Detroit Metro robot programmer jobs should be written with automotive and supplier automation in mind. This page should target people who work with industrial robot cells, not broad robotics research or AI software. Strong candidates may have experience with FANUC, ABB, KUKA, Yaskawa/Motoman, robotic welding, material handling, hemming, sealing, palletizing, machine tending, safety zones, fixture issues, cycle-time work, and production recovery.
Local job titles may vary. Some postings will say robot programmer. Others may say robotics technician, controls and robotics programmer, automation technician, manufacturing automation specialist, or robot cell support. The page should help job seekers connect those dots and encourage them to watch related PLC and controls searches. Industrial robot work in Detroit Metro is often tied to PLC handshakes, conveyors, guarding, vision, operators, and launch schedules, so candidates who understand the whole cell usually have a better search experience.
The location copy should include the broader metro area: Detroit, Auburn Hills, Warren, Sterling Heights, Novi, Livonia, Dearborn, Troy, and nearby supplier corridors. The page should link to Michigan robotics and Detroit controls pages, plus the FANUC article for credibility. It should set a clear boundary: this page is for industrial robotics, robot programming, robot cell troubleshooting, and commissioning. It is not for generic software robotics or non-factory autonomy work.
Use this page for robot programming, robot technician, robotic welding, industrial robot commissioning, robot recovery, and automation integration roles with clear factory equipment relevance. Link it back to PLC and controls pages so candidates catch roles where robotics is buried in the description.