Harmony Enterprises Nominated for Industry Partner of the Year
Harmony Enterprises, Inc. has been nominated for the Industry Partner of the Year Award, recognizing organizations that go beyond participation and make a measurable impact in career-connected learning.
This nomination, submitted by Kelsey Biel, Vocational Instructor at Fillmore Central Schools, reflects a sustained commitment to bridging the gap between education and real-world manufacturing through hands-on engagement, mentorship, and technical skill development.
Recognition Rooted in Regional Leadership
The Industry Partner of the Year Award is sponsored by SSC Cooperative as part of its Career Connected Learning Systems (CCLS) initiative. This program is designed to align education with workforce needs across Southeast Minnesota by creating meaningful partnerships between schools and industry.
Organizations are nominated based on their ability to provide real-world learning experiences, support educators, and contribute to long-term workforce development.
Harmony’s nomination reflects exactly that type of engagement.
From Exposure to Application
Many organizations introduce students to careers. Fewer create environments where students can actively experience them.
Through its partnership with Fillmore Central and broader regional initiatives, Harmony has helped bring manufacturing directly into the classroom. Our welding leads spent one day a week in the welding lab this spring semester. Students are not just learning concepts, they are working through real fabrication scenarios, engaging with welding processes, and understanding the expectations of a production environment.
This includes:
- Hands-on welding aligned with industry standards
- Interpretation of real shop drawings and tolerances
- Exposure to sequencing, quality control, and craftsmanship
- Direct mentorship from experienced professionals
This model shifts students from awareness to capability.
Building Skills That Translate
In fabricated metal manufacturing, there is no substitute for experience, and Harmony’s approach is built around real application. Students are expected to execute welds within defined time and quality standards, understand how precision directly impacts final product performance, and learn alongside skilled trades professionals who bring real world expectations into the process. They also gain exposure to the pace and discipline of an active shop environment, reinforcing what it truly takes to succeed in the field.
By introducing these elements early, students leave with more than interest. They leave with confidence and a clear understanding of what a career in manufacturing demands and offers.
Strengthening the Workforce Pipeline
This work is part of a broader regional effort led by SSC Cooperative to strengthen workforce pipelines.
Career-connected learning is not a one-time interaction. It is a coordinated system that requires alignment between educators and industry leaders. Harmony’s involvement reflects a long-term commitment to that system by:
- Supporting educators with real-world context
- Creating consistent engagement opportunities for students
- Helping define what industry-ready skills look like
- Reinforcing clear pathways from classroom to career
This level of collaboration ensures that students are not only prepared, but positioned to succeed.
A Model of Consistency
What separates impactful industry partners is not a single initiative, but consistency over time.
Harmony’s continued involvement across career fairs, classroom instruction, mentorship, and hands-on training reflects a sustained investment in both students and educators. That consistency builds trust and reinforces expectations on both sides of the education-to-industry transition.
Recognition and What Comes Next
The Industry Partner of the Year Celebration will take place on May 8, 2026, at the Wood Lake Meeting Center, bringing together educators and industry leaders committed to advancing career-connected learning across the region.
For Harmony Enterprises, this nomination is not an endpoint. It is a reflection of ongoing work and a responsibility to continue showing up in meaningful ways.
Workforce development is not a program. It is a system, and workforce development IS economic development! And systems only work when industry participates consistently, aligns with education, and invests in real outcomes.
Harmony Enterprises remains committed to that role, continuing to support students, educators, and the future of manufacturing through hands-on engagement that prepares individuals not just for jobs, but for long-term careers.
