My Colorado Journey
  • STEMA role grounded in science, technology, engineering, or mathematics.
  • Industry 4.0A role tied to advanced manufacturing — automation, robotics, and connected digital systems.
  • AutomationA role focused on automated systems, robotics, or process control.

Advanced Manufacturing Career Pathways

Build the future with precision manufacturing, automation, and Industry 4.0 technologies. Colorado's manufacturing sector is modernizing rapidly.

  • Median Salary

    $64,709

    Statewide industry median

  • 10-Year Growth

    +13%

    Statewide projection

  • Pathway Roles

    13

    Pathway roles

  • Required Education

    Certificate/Associate

    Manufacturing Technology

Explore Colorado Advanced Manufacturing

Colorado makes the future with steel and skill

From precision machining to aerospace components to food processing, manufacturing is building real things in Colorado—and it's hiring.

The big picture

Colorado is a manufacturing hotbed where advanced technologies meet hands-on craft.

Here, students can build careers across the whole shop floor:

  • Operating precision machines
  • Reading technical blueprints
  • Welding metal structures
  • Inspecting parts for quality
  • Programming CNC systems
  • Troubleshooting equipment
  • MANUFACTURING FIRMS

    5,900

    Colorado's manufacturing ecosystem spans machining, welding, mechatronics, food processing, ceramics, med-tech and wind components.

  • DIRECT EMPLOYEES

    150,700

    Manufacturing is a major employer across the state, overlapping with aerospace, energy, food and bioscience sectors.

  • SQ FT ADVANCED MANUFACTURING CENTER

    33,280

    Community College of Denver's Advanced Manufacturing Center is a tangible example of Colorado's workforce investment.

  • CERTIFICATE TO WORK

    33 weeks

    Many welding and CNC certificates in Colorado's CCCS system can be completed in under a year, with immediate earning potential.

MORE THAN FACTORIES

Manufacturing is precision, problem-solving, and craft combined

Colorado manufacturing spans machining, welding, CNC, mechatronics, food processing, ceramics, med-tech, wind components and aerospace-adjacent production. It's not just assembly—it's technical skill meeting real-world output.

HANDS-ON LEARNING PAID

Community College of Denver's Advanced Manufacturing Center is a real working hub

The 33,280-square-foot AMC sits on CCD's campus with industry equipment, instructor expertise, and internship connections. It's designed to move students from high-school entry into industry-ready technicians.

CERTIFICATE TO CAREER

Colorado pathways stack fast: high school to work in under two years

Colorado's Manufacturing pathway leads to stackable credentials like NIMS (National Institute for Metalworking Skills). Many welders, CNC operators and machine technicians start certificates and earn while they learn.

AEROSPACE & BEYOND

Manufacturing connects to space, energy, food and medical tech

Precision parts for satellites, rotor blades for wind turbines, pharmaceutical equipment, and food-processing systems all require Colorado manufacturing expertise. Career growth follows wherever precision production goes.

SMALL SHOPS, BIG CAREERS

Colorado manufacturers range from startups to Fortune 500 suppliers

Tight communities of specialized shops mean you can find mentorship, see your work's impact, and move into supervisory or engineering roles without leaving town.

TOOLS OF THE TRADE

Blueprint reading, PLC basics, CAD/CAM, and lean thinking matter most

Colorado manufacturers prize measurable competence: tooling knowledge, precision measurement, safety discipline, troubleshooting logic, and reliability are your shortest paths to leadership.

Career paths · where you fit in

Manufacturing welcomes career-switchers and hands-on learners

Military maintenance backgrounds, warehouse and logistics experience, trade apprenticeships, and even automotive repair expertise translate directly into Colorado manufacturing roles because the emphasis is always on demonstrable competence over credentials.

01/Start with metal and machines

  • Welder
  • CNC operator
  • Machine technician
  • Machinist apprentice

02/Move into quality and planning

  • Quality inspector
  • Production planner
  • Maintenance technician
  • Process technician

03/Add automation and systems

  • Robotics technician
  • Mechatronics technician
  • Controls technician
  • Tooling engineer

04/Lead and innovate

  • Industrial designer
  • Manufacturing engineer
  • Operations supervisor
  • Continuous improvement specialist