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The pace of change across the manufacturing sector is starting to increase. With the evolution to more customer-centric and service-centric business models, it is imperative that manufacturers make better use of the data and technology available. The manufacturers that invest in this now will get ahead of the curve, see stronger returns and will best equip their businesses to flourish in the future. The future of manufacturing, therefore, lies in maximising the effective use of both information and operational technology (IT and OT). By digitising value chains, manufacturers will be able to join up their businesses, optimise demand and supply and create the agility needed to respond to changing market dynamics.
As a world leader in IT solutions, cybersecurity and decarbonisation services, Atos provides end-toend solutions for all industries. Its performance enhancing services for manufacturing span both IT and OT and are enabling new production possibilities, more sustainable supply chains and factories, and growing revenue streams. IT plays a significant role in todayās business world, and when integrated effectively into OT, has the potential to improve manufacturing and create new business models in ways that are still to be discovered.
āAdopting an end-to-end approach to smart manufacturing and IT/OT integration has the ability to link up businesses that operate in silos and drive real, sustainable business value,ā Simon Culshaw, VP Manufacturing Northern Europe, Atos tells us.
Culshaw suggests that looking at manufacturing operations in the context of the wider business is needed in order to maximise return from smart manufacturing / industry 4.0 initiatives. āYou can improve manufacturing efficiency or reduce waste from operations, but such initiatives create even greater value if
With manufacturing set to spend more on digital transformation than any other industry, we speak to Simon Culshaw, VP Manufacturing Northern Europe at Atos to find out what it means for the industry
If you are a manufacturer with at least one IoT or Industry 4.0 initiative in the works, chances are there are sensors on your shop ļ¬oor or in your supply chain, and computers across your enterprise that are regularly generating masses of industrial equipment data. No matter how many di erent IoT or connectivity initiatives you have in place, however, these tactical āinnovation projectsā wonāt address the strategic demands facing your industry today: the need for an intelligent, self-aware factory where production assets, manufacturing processes and equipment maintenance converge.
As the world changed, the bar for manufacturers went higher. Driving sustainable value and intelligently connecting your business strategy with your people, processes and technology is no longer a ānice to haveā.
At Atos, we understand that the convergence of the physical and digital worlds ā from the shop ļ¬oor and operational equipment to the intelligent enterprise and the wider ecosystem ā require both the right experience and the right technology infrastructure. Our deep sector expertise means we know how to guide you to successfully transform manufacturing plants into adaptable, agile closed-loop Smart Factories, including self-optimising, self-healing production processes within a connected business network. In conjunction with our technology partner, SAP, weāre using some of the worldās most advanced technologies, such as artiļ¬cial intelligence (AI) and machine learning (ML) to create factories that not only orchestrate the manufacturing processes, but actually learn from their experiences. The combination of SAPās technology and our step-based approach means you can easily adapt at your own pace to meet all your sustainability, environmental, productivity and commercial needs.
Our experience in this area means Atos is the trusted partner to some of the worldās leading manufacturing companies across both discrete and process industries, from automotive and aerospace and defence manufacturers through to chemicals, CPG, pharmaceutical and hi-tech.
Our consultative Smart Manufacturing service gives you:
⢠A robust business case for investment.
⢠A clear strategy and a realisable road-map.
⢠Insight on how and where to start, what to expect and how to scale.
⢠Advice on how to accelerate business beneļ¬ts and drive sustainable value and environmental gains.
⢠A customised immersive experience and tailored workshops.
⢠Co-development environments demonstrating proof of value and building the case for rollout at scale.
⢠Solution design and implementation.
Our step-based approach lets you:
⢠Maximise asset data in real time.
⢠Break organisational silos and realise beneļ¬t across the value chain.
⢠Create self-optimisation.
⢠Reap the beneļ¬ts of self-healing, predictive maintenance, automatic creation scheduling and dispatching of maintenance tasks, rescheduling of production via alternate machines or work centres.
