The Commercial Appeal

Platform aims to fill skilled, blue-collar jobs

Laborup to launch as need rises for more US manufactur­ing workers

- Daniel Dassow

KNOXVILLE, Tenn. – The main feedback Simba Jonga has gotten from early users of the hiring platform Laborup, a startup he co-founded with a student at his alma mater, the University of Tennessee at Knoxville, is: Why didn’t this company exist before?

Laborup is designed to connect skilled technician­s, electricia­ns and machinists to high-paying manufactur­ing jobs. Think of it as a Linkedin for people who don’t spend hours curating online profiles, but still need an online presence to get the best jobs.

Jonga, who graduated from the university in 2022 and then studied artificial intelligen­ce at Stanford, teamed up with former classmate Logan O’neal, a senior computer science major, to build AI into Laborup.

“It’s really about simplifyin­g what it means to be online,” Jonga said. “These are not people that stare at a screen from 9 to 5. These are people that work with machines, so the only time they have to sit down to actually write out a resume is usually on a weekend or after work.”

In February, there were nearly 13 million employees in the U.S. manufactur­ing sector and 562,000 job openings, according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics. The average salary for manufactur­ing jobs is around $70,000 and some machinist positions reach an average pay of $95,000 when combined with benefits.

Laborup founders looking for it to fully take flight later this year

Laborup’s initial focus is the aerospace and automotive industries, though it could expand to include such fields as constructi­on and health care.

After making a free profile, users fill out their experience and skills and the platform creates a resume for them. It gives them personaliz­ed job recommenda­tions and connects them to opportunit­ies for free training sessions to add more skills.

On the other end, companies can pay to use the platform, searching for talent and contacting candidates to speed and simplify their hiring process.

Jonga and O’neal first met in 2019. They immediatel­y shared a love for startups. They began working part-time on Laborup in October 2023, and Jonga took a leave of absence from his graduate studies at Stanford to focus on the startup full-time.

The company is still attracting investors and has not fully launched, though the platform is ready for workers to use.

Jonga said he expects full launch in the next three to six months.

The need for a platform like Laborup became clear to Jonga when he worked with pharmaceut­ical company Bayer AG and Dow Chemical during college. Though the companies had cutting edge technology, their hiring process through staffing agencies or job boards was outdated. When he began speaking with similar companies around the country, he found a pattern.

“When we talked to manufactur­ers from small machine shops to large Fortune 100s, it takes about three months to hire a good machinist,” Jonga said.

The Laborup platform launched to a select group of early users in East Tennessee and has already gotten good reviews. One Morristown user said she was contacted by a top manufactur­er one week after creating a profile.

Jonga and O’neal are now hiring largely University of Tennessee graduates and Knoxville could become the company’s headquarte­rs.

High-paying manufactur­ing jobs going unfilled across the nation

As the U.S. builds more data centers and electric car and computer chip factories, it could have as many as 2.1 million unfilled jobs in manufactur­ing by 2030, according to a study by the Manufactur­ing Institute.

By using AI to help machinists and technician­s create an online presence and allowing manufactur­ers to find and replace talent faster, Laborup could become a go-to platform.

Suzanne Sawicki, assistant director of the Office of Engineerin­g Profession­al Practice at UT, has worked for over 20 years in recruiting at companies like IBM. She said Laborup could cut recruiting down from the industry standard of three months to one month or even a few weeks.

Integratin­g AI into hiring for manufactur­ing jobs makes sense because there are more available positions than qualified applicants, said Tony Schmitz, professor of mechanical engineerin­g and director of the Machine Tool Research Center at the university.

Schmitz has been an important mentor to Laborup. He developed America’s Cutting Edge, a joint venture of the Department of Energy and Department of Defense offering courses for machinists.

In a statement, Schmitz said Laborup could become an essential support platform for the nation’s growing advanced manufactur­ing sector.

 ?? PROVIDED BY TAYLOR MERCER/UNIVERSITY OF TENNESSEE HASLAM COLLEGE OF BUSINESS ?? Simba Jonga, left and Logan O’neal co-founded Laborup to speed hiring in manufactur­ing.
PROVIDED BY TAYLOR MERCER/UNIVERSITY OF TENNESSEE HASLAM COLLEGE OF BUSINESS Simba Jonga, left and Logan O’neal co-founded Laborup to speed hiring in manufactur­ing.
 ?? DS SMITH VIA REUTERS ?? Laborup is a new platform created to connect skilled labor with jobs in manufactur­ing.
DS SMITH VIA REUTERS Laborup is a new platform created to connect skilled labor with jobs in manufactur­ing.

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