Another survey of manufacturing business leaders regarding applying AI in their operations and availability of a skilled workforce to apply it.
Revalize, a worldwide leader in CPQ, PLM, and CAD software solutions for manufacturers, released new research around the state of AI and smart technology adoption in the manufacturing sector. Despite ongoing economic uncertainty, the report finds that technology investment continues to surge, prioritizing AI and automation, yet many companies are struggling to find talent with the right skillsets to implement and deploy the technology effectively. Manufacturers must focus on streamlining systems and upskilling workers to leverage emerging AI opportunities and fully realize the return on these investments.
The report, Smart Manufacturing 2026: Agile Leaders Confront the AI Skills Gap, features data gathered from a survey of 500 business leaders in select manufacturing fields across the United States, Germany, Austria, and Switzerland. The research reveals companies are investing in new technologies, but many are starting to face the reality that their workforce might not be ready for it.
Key findings include:
- Technology Investments Continue to Rise: 77% of manufacturing leaders report increased software budgets over the past 12 months, up from 70% the year prior, signaling sustained momentum behind digital transformation. Additionally, 93% of manufacturing leaders plan to utilize new technologies, tools, or software this year.
- Holistic AI Adoption is Lagging Despite Lofty Goals: While 56% of manufacturers reported having implemented AI in select areas, only 10% said the technology was fully integrated across their operations, illuminating a critical gap in execution.
- The U.S. Has the Highest Demand for AI Skills: U.S. manufacturers lead investment in AI-driven and human-centric Industry 5.0 technologies, creating the highest demand for AI skills among all countries surveyed. As a result, 44% of U.S. teams cited a need for AI expertise, 16% higher than other regions.
- Industry 5.0 Confidence Remains High, but Realism Grows: 84% of manufacturers feel prepared to adopt and leverage Industry 5.0 technologies, a slight decline from last year, reflecting a more realistic understanding of the integration, data, skill, and workforce capabilities required for success.
“AI and automation are transforming the manufacturing sector, but without serious investment in workforce training to leverage these technologies, initiatives fall short of expectations,” said Mike Sabin, CEO of Revalize. “The industry’s continued technology investments must be matched by a commitment to upskilling talent through both internal programs and external academic partnerships. I foresee 2026 as a pivotal turning point where manufacturers will either move beyond AI hype and take the necessary steps to bridge the gap between investment and readiness or fall behind as competitors move faster toward Industry 5.0.”
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