What This Job Is
A production manager (生产经理) runs one or more factory workshops — scheduling output, managing line leaders, hitting delivery targets, and keeping costs under control. You translate the sales order into a production plan and make sure it ships on time. Most production managers started on the floor; the job is less about sewing and more about people, numbers, and problem-solving under pressure. For how production management fits export factory clusters, see How the Global Textile Industry Works.
Brief History
The production manager role grew out of something older: the floor foreman. In early textile mills, one experienced worker supervised a room of looms or sewing machines, reporting to the owner. No MBA required — just someone who knew the machines and could keep people working.
Scientific management changed the job in the early 1900s. Time-and-motion studies, production targets, efficiency metrics — factories started measuring output the way they measured fabric yardage. Textile production managers today still live in that world: daily output numbers, defect rates, labor cost per unit.
China's home textile export boom created a specific version of this role. A single factory might run 500 operators across three shifts, with orders from six countries due in the same week. The production manager became the person who turns chaos into a shipping schedule — or takes the blame when it doesn't.
Here's what the org chart won't tell you: the best production managers aren't the ones with the fanciest planning software. They're the ones who know which line leader will actually deliver when you ask for rush production (赶货) on a Friday night.
What You'll Do Each Day
The shift begins before machines start. Yesterday's output against plan tells you whether today is routine or crisis mode.
- Review daily production against shipment deadlines
- Assign workers to lines by skill and absenteeism
- Walk the floor for bottlenecks — breakdowns, slow stations, quality holds
- Coordinate with QC, warehouse, and maintenance
- Report output, efficiency, and defect rates to the factory director
- Plan overtime in peak season; resolve disputes between line leaders and operators
- Join buyer audits and pre-shipment meetings when issues arise
Mornings stay on the floor; afternoons shift to meetings, reports, and exceptions. During peak season, exceptions rarely stop.
Skills & Requirements
Self-assessment: check the skills you have
0/9Education: Vocational diploma or bachelor's in textile engineering, industrial engineering, or business. Many production managers are promoted from line leader roles without a degree — but larger factories and international brands prefer formal education.
Physical requirements: Mostly walking and standing on the factory floor. Long hours during peak season are common. If you hate being the person everyone comes to with problems, this role will wear you down fast.
Salary Data
Pay scales with factory size and buyer mix — a 200-person bedding factory pays differently than a 2,000-person garment operation.
| Region | Entry/ annual | Mid | Senior |
|---|---|---|---|
| US (cut-and-sew / home textiles) | $65,000–80,000 | $80,000–95,000 | $95,000–130,000 |
Showing local pay for United States
Figures are approximate and vary by factory, experience, and season.
China factory managers often receive housing, meals, and an annual bonus (1–3 months' salary). US roles typically include health benefits and bonus tied to output and on-time delivery metrics. Miss a major shipment deadline and that bonus disappears — regardless of whose fault it was.
Career Progression
- 1
Line Leader
2–4 years
Supervising 8–15 operators on one production line
- 2
Workshop Supervisor
4–6 years
Managing multiple lines within one workshop
- 3
Production Manager
6–10 years
Full workshop P&L, planning, and buyer coordination
- 4
Factory Director
10–15 years
Entire factory operations, capital planning, major buyer relationships
- 5
Operations Director
12+ years
Multiple factories or regional production network
Almost nobody lands in production management from outside the industry. The promotion path from operator → line leader → workshop supervisor → manager is the normal route, and factories prefer it that way.
Working Conditions
Production managers split time between the factory floor and an office desk. Standard days run long in Asia during busy seasons — often six-day weeks with early starts — while US facilities more commonly run five to five-and-a-half days. Shipment crises require on-call availability; that pressure is part of the role, not an exception.
You are accountable for output you do not fully control: absent workers, machine breakdowns, late fabric. Success means planning for disruption. During buyer audits, documented hours, overtime records, and floor safety fall under your oversight alongside delivery performance — how local law defines each obligation varies by country; see Bangladesh, Pearl River Delta, Yangtze Delta, Vietnam, Tiruppur, and US Southeast market guides.
Standard Day
7:30 AM – 6:00 PMLunch with production team
Peak Season
6:30 AM – 8:00 PMAs production allows
Six-day weeks are standard in Asia during busy seasons. US facilities typically run 5–5.5 days. On-call for shipment crises is part of the job.
How to Get Started
- On the floor — ask to become a line leader; most managers are promoted internally
- QC background — helps with defect rates and buyer requirements
- Move faster — learn Excel planning and one regional ERP system
- International brands — English and lean-production knowledge matter more
Browse production management jobs on TexHire.
Browse open positions for this role on TexHire