10 Aug
2018

Three Ways Smart Manufacturing Creates Value

What exactly does a smart manufacturing facility look like? If you walked into a smart factory that leverages data collection and analytics, performance, machine and downtime monitoring, OEE and giveaway, you may not be able to note anything extraordinarily different before your eyes.

Analytics
Food Manufacturing IIoT
Industry 4.0
Smart Factory
Smart Meat Processing
IIoT
Three Ways Smart Manufacturing Creates Value

What exactly does a smart manufacturing facility look like? If you walked into a smart factory—one uses IIoT; that leverages data collection and analytics, performance, machine and downtime monitoring, overall equipment effectiveness and giveaway, and other related technologies—you  may not be able to note anything extraordinarily different before your eyes.  

 
But, in a paper for Hitachi Consulting, authors Greg Kinsey (Vice President, Industrial Solutions & Innovation, Hitachi Vantara) and Mark Nott (Vice President Global Solutions & Innovation, Hitachi Consulting,) they note, "once you started talking to people, you would understand the dramatic contrast between a digital manufacturing environment and a traditional one. In the smart factory, people would feel they have more knowledge at their disposal about operations. They’d be in better control of their processes, and they’d know what’s coming—predicting what might happen based on data and analytics.”  

 

three-ways-smart-manufacturing-creates-value

Image: Hitachi Consulting

 

And how does this really effect the bottom line or quality?  “If you looked at the key performance indicators (KPIs) for the smart factory, you’d notice it has a higher quality level, more efficiency, increased throughput, fewer bottlenecks and more flexibility. It responds more easily to smaller lot sizes, variable customer requirements and changing conditions. Hot weather coming in? The smart factory has a weather forecast built into its algorithms, and it knows when to readjust processes to compensate for the heat.” 

 

Kinsey and Nott write, “A smart factory with these capabilities is the goal of every manufacturing executive on the planet.” The question, they ask is, how can you get there

 

 

Here are three ways smart manufacturing creates business value

 
1. Predicting and preventing downtime: Reducing the number of products that are out of sync with Takt time, increasing capacity and throughput, and reducing maintenance costs.  
 
2. Predicting and preventing bottlenecks
: Having materials arrive at the right time with each station working at full capacity, increasing throughput.  
 
3. Predicting and preventing defects: Reducing cost of poor quality (CoPQ) and enabling better product mix. 

Source + read the complete report.

 

Want to learn more?
Download the ebook
Related blog articles

Related articles

Back to the blog
Thank you! Your submission has been received!
Oops! Something went wrong while submitting the form.
12
Jun 2018

3 Obstacles preventing Food Manufacturers to embrace IIoT

English
20
Jun 2018

6 Digital Technology Themes for Manufacturing Leaders

English
30
May 2018

4 Main Challenges of IIoT Adoption and What Can Be Done About Them

English

Related articles

Back to the blog
Thank you! Your submission has been received!
Oops! Something went wrong while submitting the form.
28
Jun 2023

Investir dans l'industrie 4.0 : c'est désormais plus important que jamais pour les manufacturiers d’agroalimentaire et boissons de toutes tailles

La clé est d'adopter l'innovation pour naviguer dans des conditions en constante évolution et rester à l'écoute des demandes des consommateurs, tout en maximisant la rentabilité.

French
28
Jun 2023

Investing in Industry 4.0: It’s now more important than ever for food & beverage manufacturers of all sizes

Faced with challenges that include labor and raw material shortages, tightened regulations ,and skyrocketing costs, companies like you are struggling to produce and price products to meet the demands of increasingly cost-conscious consumers and anxious stakeholders alike.

English
27
Jun 2023

Au-delà des chiffres : maximiser le retour sur investissement dans le secteur manufacturier grâce à l'analyse de données

L'intelligence des données provient de chiffres bruts. Ces informations doivent être analysées et traduites en actions ayant un impact sur l'entreprise. Mais avec des données qui s'accumulent plus vite qu'elles ne peuvent être transformées en analyses de données manufacturières, les entreprises ratent des opportunités.

French