It's difficult to recommend anything without a lot more detail.
I did a short "electrical upskilling" course a few months ago, aimed at mechanical maintenance guys to give an introduction to the rudiments of electrical maintenance. It was stuff I've been doing for the last 4 decades or so and I was put on the course to see whether it would be worth putting a bunch of our guys on it. The thing that really stood out to me was just how few folk had any "feel" for screw tightness.
The wiring code here in the UK calls out use of torque screwdrivers and I'd thought it was ridiculous: anyone with a modicum of competence should have no problem tightening terminals. We had a panel wiring exercise on the course using DIN-rail terminals and I was able to pull out every single wire that the other guys in my group had tightened. I now see the reason for specifying torque drivers.
It shouldn't have been a surprise: I'm utterly useless with a keyboard or touchscreen and I think it's probably a generational thing.
If you, or someone else, has been doing this stuff for years and has a feel for it, the best approach is probably to use a torque indicating screwdriver to tighten the screws, note the peak torque reading and supply a preset torque driver to that value.