Wider context
Automation knowledge is becoming too important to sit with one person.
The pressure on engineering teams is not likely to reduce. Industrial equipment is becoming more connected, more software-driven and more dependent on control systems. The Institution of Engineering and Technology reported in 2025 that automation was one of the top digital skills employers said they needed for growth, and that a significant share of employers said they lacked automation skills.
That matters for maintenance teams. When automated systems become central to production, control-system confidence becomes part of everyday operational resilience. It is no longer sensible for all practical automation understanding to sit in one person, one shift or one department.
For employers, this does not mean creating a team of full-time PLC programmers. It means recognising that automation awareness is now part of modern engineering capability. The businesses that handle this well tend to build teams that can ask better questions, diagnose more calmly and share knowledge before it becomes urgent.