⢠Trigger proactive alerts to respective engineers, supervisors, and shop ļ¬oor operators.
⢠Test, scale and deploy speciļ¬c Smart Factory use cases that will best optimise your assets and plants.
they are, for example, linked through to procurement and planning. This can, along with other benefits, free up working capital, eliminate the need for spot buying, prevent starvation events and enable just in time delivery.ā
Reduced waste and energy consumption along with increased efficiency will contribute to net zero targets as well as adding to the bottom line, and Culshaw recognises that it is important to factor these benefits in when implementing smart manufacturing solutions. The use of technology to enable these benefits is changing how businesses operate and paving the way for new business models.
āTechnology has the ability to move manufacturing businesses from making to stock to making to order, from making in specific factories to design anywhere, build anywhere and from pure manufacturing companies to companies that add further value through services and direct customer relationships,ā says Culshaw.
As a leader in the digital transformation of manufacturing, Atos builds, implements and operates end-to-end solutions for smarter factories. It is a field that Culshaw himself had already experienced earlier on in his career when he was exposed to manufacturing processes in the pharmaceutical industry.
Although this sparked his interest, it was a while before he got to work in this area in earnest. In the interim, he worked across a number of different industry sectors ā experience which has been invaluable in seeing the art of the possible and in generating ideas to be used in a manufacturing context.
āFor example, I worked in the telco sector, implementing fully integrated operational support systems (OSS) and business support systems (BSS) which enabled complete zero-touch, automated solutions,ā Culshaw
elaborates. āIt gave me a valuable insight into what was possible with technology and how to run a business based on it.ā
Culshaw first became interested in smart manufacturing and the possibilities of digital transformation in the industry through a contact ā the IT director at a large food manufacturing company in the UK. Again, the process flowed back to adding to the bottom line.
āHe had a vision on how to use technology to improve manufacturing efficiency and reduce waste but
was struggling to make the business case for it,ā recalls Culshaw. āWe met through a conversation about SAP implementation, and he thought they could be doing a lot more integrating this with technology in the manufacturing space.ā
The key support processes across the business were run through SAP, such as procurement, accounts payable/receivable, goods in, logistics, production planning and demand planning. They each had visibility in the business, but as Culshaw explains, āIn the middle of
In terms of successful smart manufacturing programmes delivered at scale, Culshaw cites Renaultās application of an industrial data solution that Atos is now working to industrialise and take to market in the automotive and discrete manufacturing sectors.
āRenault is rolling this solution out at real scale, and it has already delivered insight that has led to huge cost savings, greater efficiency and reduced waste across their manufacturing processes,ā he explains.
The results speak for themselves, as Renault launched the first industrial Metaverse.
āWe are implementing other solutions involving things like integrated product lifecycle management to enable closed loop manufacturing and digital twins, resulting in shorter design cycles and faster time to market.ā
āThe approach to smart manufacturing works best when it is a co-development with the manufacturer. This way, you work together to address real business challenges, gain true business insight and focus on the business benefit in the long term,ā adds Culshaw.
āThe Renault solution is remarkably encouraging; it has provided benefits which they did not foresee. They were able to find patterns in data that they were not expecting.ā
all that was the big black box which is manufacturing. This is how the business viewed their factories. They can see what goes into them and they can see what comes out of it, but they have no idea what happens inside.ā
Using technology to control the manufacturing process, the product lifecycle and to integrate these into the rest of the business enables you
āI AM STARTING TO SEE CHANGE IN THE MARKET WITH MORE MANUFACTURERS COMMITTING TO SCALE UP SMART MANUFACTURING INITIATIVES. THE DIRECTOR OF IT AT A LARGE FOOD MANUFACTURER TOLD ME RECENTLY THAT THE ONLY THING HE WOULD HAVE DONE DIFFERENTLY WITH THEIR INDUSTRY 4.0 INITIATIVE IS TO DO IT MUCH MORE QUICKLY AND AT SCALEā
ā SIMON CULSHAW, VP MANUFACTURING NORTHERN EUROPE, ATOS
to gain control over the end-to-end supply chain. In this case, Culshawās contact needed a business case that would bring it to life.
