SACA Releases New Credentials for Electric Vehicle Manufacturing and Battery Fundamentals
The Smart Automation Certification Alliance (SACA) is pleased to announce the release of five new credentials covering electric vehicle (EV) manufacturing and battery fundamentals into pilot testing.
- C-110 Lithium-Ion Battery Fundamentals
- C-111 EV/Battery Precision Inspection
- C-112 EV/Battery Manufacturing Systems 1
- C-113 EV/Battery Maintenance Operations
- C-114 EV/Battery Manufacturing Systems 2
These credential standards cover core competencies of EV battery manufacturing, including: lithium-ion battery technology, electrical components of battery and hybrid vehicles, foundational measurement skills, manufacturing and production, preventative and predictive maintenance, and quality. Full descriptions of each credential can be found here.
As automakers, suppliers, and advanced manufacturers accelerate their transition to electrification, the demand for technicians with validated EV manufacturing and battery competencies has surged. SACA’s new certifications provide a standardized, industry‑recognized pathway for developing and verifying those skills.
Developed in collaboration with leading automotive manufacturers, the “Big Three”, workforce organizations, and industry associations, SACA’s EV Manufacturing and Battery Certifications focus on the core competencies required for safe, effective work in EV production, battery assembly, testing, and maintenance environments.
Drew Coleman, Senior Director of MichAuto, highlighted the upcoming certifications stating, “There is a solution that we’re building, that will help [educators] prepare their schools and their students for this technology.”
The launch comes at a pivotal moment for the U.S. manufacturing landscape. With billions of dollars in EV and battery investments underway nationwide, these credentials provide a critical tool for workforce development programs, community colleges, high schools, and employers seeking to build talent pipelines for high‑growth electrification careers.
SACA would like to thank the following organizations for their participation in the pilot process of these micro-credentials: Alamance Community College, Guilford Technical College, Henry Ford College, Ivy Tech-Kokomo Campus, Jackson College, Lucid Motors, Mott Community College, Michigan Workforce Training and Education Collaborative (MWTEC), Oakland Community College, Ogeechee Technical College, Panasonic Energy Corporation of North America, Randolph Community College, Truckee Meadows Community College, West Georgia Technical College.
Thanks to these organizations and their expertise on the skills and competencies needed for today’s smart manufacturing workforce, SACA was able to create these new nationally recognized, occupation-driven standards.
- Published in News, Technology
Strengthening Workforce Pipelines Though Third-Party Credentials in Education
Walk into any modern plant or fulfillment center and you’ll see robotics and automated systems running the show. What you won’t always see is the skilled talent needed to keep those systems operating. The gap between technology and workforce readiness is widening, and employers are feeling the strain.
But industry can’t close this gap alone. Education partners play a critical role in preparing learners long before they enter the workforce, and the most effective institutions are those that align their programs with real employer expectations.
The Smart Automation Certification Alliance (SACA) is emerging as a bridge for industry to finally get the consistent, validated skills they’ve been asking for.
Schools that adopt SACA are embedding hands-on, competency-based training that mirrors what technicians will encounter on the job. This alignment ensures that students graduate with both the confidence and the credentials to step directly into high-skill roles, reducing onboarding time and strengthening the talent pipeline for employers.
Everyone benefits when industry and education work from the same playbook. Employers gain access to job‑ready talent with verified skills. Schools strengthen their programs and demonstrate clear value to students and regional partners. And learners earn portable, stackable certifications that open doors to high‑wage, high‑demand careers. SACA sits at the center of this ecosystem, creating a shared language of skills that connects classrooms to careers and helps companies build the workforce they need to thrive.
Scaling Talent at Amazon
As more employers search for ways to build a workforce capable of supporting advanced automation, some are taking bold steps to redefine what technical training looks like. Amazon is one of them. Faced with the challenge of developing maintenance technicians across a massive national footprint, the company needed a scalable, consistent way to validate skills.
Amazon’s Reliability and Maintenance Engineering (RME) team oversees all industrial maintenance across all distribution centers across the country. The RME Mechatronics and Robotics Apprenticeship (MRA) started in 2020 and is designed to take individuals with little to no maintenance background and build them into fully capable technicians. Apprentices begin with 12 weeks of intensive classroom and hands‑on training, where they learn foundational electrical, mechanical, and automation concepts while earning eight industry‑recognized SACA credentials.
