SACA certifications are the gold standard for Industry 4.0 talent, so if you’re not hiring from SACA-aligned programs, you’re already behind. Learn why world-class industrial employers are making SACA certifications a hiring priority.

Finding skilled talent in manufacturing and industrial sectors is harder than ever. As an employer, you need to see more than a resume. You need candidates who can demonstrate real-world skills, industry alignment, and a commitment to continuous learning. But how can you be sure a candidate has the skills you value?

The Smart Automation Certification Alliance (SACA) is the new standard across technical certifications. Built with industry at the table, SACA certifications are designed to meet the needs of modern employers who demand both knowledge and hands-on ability from their workforce. Whether you’re hiring for advanced manufacturing, industrial automation, or smart systems integration, SACA credentials offer a reliable signal of a candidate’s workforce readiness.

That’s why leading manufacturers like Amazon, Rockwell Automation, Ashley Furniture, Hershey, FANUC, Boeing, and hundreds of others have gotten involved with SACA. If you’re in HR, workforce development, or technical hiring and not asking for SACA credentials on your job postings, you’re missing out on the most job-ready candidates in advanced manufacturing.

1. Built by Industry, for Industry

SACA certifications are industry-driven, developed by industry, for industry. Every credential begins with the creation of international skill standards, endorsed by experts in Industry 4.0 technologies from around the world. Topics range from robotics and IoT to process control, electrical systems, semiconductor operations, and many more. This ensures every credential reflects the real-world competencies demanded by today’s advanced manufacturing environments.

SACA certifications are developed in accordance with ISO 17024 standards, the global benchmark for personnel certification. This means they’re not just well-designed, but they’re also credible, consistent, and globally-recognized.

All certifications, after initial topic selection, go through a technical work group. These groups are responsible for defining the competencies, tasks, and performance standards that each certification will assess. These work groups are made up of industry professionals who lead manufacturing and technical teams and are experts in the topic area. This ensures that every certification reflects current technologies, tools, and workflows used in industry.

The input from these work groups guarantees that SACA credentials are not only technically rigorous but also immediately relevant to employers. And because SACA updates its certifications annually, they stay aligned with the latest technologies and tools.

2. Based on Knowledge AND Hands-On Skills

One of the most powerful aspects of SACA certifications is their dual-level structure: Silver and Gold. This tiered approach is designed to build employer confidence by validating both what a person knows and what they can do.

  • Silver SACA certifications validate a candidate’s understanding of key concepts, terminology, and systems. A Silver certification signals that an individual has a solid grasp of the technical landscape and has a strong foundation and understanding of the technology.
  • Gold SACA certifications go a step further by requiring candidates to demonstrate their skills in a hands-on environment. Proctored only by other gold-certified SACA earners, these certifications give credibility and proof of a professional’s experience.

Most credentials fall short because they don’t require candidates to physically demonstrate their abilities. SACA fills that gap. Its dual-level structure and performance-based assessments make it one of the most robust certification models in the industry. And because SACA is a third-party, nationally recognized credentialing body, employers can trust that its standards are impartial, consistent, and aligned with the needs of modern manufacturing.

3. Stackable, Modular, and Occupationally-Aligned

SACA certifications are built to scale. Whether you’re hiring entry-level technicians or developing advanced engineers, the stackable structure allows professionals to build their credentials over time.

Learners can begin with a single certification and build upon it, adding new credentials that reflect their growing expertise and evolving career goals. This modular design allows individuals to customize their learning path and document a wide range of skills, all while staying aligned with the demands of modern Industry 4.0 workplaces.

Unlike generic training programs, SACA certifications are occupationally-focused. That means each Specialist and Professional certification is tied to a specific job role or function within the smart manufacturing ecosystem. Whether someone is preparing for a role in industrial maintenance, systems design, or data-driven optimization, SACA certifications ensure that the skills being assessed are directly applicable to real-world tasks. This occupational alignment helps workforce leaders identify talent that’s not only technically capable but also strategically positioned to contribute to high-tech production environments.

SACA’s microcredentials are divided into core and elective categories and offered at silver and gold levels. Core micro-credentials certify skills that are applicable to all companies, while elective micro-credentials can be added to match with regional or specific company needs.

