Apple Teaching Swift and Robotics Across Its India Supply Chain

Apple today announced a new Education Hub in Bengaluru as part of an expanded effort to provide technical training and skills development for employees across its supply chain in India.

apple education hub india factory
Apple said the new Apple Education Hub in Bengaluru will serve as a centralized training and coordination facility for supplier employees in India, marking the company's first education hub of its kind in the country. The hub will begin offering courses in March and operates in collaboration with Manipal Academy of Higher Education, which will provide faculty and curriculum support focused initially on digital literacy and Swift programming.

In parallel with the Bengaluru hub, Apple is broadening its suite of development courses at more than 25 supplier facilities across the country. The updated curriculum will be introduced starting with Tata Electronics and is designed to cover digital literacy, Swift coding, robotics, automation technology, and smart manufacturing practices. Apple said these offerings are funded through its global $50 million Supplier Employee Development Fund, which supports education and skills training initiatives across the company's supply chain.


The same spirit of innovation that drives our products also guides our commitment to supporting people across our global supply chain. We are thrilled to expand our technical training courses in India, giving thousands of employees the opportunity to learn valuable new skills and explore new paths for career growth.

The company said the new courses build on an existing portfolio of more than 75 programs currently available to supplier employees in India. The offerings span technical skills, professional development, health education, and rights awareness training, which Apple says are designed to ensure workers are informed about workplace standards and protections. Apple works with international organizations and local partners to deliver these programs.

Apple's expanded training effort also includes plans to scale its robotics education program, which launched in India in December 2024. The initiative focuses on training factory educators in dedicated robotics labs, after which those educators adapt the material and conduct hands-on sessions within their own facilities. Apple said it plans to extend the robotics program to additional supplier sites in India later this year.

Apple also announced plans to grow its Vocational Education for Persons with Disabilities program in India. The program recently launched with Salcomp and seeks to provide employment and professional development opportunities for people with disabilities within Apple's supply chain, as well as improve safety, accessibility, and inclusivity practices at manufacturing facilities. To date, the program has supported more than 18,000 supplier employees around the world and builds on Apple's partnership with Enable India.

Tag: India

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Top Rated Comments

apparatchik Avatar
5 days ago at 04:47 am

You have to love the Indian government. The hoops they have made Apple jump through are great, in order to reap profits they have to invest in the country’s education and welfare.

Love it.

Of course rich philanthropists have done this for a long time, Stanford University was created by the owner of the Railroads. It’s just refreshing seeing the Indians make this happen upfront, just in case Apple forgot about its huge wealth and its propensity for doing great things (not just for shareholders).
This has little to do with the Indian government, Apple has set up similar hubs around the world wherever it makes sense, regardless.
Score: 8 Votes (Like | Disagree)
haunebu Avatar
5 days ago at 07:47 am
Anything to avoid manufacturing products here in America, right Tim Cook?
Score: 6 Votes (Like | Disagree)
ForkHandles Avatar
5 days ago at 04:26 am
You have to love the Indian government. The hoops they have made Apple jump through are great, in order to reap profits they have to invest in the country’s education and welfare.

Love it.

Of course rich philanthropists have done this for a long time, Stanford University was created by the owner of the Railroads. It’s just refreshing seeing the Indians make this happen upfront, just in case Apple forgot about its huge wealth and its propensity for doing great things (not just for shareholders).
Score: 6 Votes (Like | Disagree)
Dreamweaver12 Avatar
5 days ago at 07:28 am
Now that's interesting. I recall Tim Cook saying on several occasions that the reason they manufacture in China is *not* for low labor costs, but instead because of skillsets they cant find anywhere else.

I've now seen quite a few articles about Apple having to invest in Indian supply chains and training/education to get them up to speed to build for Apple. So again, why isnt Apple doing this in the United States instead of India? Skillsets is no longer a valid excuse.
Score: 5 Votes (Like | Disagree)
magamo Avatar
5 days ago at 05:03 am
Swift programmers now have to compete not just against highly educated yet cheap Indian software engineers but also against not-so-highly-educated Indians on top of AI.
Score: 4 Votes (Like | Disagree)
ForkHandles Avatar
5 days ago at 05:49 am

This has little to do with the Indian government, Apple has set up similar hubs around the world wherever it makes sense, regardless.
That maybe true. But if you’re thinking that the Indian government gave Apple access to 1,643 million consumers with no strings attached, I fear you maybe mistaken.
Score: 4 Votes (Like | Disagree)