It takes more than 500 employees to produce a million pounds of cereal every day at the Post plant in Northfield. About 100 of them have been with the company less than a year.
Noah Moyer, 22, is among that new class of operators keeping the plant running 24/7.
He was just looking for a job with benefits; now he writes for the company newsletter and has recruited a number of friends to join him.
"It's a very employee-focused company," Moyer said.
Manufacturers have struggled for years to attract and retain workers, a problem that could become a crisis as long-tenured employees begin to retire in droves.
But younger applicants are showing up, at last, as perceptions of factory jobs change and opportunities for promotion grow.
"It feels like in the last two years we've seen a bit of a pivot where newer generations are coming into the plant," said Julie Sheridan, senior HR manager at the Post cereal plant in Northfield. "That's exciting for us because as we see more interest in manufacturing it means better candidates, better talent."
In 2021, the share of Minnesota manufacturing employees younger than 45 reached its highest rate — more than 52% — in at least a decade.