Joshua Joseph

AMR Deployment Engineer | Tesla

Joshua Joseph is an Autonomous Mobile Robot (AMR) Deployment Engineer at Tesla, leading pilot deployments and scaling AMR systems to optimize material flow across both new and legacy factories. He specializes in bridging factory operations with robotics, integrating AMRs with fleet management software, warehouse systems, PLCs, and real-time analytics to deliver measurable efficiency gains and improve human–robot collaboration on the production floor.

Joshua earned his Master’s in Mechanical Engineering from Northeastern University, where he taught Smart Factory Systems labs and conducted research on Robotic Process Automation (RPA) at the Kostas Research Institute. His expertise spans scalable AMR deployment frameworks, interoperability standards, and data-driven automation strategies that connect industrial engineering and robotics to drive operational results.

He serves as the Regional Young Professional Representative for the South Central U.S. Division of IISE and is a Certified Automation Professional (CAP) Associate with the International Society of Automation (ISA). Joshua combines hands-on experience with strategic insight to help manufacturing leaders implement robotics solutions that improve throughput, safety, and operational resilience.

All Sessions by Joshua Joseph

May 28, 2026

Tesla’s Roadmap for Scaling AMRs in Legacy U.S. Factories
1:45 PM - 2:30 PM
Room 253 ABC
Most U.S. factories were built long before automation was feasible, yet they produce the majority of American manufacturing output — creating both a challenge and an opportunity for Autonomous Mobile Robots (AMRs). These legacy facilities rely heavily on manual material transport, fragmented control systems, and labor-intensive routing, resulting in inefficiencies that limit throughput, safety, and operational flexibility. This session presents a practical, data-driven roadmap for deploying AMRs in legacy manufacturing environments, grounded in pilot programs and scaled deployments at Tesla’s high-volume electric vehicle operations. Rather than treating AMRs as standalone tools, the talk reframes them as infrastructure — a connective layer linking production, logistics, and workforce execution. Attendees will learn how Tesla engineers identified high-friction material flows, defined measurable performance indicators, and integrated robots with existing factory systems such as fleet management software, warehouse systems, PLC-controlled equipment, and real-time analytics dashboards. Thoughtful system integration and human-robot collaboration enabled reliable material delivery with minimal manual intervention — even in environments never designed for autonomy. Beyond technical implementation, the session emphasizes why this matters for U.S. manufacturing: scalable AMR adoption improves productivity, workforce safety, and operational resilience, strengthening American factories’ competitiveness in a global market. Common pitfalls that stall pilots are highlighted, along with strategies for operational ROI modeling, interoperability, workforce adoption, and scaling across multiple production areas. These lessons extend beyond Tesla, providing a replicable framework for any U.S. factory seeking to modernize operations and maintain global competitiveness.

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Joshua Joseph