A silent crisis is shaking the very foundations of modern society.

The industrial workforce responsible for building the global economy is at risk of crumbling. The people charged with keeping our power grids online, factories humming, utilities reliable, and supply chains moving uninterrupted are retiring at a fast clip. Sure, this may seem like the natural cycle of things as mass retirement opens the door to at least 3.8 million jobs. But it hides a deeply troubling reality: tacit knowledge, along with practical skills refined over decades of hands-on work, is at risk of leaving with them.

While technologies from artificial intelligence to robotics to computer vision are transforming industrial operations, we’re dangerously close as a society to losing the ability to diagnose a failing motor by sound, read analog engineering drawings, or understand the quirks of a 60-year-old machine that predates Disco.

This kind of expertise is rarely written down in one place and always valuable, especially when there’s a mechanical issue or system-level disruption. Meanwhile, generative AI is making information feel instantly available.

The tension here is real and consequential. The question facing junior industrial professionals across industries, from heavy manufacturing to utilities to supply chain: If software can answer questions in seconds, why spend years learning by doing (and, in some cases, failing)?