Job Description
Ready to Build Quality Glass Products Night After Night?
Do you take pride in safe operations, precise work, and continuous improvement? As an Industrial Manufacturing Operator focused on glass processing, you’ll run production equipment, ensure standards are met, and help drive better processes across the line. Night Shift Details
Work 12-hour nights from 6:50 p.m. to 7:00 a.m. on a 3-2-2 rotation, averaging about 15–16 scheduled workdays each month. Your Impact
Maintain a safe environment—identify, communicate, and act on any safety concerns with your supervisor or safety team.
Operate pre- and post-production equipment per documented procedures to achieve glass product quality and customer satisfaction goals.
Keep raw materials flowing to the line to prevent downtime.
Use stand-up and sit-down forklifts responsibly and efficiently.
Run scheduled quality checks and address variances.
Diagnose and resolve equipment or product issues.
Engage in Kaizen—sometimes leading events—to continuously improve processes.
Uphold 5S: clean, orderly, and well-organized work areas with proper tool placement.
Perform minor maintenance tasks and support job changeovers.
Exemplify the AGC Way in all aspects of your work.
Take on other duties or projects as needed. How You Lead
Passion: You care deeply about our mission and strive for continuous improvement.
Innovation & Change Orientation: You network widely, promote new thinking, reject complacency, adapt fast, and take calculated risks.
Influence & Communication: You communicate a compelling future state, overcome resistance, inspire others, and encourage open, two-way dialogue at all levels.
Integrity: You are consistent, transparent, ethical, and put the company’s interests before your own.
Courage for Challenge: You stay positive through adversity, make tough decisions, learn from failure, and keep growing. Qualifications
High School diploma or GED required; NCRC Silver preferred.
Ability to learn structured problem-solving (Six Sigma, Fishbone, KT, 8D, etc.).
Basic knowledge of Windows computer systems.
Willingness to learn glass product quality standards.
Prior manufacturing experience preferred. Authority to Act
You can stop or suspend operations when safety or quality is in question. Core Proficiencies
Equipment Troubleshooting
Mechanical Troubleshooting Skills
Visual Inspection Aids
Glass Cutting
Glass Fabrication
Mechanical Assembly Skills
High School / GED
Experience in a Manufacturing Environment Compensation Information
Pay rate is determined based on verifiable employment via the background check.