Automate Now

The push to reshore U.S. manufacturing is gaining real momentum — but momentum alone won't close the labor gap. In this episode, the Formic team makes the case that automation isn't a luxury or a long-term wish list item; it's the operational baseline manufacturers need to stay competitive right now. With the National Association of Manufacturers estimating 2.1 million jobs could go unfilled by 2030, the workforce challenge isn't seasonal or cyclical — it's structural.

The consequences of inaction ripple far beyond the factory floor. Production bottlenecks slow delivery times, unfilled orders damage customer relationships, and consumers reach for alternatives when products aren't on shelves. Meanwhile, workers who remain are asked to do more with less, accelerating injury rates and turnover in a vicious cycle that compounds over time. Automation steps in not to replace people, but to fill the gaps they can't fill — and to give manufacturers the capacity to say yes to more business, more customers, and more opportunity.

Key Takeaways:
  • The U.S. manufacturing labor shortage is structural, not temporary — 2.1 million jobs are projected to go unfilled by 2030, and wages alone won't solve it
  • Inaction has cascading consequences: production slowdowns, damaged customer relationships, lost shelf presence, and accelerating worker fatigue and injury
  • Automation levels the playing field with international competitors who have long embraced it as a baseline operational tool
  • A hybrid workforce of humans and machines isn't the future — it's the present, and manufacturers who act now will have the advantage
  • The path forward isn't about replacing people; it's about giving manufacturers the capacity to grow, scale, and compete without being bottlenecked by labor constraints
Automate Now is written by the Formic team — Saman Farid, Danijel Lolic, Molly Garrison, Brooklyn Kiosow, and Shawn Fitzgerald — and edited by Brooklyn Kiosow. Formic helps U.S. manufacturers automate for the first time through Full Service Automation: no large upfront investment, no in-house robotics expertise required. If this episode made you think about where automation could work in your facility, start the conversation at formic.co.

0:00 Intro & The Labor Gap 
0:48 The Labor Gap That Won't Go Away 
2:00 The Broader Cost of Inaction 
3:00 Automation Isn't a Luxury 
3:52 The Path Forward 
4:51 Key Takeaways

What is Automate Now?

American manufacturing is at an inflection point. Labor shortages are accelerating, global competition is intensifying, and the pressure to produce more with less has never been greater. The answer — for manufacturers of every size — is automation. But knowing you need to automate and knowing how to do it are two very different things.

Automate Now is the practical playbook for CPG manufacturers ready to take action. Written by the Formic team — the people who have helped hundreds of U.S. factories automate for the first time — this audiobook cuts through the complexity and gives you a clear, honest roadmap: where to start, how to build internal buy-in, how to choose the right partner, and how to scale from your first win into a future-proof operation.

Automate Now — Episode 2
Why Automation Is Critical for U.S. Competitiveness

Over the last few years, it's become more obvious than ever that there needs to be a shift in the current U.S. manufacturing landscape. Global instability, fragile supply chains, rising labor costs abroad, and a renewed focus on economic security have all fueled a national effort to bring production back home.

But bringing manufacturing back only works if we can actually build the things we say we're going to build. And right now, labor shortages and productivity constraints are threatening that comeback.

The Labor Gap That Won't Go Away

The National Association of Manufacturers estimates that 2.1 million manufacturing jobs could go unfilled by 2030. And it's not just an issue of wages — manufacturing roles are increasingly seen as physically demanding and undesirable, resulting in a transient workforce that is very difficult to retain.

At Formic, we've spoken with hundreds of small and mid-sized manufacturers across the country who echo the same concerns: "We can't find workers." "We're losing employees faster than we can train them." "Injuries from repetitive motion are wearing our team out." "We're turning down new business because we simply can't fulfill the demand."

This isn't a short-term staffing issue. It's a systemic workforce challenge. And it's not going to get better.

The Broader Cost of Inaction

When we fail to fill these roles, the consequences ripple far beyond individual factories. Production bottlenecks slow delivery times. Unfilled orders damage relationships with customers. Consumers don't see products on the shelves when they want them, forcing them to try an alternative.

Inability to scale means missed opportunities in both domestic and global markets. In a world where agility and speed are competitive differentiators, falling behind on fulfillment timelines can cost U.S. manufacturers dearly — not just in dollars, but in relevance and brand loyalty.

The labor gap contributes to worker fatigue and injuries. As fewer employees are asked to do more, the risk of repetitive stress injuries, burnout, and turnover only accelerates, creating a vicious cycle that further weakens operational capacity.

Automation Isn't a Luxury

That's where automation steps in. Not to replace workers, but to enable them, fill in the gaps, and power productivity where labor alone can't.

It's time to stop treating automation as unattainable to small and medium-sized businesses and as an optional long-term investment, and start treating it as the operational baseline for competitiveness. Without it, U.S. companies risk falling behind on cost, speed, quality, and innovation. With it, we can level the playing field with international competitors who have long embraced automation, ensure quality and consistency even as demand fluctuates, and enable manufacturers to grow, take on more orders, and serve new markets without being bottlenecked by labor constraints.

The Path Forward

We talk to U.S. manufacturers every day, so we know the U.S. has the innovation, drive, and market demand — but we need automation to help us seize this manufacturing moment. It's not about replacing people; it's about building a hybrid workforce of humans and machines working in tandem to maximize output.

This future is about more than production efficiency. It's about giving manufacturers the confidence and capacity to say "yes" more often to new opportunities, new customers, and new orders. Automation allows small and mid-sized manufacturers — the backbone of American industry — to think bigger, act faster, and stay competitive.

Key Takeaways

The push to reshore U.S. manufacturing is gaining momentum, but without solving the labor shortage, it won't succeed. Millions of jobs are going unfilled, productivity is lagging, and many manufacturers are struggling to meet demand. Automation is no longer a luxury or long-term wish list item; it's a critical tool for staying competitive in a global market. By automating repetitive, injury-prone tasks, manufacturers can boost output, reduce risk, and unlock growth without relying on an increasingly strained workforce. The future of American manufacturing depends on smart, scalable automation — and that future starts now.