These micro-credentials can stack into full specialist or professional certifications. Specialist certifications are keyed to a skilled occupation and certify technical skills in operations, troubleshooting, programming, maintenance, and systems integration. Professional certifications are engineering certifications that focus on analysis, design, and optimization of Industry 4.0 systems.

This modular format makes SACA ideal for scalable workforce development. You can upskill employees incrementally, tailor training to your equipment, and build career pathways that align with your operational goals.

Tap Into the Talent Pipeline

Employers shouldn’t wait for certified professionals to show up at their door. Across the country, high schools, technical colleges, and workforce training centers are building SACA-aligned labs and integrating SACA certifications into their programs. These institutions are producing graduates who are ready to contribute from day one. By partnering with these schools, employers can build direct hiring pipelines, offer internships, and even shape training to match their equipment and processes.

By engaging with SACA-certified programs, employers can shape the future of their workforce. Many schools with SACA labs welcome industry partnerships, offering opportunities to host facility tours or provide guest speaking sessions. These collaborations help students gain familiarity with your company that can be top of mind when having conversations about their futures. Employers who invest early in these relationships gain first access to top talent and build long-term pipelines of skilled professionals who are already aligned with their company’s standards and technologies.

Hire with Confidence and Lead with Capability

Developed by industry professionals, validated through hands-on performance, and organized into stackable microcredentials, SACA certifications align directly with the needs of modern production environments.

SACA certified candidates are showing up with validated skills, hands-on experience, and a clear understanding of the technologies shaping modern manufacturing.

Looking for a place to start? Here are easy ways to take advantage of SACA-certified talent:

In a world where technology evolves fast and talent is a competitive edge, SACA makes workforce development both practical and powerful. The companies already hiring for SACA know this, and if you’re not, you’re leaving talent on the table.

Industry Credentials Turned a Career’s Worth of Experience Into College Credit

SACA certifications give learners a way to turn real-world expertise into college credit, saving time, reducing costs, and accelerating career growth. 

(L-R) Dr. Ding, Wesley Lidwin, Tyler Solberg, Jason Solberg from the University of Wisconsin-Stout Automation Leadership program. Photo: Jason Solberg

For any parent, their child’s graduation is a moment of pride. For Jason Solberg, it’s also a personal milestone. This spring, he’ll don his cap and gown alongside his son, Tyler, as both become some of the first graduates of the University of Wisconsin-Stout’s new Bachelor of Automation Leadership program. 

The degree is the first of its kind, offering students an opportunity to blend technical skills with industrial business leadership expertise. The program prepares learners to lead in areas such as Industry 4.0, digital transformation, and operations management.  

What makes this program so unique is that 61 credits can be transferred through associated credentials from the Smart Automation Certification Alliance (SACA), a national certification body that delivers industry-recognized certifications and microcredentials in advanced manufacturing and Industry 4.0. SACA silver certifications are written exams that test knowledge, and gold certifications are hands-on assessments that measure technical skill.  

Add general education credits, and students can transfer up to 88 total credits to UW-Stout from any technical or community college in the country that has a transfer agreement with UW-Stout. 

In other words, students can complete 75% of a 120-credit bachelor’s degree without paying university tuition. 

To finish their degree, students will build on their technical foundation with courses in IoT, lean manufacturing, project management, and digital strategy. Then, they’ll complete an automation leadership internship and final capstone project. These capstones showcase a student’s understanding of both the technical and business sides of a project, including scheduling, budgeting, team management, and communication.  

Jason Solberg describes himself as a man who’s done a little bit of everything, with a career that has spanned roles, technologies, and learning environments. That versatility is exactly what accelerated his journey through the Automation Leadership degree. 

For his capstone project, Jason developed a coil winding training station and related training materials. Photo: Dr. Ding, University of Wisconsin-Stout

Jason’s has had roles in operations, maintenance, automation, and instruction, with roles at Tecumseh Products, Waukesha Engines, and GE. Early on, he pursued technical education at Moraine Park Technical College and completed a journeyman apprenticeship at Waukesha County Technical College (WCTC).

