manufacturers report that Generation Y represents a small fraction of their workforce, and most do not see this changing soon. The findings point to a need for a collective “succession plan” for the manufacturing sector—starting yesterday.

Benefits of Consistent Talent Acquisition

Todd Berg, President and CEO of Liftomatic, knows firsthand why this matters. Berg’s Chicago-based company makes drum- and barrel-handling equipment for customers such as Smucker’s, Campbell Soup Company and DuPont. This year, one of its clients tapped the company for a job full of technological complexities that it would have had to turn away five years ago. However, with a new crop of tech-savvy employees, Liftomatic was able to handle the job and sold the product for five times the price of its average order.
Team member Helen Edwards runs a large production order of flexible graphite die-formed rings at SEPCO’s manufacturing facility in Alabaster, Ala.
For Berg, this is only one example of why companies continuously need to acquire new talent. With decades of experience in manufacturing himself, he is amazed at how requirements for success have changed in a few short years. Inside sales and customer service staff need to understand social media and web analytics to excel. Contract manufacturing managers must be adept at the latest supply chain management and logistics software. By complementing the judgment and experience of long-term staff with the fresh perspective of entry-level employees, he is able to take Liftomatic to new heights. Last year, the sales of Liftomatic’s core products grew almost 10 percent. Eggemeyer, too, knows that nurturing fresh talent is fundamental to his company’s future. He is constantly persuading neighbors and friends of friends in career transitions to give Keats Manufacturing a try. “I don’t find trained manufacturers. I make them,” he says, and his creative approach pays off. Last year, Keats hired and retained 15 new staff members (average age 25), bringing the total number of their employees to 106. For Eggemeyer and his peers, these efforts are not always easy. Most of the respondents to the survey (73 percent) believe that young people still have negative perceptions that may deter them from considering manufacturing jobs. They wish they could draw back the curtain and show the naysayers what they know so well—that the rewards of manufacturing are unparalleled. These manufacturers are vocal about the satisfaction they gain from creating something tangible, working in an environment of constant change, making a difference to customers from around the world and contributing to their country’s economic well-being.
Copper bar rotor torch brazing at Toshiba’s Houston manufacturing facility—brazing end rings on rotors using propylene and oxygen flame torches
Many of these manufacturers have developed partnerships with schools to engage their best and brightest, and they consider educators important for their future. They continue to call on high schools to offer more skills training and to increase the emphasis on science, technology, engineering and mathematics (STEM). These strategies, though, are just the tip of the iceberg. Rising generations need more than STEM knowledge. They need to understand how the companies that will value their backgrounds will enrich their lives. As a foundation of the economy, the manufacturing sector is strong, and technology continues to provide companies with more opportunities to grow. For example, manufacturers’ websites are their number-one business-building tactic, online or offline.

Recruiting Future Manufacturers

The hard truth, though, is that changes in workforce demographics threaten to override these gains. For the manufacturing sector to benefit most in this era of innovation, those who love the industry need to step up efforts to share their passion with the next generation. Whether we talk with children about their dreams at the kitchen table, take them on plant tours during Manufacturing Day events or bring manufacturing speakers to schools during career fairs, we need to wear our hearts on our sleeves. A few words from Eggemeyer’s mother changed the course of his life and made him fall in love with his career. With a similar approach to engaging the next generation, starting at the grassroots level, new talent can be added to this $1.9 trillion sector, carrying it toward a more vibrant future.

Acquisition & Retention in the Pump Industry

In 2014, the industry will see increased pressure to acquire and retain top talent. Continued expansion and investment in oil and gas, as well as water and water treatment, is creating strong demand for talent that can create value in a competitive and dynamic trading environment. Kerry Baskins VP/GM, Milton Roy Americas Very few young people are excited about entering the wastewater industry. This is a concern because many municipal workers are retiring. The wastewater manufacturing industry will survive this trend, but we may see more design, build, operate contracts in the future as municipalities turn their wastewater operations over to the private sector. Walt Erndt VP/GM, Crane Pumps & Systems President, Submersible Wastewater Pump Association Pioneer Pump, Inc., has opened additional facilities and added people in all locations. As a company that puts a high priority on its employees, we have enjoyed a very high retention rate. Jerry Turner Founder & Senior Advisor, Pioneer Pump