In speaking with The TechEd Podcast, Logan Schulz, Senior Manager of Reliability & Maintenance Engineering at Amazon says, “One of the reasons we chose SACA was to reflect ourselves against the industry standard and to create something that is transferable.”
After completing the classroom portion, apprentices transition into 2,000 hours of structured on‑the‑job training. They progress through a series of clearly defined benchmarks that reinforce their skills in real operating environments. By the end of the program, apprentices are prepared to step into Amazon’s Mechatronics and Robotics Technician role, equipped with both the theoretical knowledge and the practical experience needed to succeed.
This dual-training model gives Amazon a powerful way to grow its own talent. Like many employers, Amazon is navigating a widening retirement gap as experienced technicians leave the workforce faster than new ones can be trained. At the same time, the rapid evolution of automation and robotics demands a baseline of transferable skills that can adapt as technology changes. By embedding SACA certifications into the apprenticeship pathway, Amazon ensures every apprentice develops a consistent, future-ready foundation.
The success of Amazon’s apprenticeship model demonstrates the power of pairing hands-on training with industry-recognized credentials. With SACA at the core, Amazon is developing technicians who are ready for today’s systems and prepared for whatever comes next.
Ogeechee Tech Turns Industry Standards into Student Success
Logan also states that one of Amazon’s partner schools for the MRE Mechatronics and Robotics Apprenticeship is Ogeechee Technical College in Statesboro, GA. For more than five years, Ogeechee has been one of SACA’s earliest and most committed higher education partners, weaving industry-recognized credentials into a mission built around delivering a skilled workforce to the communities it serves.
As a unit of the Technical College System of Georgia, Ogeechee supports learners across Bulloch, Evans, and Screven counties through student-focused programs, state-of-the-art facilities, and flexible learning pathways that meet the demands of today’s in-demand careers.
Ogeechee has become a standout example of how higher education can translate industry standards into real student outcomes. By integrating SACA certifications into student pathways, Ogeechee ensures that graduates enter the workforce with a shared language of skills. One that resonates with employers and reflects the college’s mission to deliver a highly skilled workforce to the communities it serves.
When speaking about SACA, Vice President for Economic Development Jan Moore said, “What higher education should be doing is looking for ways their students can demonstrate the skills that they have when they leave that institution. And if you’re not using something like SACA to do that, you’re doing your student a disservice.”
For employers, leveraging SACA credentials offers a direct path to building a workforce that’s both consistent and future-ready. Rather than hoping new hires have the right technical strengths, employers can turn to a nationally recognized standard that clearly validates a technician’s capabilities.
This shared benchmark not only streamlines hiring and onboarding, it also ensures that workers bring transferable, adaptable competencies that hold up as technology evolves. It’s why partners across advanced manufacturing, logistics, and technical services increasingly look to educational partners, like Ogeechee Tech, to deliver graduates who are prepared to contribute from day one.
As automation accelerates, companies need technicians who can troubleshoot confidently and keep production running without disruption. “I think that due to the amount of automation that’s coming into processes, quality is extremely important now to manufacturers,” explains Jan Moore.
Ogeechee’s integration of SACA credentials reflects a deep understanding of what modern employers need and what students deserve. By aligning curriculum, facilities, and partnerships around a shared skills standard, the college delivers graduates with the confidence and capability to step into advanced technical roles. It’s a powerful example of how higher education can elevate both opportunity and industry readiness.
When education and industry speak the same language
Everyone moves forward faster when education and industry speak the same language. Shared skill standards like SACA create a direct bridge between what students learn in the classroom and what employers need on the job, eliminating the guesswork on both sides.
Students gain clarity, confidence, and credentials that carry weight across industries, while employers benefit from a talent pipeline built on verified, transferable competencies. It’s the kind of alignment that turns training into opportunity and workforce challenges into long-term solutions.
Employers benefit just as much from this shared standard. With SACA, they no longer have to interpret résumés or assume what a candidate can do; they can trust that certified technicians bring validated, consistent skills in mechanical, electrical, and automation systems. Employers benefit just as much from this shared standard. With SACA, they can trust that certified technicians bring validated, consistent skills in mechanical, electrical, and automation systems.