Having spent over two decades in industry, Jason moved to the world of education after discovering a job listing for an adjunct instructor position at WCTC. “I took the plunge and I went to the other side and became a teacher. It was terrifying because I never taught a day in my life.”  

After nine years of teaching, Jason has now taught over 28 different courses and set up five apprenticeship programs. “I don’t teach for the money. I do it because I want to make a difference in people’s life.” 

Always looking to grow, Jason had recently enrolled at Lakeland College for data analytics when WCTC Associate Vice Provost of Academic Affairs, Mike Shiels, mentioned a new program that might be of interest. The University of Wisconsin-Stout’s new bachelor of Automation Leadership was being rolled out and looking for students. With the SACA credential portion of the degree, Shiels explained how Jason could gain credit for his years of experience.  

“I just took whatever [SACA assessments] just to see, test myself. I got 15 or 16 silvers from that,” Jason explains how he received his SACA credentials. He then spent 4 days at Lakeshore College in Cleveland, Wisconsin testing for his gold certifications. “I didn’t even study. I went in there and I walked away with 10 golds.” These credentials will translate into 28 credits towards Jason’s degree. 

Jason Solberg (right). Photo: Waukesha County Technical College

Unlike the traditional credit for prior learning model, which maps to courses, Stout’s model uses the earned SACA credentials to award credit. According to Program Director Dr. Xuedong (David) Ding, “SACA makes this program possible. Because if there is no national or internationally-recognized skill set competencies certificate, this program would not be available.”  

Dr. Ding also explains how SACA’s industry-validated and standardized benchmarks, along with flexible delivery, enabled the University to format the program to support reshoring American manufacturing.  

Jason is the perfect example of what makes the Automation Leadership degree so unique. By earning his 25 SACA certifications, he validated decades of hands-on experience and turned those credentials directly into college credit. This allowed him to reduce the time it will take to obtain the degree as well as reduce tuition costs, since converting certifications into credits meant fewer classes to pay for. Jason’s journey shows that when education aligns with experience, learners can move forward faster, with greater purpose and impact. 

 “I like to lead by example, and I want to pave the path for our apprentices because I’m an apprentice,” Jason shares. 

Now that Jason has taken his own certifications and knows the variety of credentials SACA provides, he uses them as a planning tool to shape his courses at WCTC. SACA helps him align labs, lectures, and assessments with the exact skills students will need in the field. This approach gives students a clear path toward earning certifications while they learn, and it ensures that every lesson connects directly to real-world outcomes. 

And because WCTC has a transfer agreement with UW-Stout, Jason’s students also have a clear pathway to an Automation Leadership degree if they want to continue their education. 

Tyler Solberg, Jason’s son, had also started the Automation Leadership program at the same time as Jason and was able to transfer 19 credits into the program from his dual enrollment at Oconomowoc High School.  

For his capstone project, Jason worked with Tyler and another classmate, Wesley Lidwin, to complete a multi-year project to develop a coil winding training station for Eaton. Jason often conducts training bootcamps for Eaton employees, and Eaton offered $350,000 to fund Jason’s leadership of the new training program. 

[A look at the coil training line at Eaton coordinated by Jason and his team.]

Dr. Ding oversees Jason’s capstone project and predicts the training Jason coordinated will have a continued impact on Eaton beyond this first project. “[The coil training line] impacted the whole culture of that facility. It transferred from a semi-automated or manual operation to a fully automated production. So, they have a more competitive edge compared to competitors nationally and internationally.” 

Jason and Tyler’s journeys show how SACA certifications create real opportunities for learners at every stage, from high school students just starting out to seasoned professionals with years of experience. While Tyler used dual-enrollment credits to begin his degree early, Jason converted decades of hands-on expertise into college credit through performance-based certifications. Each took a different path, but both will end up in the same destination as they walk the graduation stage together this spring. 

Whether students are just starting out or bringing years of experience to the table, SACA helps them build meaningful skills that connect directly to the workplace. It turns learning into progress, and progress into possibility. 

Learn more about Jason’s capstone project here. 

Find the current offerings of SACA certifications here

Learn more about the Automation Leadership degree here