
If you’re managing a growing manufacturing operation, you may be asking: “How can a cobot help my team improve efficiency and productivity?” You’re not alone. Many manufacturers are exploring collaborative robots (cobots) but aren’t sure how to integrate them. Maybe you’ve seen one at a trade show, heard a vendor pitch, or noticed a competitor using them.
This guide explains what cobots do in real-world manufacturing settings, with practical examples that show just how approachable and valuable these solutions can be.
A cobot—short for collaborative robot—is a robotic arm designed to safely work alongside humans without the need for cages or safety fences. Cobots:
Think of a cobot as an extra pair of hands on the floor, running consistently every shift without fatigue or breaks.
Here’s how MG Automation and Controls customers are deploying cobots in mid-sized manufacturing operations:
Industries: Metalworking, plastics, precision machining
Function: Loads/unloads parts, presses buttons, opens doors, and handles hot or sharp materials.
Benefits:
Example: A CNC shop added a cobot to its vertical mill on the second shift, adding six hours of extra runtime without hiring additional staff.
Industries: Assembly lines, packaging, sorting, kitting
Function: Moves parts from bins to trays, trays to boxes, or conveyors to pallets.
Benefits:
Example: An electronics assembly line used two cobots to transfer circuit boards between stations, cutting transfer time by 30% and minimizing handling errors.
Industries: End-of-line operations across multiple sectors
Function: Stacks boxes or packages on pallets consistently and accurately.
Benefits:
Example: A food manufacturer replaced a second-shift palletizing role with a cobot, saving $70,000 per year in labor costs while reducing injuries.
Industries: Automotive, electronics, consumer products
Function: Fastens screws, presses parts, applies adhesives, or inserts small components.
Benefits:
Example: A consumer goods plant used a cobot for final assembly on a packaging line, reducing scrap by 22% and improving cycle time by 14%.
Industries: Sheet metal, industrial fabrication, automotive
Function: Tack welds, seam prep, and consistent weld paths.
Benefits:
Example: A fabrication shop used a cobot to prep weld joints, tripling MIG welder productivity.
Industries: Electronics, medical, automotive, food
Function: Vision systems detect defects, confirm alignment, or verify completeness.
Benefits:
Example: A packaging facility added a vision-equipped cobot to check label alignment, cutting rework by 36% and saving 180 hours of manual inspection annually.
Every cobot application shares these features:
These applications are not just for large-scale, high-tech factories—they fit everyday manufacturing operations.
Consider an 8-hour shift with a cobot running a packaging line:
Results: Over 2,000 cycles per day with perfect repeatability, allowing operators to manage multiple lines simultaneously.
Typical benefits include:
Cobots are redeployable—today they may palletize, tomorrow they could handle assembly or inspection tasks.
If you’re curious whether a cobot could help your team, MG Automation and Controls can:
Start discovering how one cobot can transform your operations today.