My Top 7 Takeaways from APEX EXPO 2026
April 3, 2026 | Chris Mitchell, VP of Global Government Relations, Global Electronics AssociationEstimated reading time: 6 minutes
I’m back from APEX EXPO 2026 in Anaheim, California, and it was another great year. Even amid significant global volatility, the industry is growing, innovating, and building partnerships. As I reflect on the experience, I want to share my top 7 takeaways and explain why each matters.
1. The Advanced Electronics Packaging Conference Was a Standout
This year’s Advanced Electronics Packaging Conference (AEPC) delivered outstanding, peer-reviewed content and strong participation, reflecting how central advanced electronics packaging has become across the industry. The program featured 25 sessions across seven tracks with an added Monday Opening Session focused on next‑gen compute and two Thursday special sessions on aerospace and defense packaging and the future of EV/autonomous electronics. In total, AEPC drew technical papers presented by 78 authors from 20 countries, including 21 Ph.D. authors. More than 100 companies were represented across keynotes, speakers, panels, committees, the design village, and the tech pavilion.
The throughline this year was the component-to-system packaging connection—how design, materials, fabrication, and test come together to deliver higher-performance systems. That convergence is exactly where the toughest technical and strategic questions now live, and AEPC is a key place where the industry is coming together to work through the challenges. Congratulations to Matt Kelly, Devan Iyer, Chris Jorgensen, Peter Tranitz, and the entire Association Solutions team for an exceptional event.
2. The EMS Leadership Summit Delivered Real Value Through Live Benchmarking
More than 60 EMS companies, including a number from Europe, came together at APEX EXPO for the EMS Leadership Summit. The Summit has become a must for EMS executives looking to engage with peers on the issues shaping the future of the industry. What made this year's summit especially valuable was the addition of instant benchmarking, supported by the Association's Industry Intelligence team. Attendees provided real-time data on supply chain, operations, workforce, and other key issues, and that data was shared back to the room immediately, prompting grounded and productive discussion.
There is no question that this approach elevated the conversation, providing for more actionable discussion. Congratulations to Summit chair Allison Budvarson of Out of the Box Manufacturing, and to Association staff Mark Wolfe and Tracy Riggan, for a great event. Thanks also to the Industry Intelligence team for helping make this Summit stand out.
3. The AI Conversation Has Matured; Industry from Awe to Action
AI was a major focus again this year, but the nature of the conversation felt very different. Last year, many companies were approaching AI with more uncertainty than direction. This year, they were far more focused on understanding how to intelligently integrate AI into their operations, whether in sales, administration, workforce development, or manufacturing. It's not that companies have figured it all out, but the posture has shifted. Instead of standing still, they are finding real motivation to identify where AI makes sense so they can make the right investments.
Page 1 of 2
Testimonial
"Advertising in PCB007 Magazine has been a great way to showcase our bare board testers to the right audience. The I-Connect007 team makes the process smooth and professional. We’re proud to be featured in such a trusted publication."
Klaus Koziol - atgSuggested Items
EDIP Opens the Door: EU Funding Now Available for Defence Electronics Including PCBs and Substrates
04/21/2026 | Alison James and Chris Mitchell, Global Electronics AssociationThe European Commission has published a call for proposals under the European Defence Industry Programme (EDIP), and for European electronics manufacturers the message is clear: this is real money for real capacity, and PCBs and IC substrates are explicitly in scope. EDIP's Industrial Reinforcement Actions (IRA) dedicate €122.25 million to key electronic components, covering guidance electronics, propulsion electronics, RF and laser modules, multispectral cameras, avionics, PCBs and IC substrates, lithium-ion polymer batteries, power electronics, and critical semiconductor building blocks
Women in Technology: Learning to Just Be Myself
04/21/2026 | Michelle Te, I-Connect007Approximately 100 women and a handful of men gathered for a Women in Electronics evening event at APEX EXPO. As I wandered among the tables before it started, I stopped to chat with several women all wearing purple and white polo shirts emblazoned with the TTM logo. It turns out they are part of TTM’s Women in Technology Group, so I sat down and invited them to share their thoughts on coming to the event and what it means to be part of the electronics industry.
SMTA Announces 2026 STAR Forum Technical Program
04/16/2026 | SMTAThe SMTA announced the finalized program for the High Reliability: Strategic Technology Advancement Research Forum which takes place on May 6-7, 2026 in Olathe, Kansas, USA.
From AI to AEP, an Impressive Array of Keynotes at APEX EXPO 2026
04/17/2026 | Marcy LaRont and Nolan Johnson, I-Connect007Each year at APEX EXPO, the Global Electronics Association provides an impressive lineup of keynote speakers to kick off the largest electronics manufacturing event in North America. This year included four keynote speeches, on topics ranging from the promise and peril of AI to the power of electronics, quantum computing, and the importance of heterogeneous integration in advanced electronics packaging.
Breaking the Manual Quoting Bottleneck in Wire Harness
04/15/2026 | Nolan Johnson, SMT007 MagazineArik Vrobel has spent more than 35 years in wire harness manufacturing—starting in EL-Com, his father's shop, building it into a nationally recognized contract manufacturer, and ultimately selling to Aptiv/Winchester in 2021. But retirement didn't last long. Within months, Arik was back, not as a manufacturer this time, but as a technologist. His new company, Cableteque, is building the quoting and data automation platform he always wished existed.