Domestic workforce mobility is the systematic relocation of work-authorized American workers from labor-surplus geographic regions to facilities in labor-deficit regions. It is the structural solution to manufacturing’s labor shortage that does not depend on local recruiting, immigration programs, or visa sponsorships.
Definition
Domestic workforce mobility connects available workers in high-unemployment regions (Michigan, Ohio, Appalachia, Puerto Rico) with manufacturing facilities in shortage regions (rural Texas, North Carolina, Indiana, Georgia) through a structured relocation and retention program.
Key Benefits
- 92% 12-month retention vs. 40% industry average
- No immigration dependency or political risk
- 100% E-Verified, work-authorized workers
- Zero upfront costs to employer
- Free conversion to direct payroll at end of program
How to Implement
Work with a domestic workforce mobility provider like TalentMovers. Start with a pilot of 5-10 workers in your hardest-to-fill role type. Measure 90-day and 180-day retention against your local baseline. The data will support scaling. talentmovers.com