As a manufacturing leader and consultant who’s worked with dozens of A&D leaders over the past two decades, I’ve sat in boardrooms where executives grapple with the same paradox: How do you capitalize on the most explosive market growth the industry has ever seen when you can’t find enough skilled workers to execute on the opportunities?
Global defense spending surged 9.4% in 2024 to reach 2.7 trillion, air passenger traffic is projected to grow nearly 12%, and production backlogs now extend well into the 2030s—yet the fundamental question keeping leaders awake isn’t about demand forecasting or supply chains, it’s about workforce capability and how to accelerate Aerospace and Defense workforce skills training at scale.
This convergence of unprecedented demand, technological advancement, and competitive consolidation has created what I call the “success challenge.” The opportunity is extraordinary, but our ability to execute depends entirely on revolutionizing how we develop, deploy, and optimize our workforce through AI-powered training technologies and more effective workforce development models. The companies that solve this equation won’t just survive the current environment—they’ll define the next decade of aerospace and defense manufacturing.
Understanding the workforce landscape
The A&D sector’s workforce dynamics reflect broader economic trends, but with unique characteristics that create both challenges and opportunities for forward-thinking leaders. Industry attrition rates in 2024 average 14.5%, significantly higher than most other sectors. The combination of an aging workforce and younger employees leaving for higher paying, more flexible roles continue to drive turnover, putting even more pressure on Aerospace and Defense workforce skills training, onboarding, and cross-training.
Recruiting new talent remains a persistent challenge as well, with A&D companies citing broad-based engineering, skilled manufacturing, and software engineering positions as the hardest to source and fill. Three key trends are redefining the workforce landscape, creating opportunities to strengthen growth and talent development through smarter workforce development strategies.
- High-demand roles offer maximum training impact. The positions experiencing greatest demand—welders, Level 3 inspectors, and specialized technicians—represent exactly where advanced AI-powered training technologies deliver superior results and faster skills ramp-up.
- Workforce preferences have evolved dramatically. Today’s manufacturing professionals actively seek continuous learning opportunities, digital tools, and modern training methods, creating tremendous opportunities for companies providing tech-enabled work environments and structured standard work in Aerospace and Defense operations.
- Digital skills gaps create competitive advantages. While 16% of current manufacturing workers have limited digital skills, this represents a massive opportunity for companies offering effective cross-skilling programs built on digital work instructions, standard work, and AI-powered workforce training platforms.
The key insight shared with clients: companies that view Aerospace and Defense workforce development and skills training as a strategic investment rather than an operational cost will capture disproportionate market share as demand continues growing.
Rapid skill development
The biggest challenge heard from clients is simple: “How do we train people fast enough?” Traditional programs (classroom, apprenticeships, etc.) still matter, but they cannot keep up with today’s pace or the complexity of Aerospace and Defense workforce skills training needs. AI-powered workforce training changes the equation. It takes months-long workforce development cycles and compresses them into something scalable, fast, and effective.
- Traditional training timelines become compressed. Workers can start contributing within weeks, building advanced skills through embedded micro-learning during shift changes, changeovers, and quality holds—maximizing training time without disrupting production while accelerating Aerospace and Defense workforce development.
- Knowledge transfer scales exponentially. Once training content is developed and validated, it can be available across multiple facilities instantly. Best practices identified at one location become immediately available everywhere, creating enterprise-wide capability improvements and consistent standard work in Aerospace and Defense operations.
- Real-time feedback drives continuous improvement. These systems monitor performance in real time, flagging problem areas and automatically updating or adding training as needed to strengthen workforce skills and process reliability.
- Quality and safety integration ensures effectiveness. Training modules include quality and safety checks, ensuring workers advance only after proving proficiency through measurable results—essential in highly regulated Aerospace and Defense environments.
Why AI-powered training is strategic
AI-powered training technologies represent a fundamental shift from traditional training approaches to integrated, intelligent workforce development systems that deliver measurable business impact and directly address the Aerospace and Defense workforce skills training gap. While TBM has worked with AVIX for many clients, there are many solutions to consider. From experience, AVIX has changed training as it is known today. The software transforms training from an event to a process and anchors it in practical standard work in Aerospace and Defense production.
Here is what that looks like in practice:
- The system delivers contextual, real-time instruction embedded directly into daily operations, increasing training effectiveness while maintaining production efficiency and making AI-powered training part of everyday work.
- The integration creates seamless connections between process documentation, time studies, line balancing, and digital work instructions, establishing true standard work on the shop floor so every operator follows a clear, repeatable best way to perform the job.
- Video-based instruction helps workers understand both procedures and the reasoning behind each step, while the combination of standard work and visual training helps new operators learn faster, contribute value more consistently, and strengthens a continuous improvement culture across Aerospace and Defense manufacturing sites.
- Digital work instructions provide interactive, standardized guidance accessible through web browsers, ensuring consistency across shifts, facilities, and training scenarios and reinforcing common standard work in Aerospace and Defense operations.
- Cross training becomes scalable and data-driven as AI analyzes performance, tailors instruction to skill level, and delivers real-time guidance to share expertise across the organization, elevating overall workforce development.
- Digital guided work instructions interface with visual aids and automated workflow initiation for assembly tasks, closing the loop between engineering standards, shop floor execution, and AI-powered training content.
Companies implementing solutions like AVIX typically see immediate improvements in training consistency and efficiency, with longer-term benefits including reduced turnover, improved safety performance, and enhanced ability to adapt to new technologies and evolving Aerospace and Defense workforce skills requirements.
Seizing the workforce opportunity
Aerospace and Defense manufacturers that will dominate the next decade are being defined right now, in boardrooms and on factory floors where leaders are making fundamental choices about workforce development, standard work, and AI-powered training. The combination of unprecedented market demand, proven automated training technologies, and urgent workforce needs has created a window of opportunity that will not stay open indefinitely.
Companies implementing these systems first are building capabilities that improve over time, creating sustainable competitive advantages while competitors struggle with the same challenges. The technology is ready, the business case is proven, and market conditions are creating the perfect environment for extraordinary growth for those who prioritize Aerospace and Defense workforce skills training and standard work as core strategic capabilities. The only question is whether you will lead this transformation or spend the next five years watching others capture the opportunities that should have been yours. If the answer is to accelerate progress and lead through speed and innovation in workforce development, TBM is ready to help you get there—faster.