Technology & Transportation Manufacturing

We work with tech and transport manufacturers to streamline operations, manage complexity, and enable scalable growth.


Technology and transportation manufacturers are running two fundamentally different production systems simultaneously — one profitable but declining, one necessary but not yet mature — and the organizational cost of that split is rarely visible until it’s already expensive.

Global vehicle sales reached 92.5 million units in 2024, but the more significant figure is what’s beneath it: electric vehicle sales hit 17 million units, representing more than 20% of total car sales worldwide and growing at 25% annually.[1] EV production requires 30% fewer workers than traditional internal combustion engine manufacturing — fundamentally altering workforce planning, skill requirements, and supplier economics across the sector.[2] According to the 2024 AMS & ABB Automotive Manufacturing Outlook Survey, 36% of industry executives identify increased labor costs and skill deficiencies as their primary challenge.[3] For manufacturers of transportation equipment and the technology systems embedded in it, the transition isn’t theoretical — it’s happening inside active production environments with no option to stop.



Biggest Challenges We See
in the Technology & Transportation Manufacturing Space


Running parallel production systems with organizations designed for one

Technology and transportation manufacturers managing both legacy and next-generation product lines face a structural organizational problem. ICE production teams and EV or advanced technology production teams operate with different processes, tooling, skills, and cultures — often on shared equipment and with shared support functions. Engineering teams trained on one production philosophy make assumptions that don’t translate to the other. Quality protocols designed for mechanical tolerances don’t account for software validation requirements. Supply chain teams structured for stable, predictable sourcing relationships now need to manage volatile battery material markets alongside long-established ICE supplier networks. The result is two production systems that create friction rather than learning.[1][3]

Workforce transition where resistance is rational, not organizational

Workers who spent careers developing expertise in legacy manufacturing systems aren’t resisting new technology — they’re responding rationally to genuine uncertainty about their roles, career paths, and employment security. When transition plans focus on technical training without addressing role clarity, managers avoid difficult conversations, and information vacuums fill with rumor. The workers with the deepest institutional knowledge about current production systems — knowledge the company needs to maintain while transitioning — are also the workers most at risk of disengaging during the process. That’s not a communications problem. It’s an organizational design problem: the transition plan wasn’t built around how experienced workers actually respond to role-level disruption.[2]

How Rooted Helps Leaders in the Industry

OCM and OD&E address the parallel production and workforce transition challenges that technology and transportation manufacturers face. OCM builds the change infrastructure for a multi-year transition: stakeholder-specific strategies for workers facing different levels of disruption, two-way communication structures that surface operational concerns before they become production problems, and change champion networks built around the informal leaders production teams actually listen to. OD&E designs the workforce and organizational structures for the combined environment — clarifying roles, building career pathways for workers navigating the transition, and creating the development frameworks that retain institutional knowledge from legacy systems while building capability for what comes next.

Organizational Network Analysis (ONA)

Technology & Transportation Manufacturing

Manufacturing operations depend on informal networks that production veterans have built over years. ONA maps these networks — floor leads, quality coordinators, shift supervisors who hold institutional knowledge — before nearshoring transitions, technology rollouts, or workforce reductions break them.
Production floor informal network mapping
Quality-operations coordination gap identification
Critical knowledge holder assessment
Nearshoring and technology transition relationship analysis

Business Process Engineering (BPE)

Technology & Transportation Manufacturing

Manufacturing processes accumulate inefficiency as equipment, suppliers, and workforces change without corresponding process updates. BPE maps actual production workflows, identifies where handoffs create delays, and redesigns operations around how production actually runs today.
Production workflow analysis and redesign
Quality control process improvement
Supplier onboarding and qualification standardization
Technology integration process development

Organizational Change Management (OCM)

Technology & Transportation Manufacturing

Technology adoption on the production floor fails when it ignores floor-level dynamics. OCM works through the informal leaders that production teams actually listen to — not around them — designing change approaches that respect decades of operational expertise.
Technology adoption strategy for production environments
Nearshoring transition change management
Workforce restructuring communication and engagement
Operator training and capability development

Organizational Development & Effectiveness (OD&E)

Technology & Transportation Manufacturing

Manufacturing workforce structures require design that reflects operational reality: shift structures, skill tiering, apprenticeship models, cross-training programs. OD&E builds organizational frameworks that retain institutional knowledge, develop frontline capability, and create resilience through headcount and supplier changes.
Production workforce structure design
Skill pathway and apprenticeship development
Cross-training and knowledge transfer systems
Organizational design for nearshoring transitions and growth


How We’ve Helped Technology & Transportation Manufacturing Organizations with their Operations

Sector-Based Scenarios. Tangible Outcomes.

A tier-1 automotive components manufacturer automating battery pack assembly for a new EV platform faced workforce resistance that was stalling implementation. Union negotiations were dragging, experienced workers were calling in sick at elevated rates, and the automation rollout was running three months behind schedule. Management attributed the problem to change resistance. Our OD&E assessment found otherwise: workers scheduled for reassignment had received no concrete information about new roles, required training, or job security timelines. Managers were avoiding direct conversations, leaving workers to fill the gap with worst-case assumptions. We designed a transition communication plan with specific career pathways for each affected worker group, established reskilling programs tied directly to new roles, and coached managers on direct, honest conversations about what the transition would and wouldn’t mean for each person. The union agreement closed within six weeks, absenteeism returned to baseline, and the automation implementation finished one month ahead of the revised schedule.


Markets shift (fast).
Your floor can’t afford to.

At Rooted, we help financial institutions adapt to new requirements without losing client trust. As compliance evolves and competition intensifies, we guide teams through transformation using strategies built for stability. We understand the stakes, then we help you protect what matters.

  1. World Resources Institute. “How the EV Transition Will Impact Auto Manufacturing Jobs.” 2024. https://www.wri.org/insights/ev-transition-auto-manufacturing-jobs
  2. PwC. “Automotive Industry Trends.” 2024. https://www.pwc.com/us/en/industries/industrial-products/library/automotive-industry-trends.html
  3. RSM Global. “Automotive Trends in 2025 Impacting Middle-Market Organisations.” 2025. https://www.rsm.global/insights/automotive-trends-2025-impacting-middle-market-organisations