What’s happening at places like Ogeechee Tech and across SACA’s partner network shows what’s possible when everyone commits to a shared vision of workforce excellence. As more schools and employers adopt these standards, students gain clearer pathways and companies gain talent they can trust. It’s a shift that strengthens communities today and builds a more resilient workforce for tomorrow.
Interested in having your institution become a SACA member? Check out our full member benefits for industry and education.
Looking to see what certifications your organization can utilize in training or programming? Check out our current list of credentials.
- Published in News, Technology
New Collaborative Robot System Operations Certification Announced by the Smart Automation Certification Alliance
Collaborative robots (cobots) are rapidly reshaping modern manufacturing, blending human problem solving with robotic precision since they first gained widespread attention in 2008. As industries adopt more advanced automation, the demand for technicians who understand how to safely operate, program, and collaborate with these systems is accelerating.
A cobot is a type of automation designed to work directly alongside human operators, sharing tasks and physical space in a way traditional industrial robots can’t. Their purpose isn’t to replace people but to enhance human capability, handling repetitive, precise, or ergonomically challenging tasks while workers focus on problem‑solving, quality, and higher‑value responsibilities. This human‑robot partnership is becoming a defining feature of modern smart manufacturing.
To support this shift, the Smart Automation Certification Alliance (SACA) has developed a new certification that assesses and validates individuals’ understanding of cobot technology. These standards are being built with direct input from industry and education partners to ensure they reflect the competencies needed on today’s smart factory floor.
The Importance of Cobot Certifications
A certification in collaborative robotics is becoming increasingly valuable as industries accelerate their adoption of human‑robot teamwork. Because effective cobot integration relies on strong safety practices and a strong understanding of how robots operate, employers need assurance that workers have been trained to meet these expectations. A recognized credential signals that an individual understands the safety standards, interaction principles, and technical skills required to work productively with cobots.
It also demonstrates readiness for continuous learning as the technology evolves. In a workforce where human‑robot collaboration is quickly becoming the norm, certifications provide a trusted way for employers to identify talent that is prepared, capable, and aligned with modern automation needs.
As with all SACA certifications, the development of the Collaborative Robot System Operations 1 credential began with a technical work group to define the industry-standard competencies required for working with collaborative robot technology.
Comprised of leading global robotics manufacturers, technical experts and education leaders, the work group partnered with Vincennes University and its Center for Applied Robotics and Automation, who hosted the event.
Kimberly Wright, Director of the Center, says, “This new certification reflects the power of collaboration between education and industry. By working with SACA, Vincennes University is able to embed industry-driven credentials into our career pathways, ensuring learners are prepared for the evolving demands of collaborative robotics and advanced manufacturing.”
Collaborative Robot System Operations
The Collaborative Robot System Operations 1 credential certifies individuals to safely operate and program a collaborative robot within an industrial collaborative workspace. Skills include identifying and applying collaborative safety principles, how automation safety devices function, defining soft-limits, and employing a virtual safety fence in software. Individuals will develop foundational programming skills, including recording and touching up motion points, creating variable arrays for position recording, and using logic operations.
Obtaining a cobot certification strengthens a student’s knowledge of advanced manufacturing systems. As facilities integrate more automation, employers need individuals who understand how to operate, program, and monitor these systems with precision and confidence. Learning cobot fundamentals gives students the technical fluency required to contribute on day one in environments where automation and human oversight are tightly interconnected.
This certification arrives at a pivotal moment for industry and education alike. As collaborative robots become standard tools on the modern factory floor, employers need a reliable way to identify individuals who can operate, program, and maintain these systems safely and effectively.
By aligning its standards with real industrial practices and emerging workforce needs, SACA gives members a clear pathway to evaluate how their current programs measure up and where they may need to evolve.
The full certification description is available to all SACA members, and we encourage institutions to review the standards closely. Doing so provides a clear picture of how existing programs can align with the certification requirements and where updates or redevelopment may be needed to fully support this emerging area of collaborative automation.
Interested in having your institution become a SACA member? Check out our full member benefits for industry and education.
- Published in News, Technology

