For a lot of manufacturers, the assumption is simple: if the role is open and the pay is competitive, the right people will apply. That’s not how this works anymore.
Skilled workers aren’t just evaluating the job. They’re evaluating the company before they ever click “apply.” They’re checking your website, your careers page, your reputation, and the signals you send about what it’s actually like to work there.
If those signals are weak—or missing—you lose them early.
This is the employer brand blind spot.
We see it all the time. A company is hiring, but everything about their digital presence is built for customers, not candidates. The site talks about products and capabilities. The careers page is thin. The messaging is generic. There’s no real proof that this is a place worth choosing.
And in a market where skilled trades are still in short supply, that gap matters. Recent industry reporting from Plastics Today continues to highlight just how difficult it is to fill technician and hands-on roles—and how much workplace culture and employer perception influence who actually applies.
The companies winning right now aren’t necessarily offering the highest pay. They’re the ones showing a clear, credible story about the work, the team, and the opportunity.
Meanwhile, many manufacturers are still leaning on outdated tactics—posting jobs, pushing them through an Applicant Tracking System (ATS) and hoping visibility happens.
It doesn’t.
Your ATS isn’t a strategy. It’s a tool. And for a lot of companies, it’s quietly become a crutch.
What This Actually Means
If applications are slow, the problem may not be awareness.
It may be perception.
And perception is shaped long before someone hits your application page.
Stop Renting Attention. Start Building It.
At Main Street Recruitment, we help manufacturers fix the front end of hiring—your messaging, your visibility, and the way candidates experience your brand before they ever apply.
If you’re tired of “we just can’t find people,” it’s time to look at what candidates are actually seeing.
Let’s take a look together.