It was this opportunity and the subsequent implementation to deliver the business case that resulted in Culshawās fascination with the possibilities of technology in the manufacturing context.
āThese solutions were not difficult to implement, but for me they were quite ground-breaking, especially when they were integrated into end-to-end business processes,ā says Culshaw. āIn terms of the technology used in the factory, it was generally standalone to that point, and this bought manufacturing processes into the mainstream business.ā
As an example of the benefits that can be delivered from fully integrated smart manufacturing solutions, Culshaw cites a soft drink manufacturer which he worked with. They implemented technology to create integrated processes across core business functions, aligning order intake to procurement, goods-in, accounts payable, capacity planning, production scheduling, quality and recipe management, warehouse management, manufacturing control and providing a full product genealogy.
āIt enabled the company to achieve 100 percent first-time right in its ingredients processing, provided an accurate picture of stock and enabled effective first-in, first-out routines,ā he explains.
The whole approach was driven by looking at the end-to-end manufacturing process and the processes that support it.
āWe went on at the soft-drinks manufacturer to implement many more solutions based on a common platform. One such solution drove a significant increase overall equipment efficiency in the plants. It was a solution based on the theory of constraints that enabled them to course correct in real time and maximise yield from the lines,ā Culshaw adds.
Forecasts predict that by 2025, some USD$815 billion will be spent on digital transformation by the manufacturing industry.
āThere is a good reason that manufacturing is the industry sector that will have the largest spend on digital transformation. Too many factories are not yet integrated into the business and are still being run on paper and spreadsheets,ā Culshaw says.
āWhere manufacturing is digitised, there tends to be multiple standalone
Atos has teams of people all over the world and an amazing community focused on driving real value for manufacturers from the use of smart manufacturing technology.
point solutions that have been put in place to address specific challenges. The cost to the business may be initially low, but the lack of common platforms and integration actually costs the business more and misses the opportunity to drive greater value from the investment.ā
Since initiating the smart manufacturing programme at Atos in the UK, Culshaw continues to drive its progress.
āWe have teams of people all over the world and an amazing community focused on driving real value for manufacturers from the use of smart manufacturing technology. I have helped drive this in the UK and Northern Europe; it is a real passion of mine and something that I can see enormous potential for across our customer base in the manufacturing sector.ā
Looking towards the future, Culshaw has a key objective for 2023.
āAtos aims to be a leader in smart manufacturing services which drive sustainable business value through the implementation of intelligent, integrated solutions,ā said Culshaw. āThese solutions can transform manufacturing by connecting business strategy, people, processes and technology.ā
He goes on to add, āstrong partnerships will be the key, and I
am keen to be involved in initiatives in this area, as they can help deliver at scale and have the potential to dramatically accelerate time to benefit.ā
Nevertheless, when it comes to scaling up smart factories, it is not without its challenges, he warns. Francesco Betti, Industry 4.0 lead for the World Economic Forum and Enno do Boer, lead partner for Industry 4.0 at McKinsey, refer to many manufacturing businesses as being stuck in āpilot purgatoryā when it comes to Industry 4.0 initiatives.
āThe big challenge for manufacturers is to escape pilot purgatory and to do this at scale,ā says Culshaw. āOnly by doing so will they make substantial change to the bottom line, increase agility and make the adoption of new business models possible.
āThe way in which many manufacturing businesses are run make it difficult to scale Industry 4.0 initiatives. Investment which cuts across business functions and brings the silos together needs active championing at the board level, often from the CEO. This requires a bit of a leap of faith, and there is a nervousness to commit to the benefits that can be delivered.
āA robust business case is often not sufficient, we need to see more active promotion of shining examples of excellence, an ecosystem which enables joint investment and leadership in manufacturing which is prepared to push boundaries. At Atos, we are committed to pushing this and to helping industry move into the modern age of production.ā