Assemblers and fabricators
Clear pressure on routine tasks. Composition of the role will shift within the decade.
SOC · Production
Signal composition
how the 0-100 score is assembled
By seniority
multiplicative adjustment from category curve
Entry-level roles carry the brunt because they concentrate the most automatable subset of tasks. Senior work is insulated by judgment, relationships, and accountability.
Task-level analysis
scored 0-100 for current-generation AI feasibility, weighted by BLS-stated importance
Read and understand schematics and blueprints
Modern vision-language models can parse technical drawings and extract component relationships, dimensions, and assembly sequences with high accuracy. AI systems already assist engineers in schematic interpretation, though complex or ambiguous legacy drawings may require human judgment.
BLS evidence: Assemblers putting together complex machines must be able to read detailed schematics, and workers must understand technical manuals, blueprints, and schematics for manufacturing a range of products.
Conduct quality control checks throughout the assembly process
Computer vision AI can detect many defects, dimensional deviations, and assembly errors through image analysis and sensor data. However, human oversight remains necessary for edge cases, contextual judgment calls, and validating AI findings in production environments.
BLS evidence: Assemblers 'conduct quality control checks' and 'look for faulty components and mistakes throughout the assembly process' to ensure quality.
Consult with designers and engineers on product development and prototypes
AI can generate design suggestions and simulate prototypes, but meaningful consultation requires understanding tacit manufacturing constraints, negotiating trade-offs, and communicating practical shop-floor insights that AI cannot yet fully grasp or articulate.
BLS evidence: Designers and engineers may consult manufacturing workers during the design stage, and some experienced assemblers work with designers and engineers to build prototypes or test products.
Operate robots, computers, and automated manufacturing systems
While AI can optimize parameters and monitor automated systems, human operators are still essential for setup, troubleshooting, handling exceptions, and making real-time decisions when automated systems encounter novel situations or failures.
BLS evidence: Modern manufacturing systems use robots, computers, and other technologies, and workers must use programmable motion-control devices, computers, and robots on the factory floor.
Trim, cut, and adjust components to fit together properly
Trimming and fitting require physical manipulation, judgment about material properties, and adaptive problem-solving when parts don't align as expected. Robotic systems lack the sensorimotor flexibility to handle the variability in materials and fit tolerances common in fabrication work.
BLS evidence: Workers 'use handtools or power tools to trim, cut, and make other adjustments to fit components together.'
Use handtools or machines to assemble parts
Manual assembly with handtools demands tactile feedback, force modulation, and real-time adjustment to part variations that current AI-robotics systems cannot reliably replicate across the diverse assembly scenarios typical in this occupation.
BLS evidence: Workers 'use handtools or machines to assemble parts' and 'connect them with bolts and screws, or they weld or solder pieces together.'
Clean and maintain work area and equipment including tools
Cleaning and maintenance in manufacturing environments require navigating cluttered spaces, handling varied tools and equipment, and adapting to different cleaning requirements—physical tasks in unstructured settings that current robotics cannot perform reliably at scale.
BLS evidence: Duties explicitly include 'Clean and maintain work area and equipment, including tools.'
Position or align components and parts using manual methods or hoists
Requires fine motor control, spatial reasoning in three dimensions, and physical manipulation in variable factory environments. Current robotics struggle with the dexterity and adaptability needed for diverse component positioning tasks, especially with irregular parts or tight tolerances.
BLS evidence: Duties include 'Position or align components and parts either manually or with hoists' and workers must determine how parts should connect.
Task heatmap
automation score by task, sorted by weighted contribution
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External signals and sources
category-level priors and BLS fields that feed the four non-task signals
- Karpathy/BLS Digital AI Exposure (0-10 scale rescaled to 0-100)
- BLS projected outlook: Decline (-1%)
- Indeed demand signal (monthly refresh pending)
- BLS typical entry-level education: High school diploma or equivalent
- Credential trend signal (annual refresh)
Related in Production
closest AOI neighbors in the same category