By Shannon Gabriel
According to the Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS), by 2025, there will be more than 2 million unfilled manufacturing jobs in the U.S. A Deloitte executive survey shows that many companies are already feeling the pinch, specifically when it comes to skilled production workers. By 2020, 63% of manufacturers will experience a skills shortage in this area. Many will also be hard-pressed to find the engineers and researchers and scientists their organizations need to succeed.
Operational and supply chain leaders are in short supply, too. Industry Week suggests that nearly 60% of companies face leadership talent shortages, and those shortages negatively impact company performance. Manufacturers and supply chain operations are not exempt from experiencing the management dilemma.
In the U.S., many factors are converging to result in a “perfect storm” scenario that is depleting the pool of available operational talent. Here’s a look at what’s contributing to the problem:
Unfortunately, current employees are deficient in the skills needed to work efficiently with “smart” machines and systems. Equally discouraging, current K-12 students, who represent the next generation of workers, lack STEM skills too. This will only further reduce the pool of qualified candidates for the future advanced manufacturing environment.
Lack of awareness and understanding about the industry, coupled with poor engagement, have contributed to this wrong perception and resulted in insufficient manufacturing-related learning curricula and educational programs that could attract and groom candidates for these jobs.
The demand for skilled supply chain professionals is a result not only of the increasing complexity of globalized supply chains, but also the supply chain’s growing role in an enterprise’s success. These factors mean that today’s supply chain professionals need to bring a comprehensive set of skills to the table, including experience in operations research, supply chain engineering, statistical process control, and data analysis and simulation, along with soft skills for managing relationships up and down the supply chain. This combination of expertise is often hard to find.
Clearly, there is much work to be done by the industry and other stakeholders to develop the workforce needed to fill current and future manufacturing and supply chain roles. Creating greater awareness of manufacturing as a desirable career path and developing the appropriate training and education programs to teach needed skills are a must.
In the meantime, manufacturers that need operational and supply chain leadership now may want to consider interim talent as part of their workforce strategy. Having access to a highly qualified, vetted, and ready-to-go pool of short-term leaders can help companies fill their existing gaps while they search for permanent replacements.
TBM Leadership Solutions, LLC maintains a talent pool that offers pre-identified, fully-vetted contingent labor resources. Read our recent infographic, Interim Talent: Your Solution to Operational Leadership Gaps, to learn more about the cost of leadership vacancies and how an interim talent strategy could help.
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