Here is a scenario that plays out every June in manufacturing facilities, distribution centers, and corporate offices across West Michigan: a plant manager or HR director spends the day wrestling with workforce capacity, shift coverage, and headcount planning. Then they go home and find a teenager parked on the couch, phone in hand, with no particular plan for the next ten weeks.
The irony is rich. And the opportunity is real.
Michigan's Department of Labor and Economic Opportunity (LEO) reports that more than 252,500 Michiganders ages 16-19 are expected to enter the labor market this summer. More than 207,000 of them are projected to find employment. That is a significant pool of entry-level energy moving through industries like retail, food service, hospitality, and recreation -- industries that have historically absorbed young workers while manufacturing has not always made the same reach.
The Pipeline Problem No One is Talking About
Michigan manufacturers have spent the better part of a decade lamenting the skilled worker shortage. The average age of the production floor workforce climbs every year. Institutional knowledge walks out the door at retirement. Recruitment budgets balloon. Yet the same employers who understand this dynamic at a strategic level often have not connected it to the 16-year-old who lives under their roof.
That disconnection is costing the industry more than it realizes.
When young workers land their first jobs at a retailer or a fast food chain, they are building their foundational assumptions about work -- what a good employer looks like, what a reasonable schedule feels like, what it means to show up consistently and be treated with respect. Manufacturing has an opportunity to shape those assumptions early, and most of it is being left on the table.
"When employers are willing to bring young people into the workplace, mentor them and give them real responsibility, it can completely change how they see themselves and their future." -- Ericka Page, Director of Youth Program Services, Detroit Employment Solutions Corporation
What Early Investment Actually Returns
The Clare County Road Commission in mid-Michigan ran this experiment. They brought in Cameron Letts, a recent high school graduate, for a summer youth employment opportunity through Michigan Works!. By summer's end, what started as a short-term role had evolved into a full-time technical assistant position, with Letts actively exploring civil engineering as a long-term career path.
"When we bring them into real work environments early, we're shaping future employees who already understand the work and our expectations," said Dewayne Rogers, Managing Director of the Road Commission. "We've seen firsthand how early exposure and mentorship turn potential into long-term value for both the worker and the employer."
That is not an isolated story. It is a repeatable model -- and one that Michigan manufacturers are positioned to run at scale.
Where Employers Can Start
Connect with Michigan Works!
Michigan Works! agencies serve as a direct conduit between employers and young job seekers. During the program year ending June 2025, Michigan Works! hosted 27 large-scale career exploration events with more than 51,400 students and approximately 1,100 employers. That infrastructure exists. Using it is a business decision, not a charitable one.
Think Beyond the Summer
The employers who extract the most long-term value from youth hiring are the ones who treat a summer role as the first chapter of a longer workforce relationship -- not a 10-week transaction. Structured mentorship, real responsibility, and honest feedback during those weeks do more for talent retention than most recruitment campaigns.
Talk to Your Own Kids
This is the part that does not typically appear in a workforce brief, but it belongs here. If you are a plant manager, an operations director, or an HR leader, and you have a teenager at home with an unstructured summer ahead of them, you already have a direct line to the next generation of the workforce. That conversation -- about the real nature of work, the value of showing up, the difference between a job and a career -- is one you are uniquely qualified to have.
The staffing gap Michigan manufacturers face in 2026 and beyond will not be closed by recruitment technology or compensation adjustments alone. It will be closed, incrementally, by employers who decided early that developing young workers was a strategic investment rather than someone else's responsibility.
WSI has been helping Michigan employers build and manage workforce solutions for decades. If your organization is ready to think more strategically about entry-level talent pipelines -- including how summer and seasonal hiring fits into a longer workforce plan -- our team is ready to talk.
And if your teen is still on the couch, we wrote something for them too.
Build a Smarter Workforce Pipeline
WSI works with Michigan manufacturers and employers to develop flexible, strategic staffing solutions -- from entry-level seasonal roles to long-term workforce planning.
Talk to WSI