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Turn your operations into a competitive advantage by implementing digital transformation across your value chain—from supply chain management to manufacturing and product development.
Digital manufacturing, with the emergence of machine-to-machine and human-to-machine interactions, as well as cloud computing, robust data analytics capabilities and powerful sensors enhanced by the Internet of Things, is transforming how organizations develop, make and distribute their products and services to their customers.
Through Industry 4.0, we support clients to shape their digital product and service offerings, operate a connected supply chain and digitize factories and shop floor operations as well as automate all core operations and back-office activities.
Generating, analyzing and communicating data seamlessly underpins the value of Industry 4.0, which networks a wide range of new digital technologies to create competitive advantage. Mastering digital operations requires a deep understanding of collaboration, the commitment of top management, and a clear strategy - without these key elements, companies will struggle to embrace this radical, but critical change.
Digital and emerging technologies enable manufacturing companies to solve traditional operational problems in completely new ways. In the course of the smart factory transformation, companies are deploying a number of key technologies to digitize production as well their entire supply chain. A key concept of smart factory is “Connect & Optimize”. These include big data analytics solutions, end-to-end, real time planning and connectivity autonomous systems, digital twinning and worker augmentation, among many others. These technologies provide significant efficiency gains and allow companies to produce highly customized products, often at lot size one.
The smart factory transformation requires a great deal of knowledge-building (analytics potential, integration considerations, ecosystem awareness, business case realities, etc) to be able to define the future architecture and how new and legacy capabilities /systems will support the vision and strategy. By adopting an agile, fail-fast/succeed-faster mentality that quickly exposes the organization and key stakeholders to the learning curves allows companies to adopt the new innovations to their environments.
The supply chain today is a series of largely discrete, siloed steps taken through marketing, product development, manufacturing, and distribution, and finally into the hands of the customer. Digitization brings down those walls, and the chain becomes a completely integrated ecosystem that is fully transparent to all the players involved — from the suppliers of raw materials, components, and parts, to the transporters of those supplies and finished goods, and finally to the customers demanding fulfillment.
This network will depend on a number of key technologies: integrated planning and execution systems, logistics visibility, autonomous logistics, smart procurement and warehousing, spare parts management, and advanced analytics. The result will enable companies to react to disruptions in the supply chain, and even anticipate them, by fully modeling the network, creating “what-if” scenarios, and adjusting the supply chain in real time as conditions change.
Once built — and the components are starting to be developed today — the digital supply “network” will offer a new degree of resiliency and responsiveness enabling companies that get there first to beat the competition in the effort to provide customers with the most efficient and transparent service delivery.