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Data Drives Digital Transformation’s Success in 2021

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Click to learn more about author Keith Higgins.

As the COVID-19 pandemic continues to accelerate digital transformation into 2021, 73 percent of manufacturers plan to increase their investment in smart factory technology over the next year. However, as manufacturers will favor automation to address social distancing and capacity requirements, people will be critical for digital success, leveraging new connected technologies to find creative solutions and make data-driven decisions.

Below are a few trends we can expect to see in 2021 as manufacturers leverage data to provide high-level insights, use edge computing to enable real-time data processing, adopt digital twins to predict challenges, and evolve jobs with augmented reality (AR) training and human-machine collaboration.

IT/OT Integration Is Critical for Answering the $77 Billion Need for IIoT

With the IIoT market expected to grow from $77.3 billion in 2020 to $110.6 billion by 2025, 73 percent of manufacturers plan to increase their investment in smart factory technology over the next year. As IIoT sensors produce 1.44 billion data points per plant per day, IT/OT integration is critical to improving operational efficiency while accelerating success through digital transformation initiatives. However, enterprises have traditionally been challenged with converting real-time, historic OT data from legacy systems into higher-level IT insights.

Data produced on the factory floor needs to maintain its rich context (such as process conditions, time stamps, machine states, and other production states) to provide maximum insights to factory staff. Previously, aggregating the data generated by machines in processes required significant manual effort and pulling information from many disparate sources. Instead, by automatically capturing high-speed, contextualized OT data from industrial controllers in real-time, organizations can generate predictive insights and operational excellence across the enterprise. By applying context to data pulled from the factory floor, OT teams will create more powerful analytics to better understand the data and how it impacts the machines, lines, plants, and processes they are responsible for. In 2021, IT/OT integration will directly impact whether enterprises remain or become more competitive in the global manufacturing landscape.

Edge Is the New Cloud

For companies scaling smart factory initiatives in 2021, real-time availability of mission-critical workloads will be necessary to ensure business outcomes. Edge computing will complement existing cloud infrastructure by enabling real-time data processing where the work takes place (e.g., motors, pumps, generators, or other sensors). Implementing integrated analytics from the edge to the cloud will help these enterprises maximize the value of investments in digital systems.

The industry will continue to move toward more decentralized compute environments, and the edge will add significant value to digital transformation initiatives. By integrating edge functionalities with existing cloud infrastructure, organizations will worry less about logistical IT considerations and, instead, focus on rethinking what’s possible in a smart machine: What questions can it answer faster? What new problems can it solve? How can it protect operations better? Analysts note that by 2022, 90 percent of industrial enterprises will utilize edge computing for this reason.

Digital Twins Save $1 Trillion in Manufacturing Costs

Over the next 12 months, by interconnecting business systems via digital thread, organizations will virtually commission new production lines. Using digital twins, manufacturers will run machines virtually before parts are ordered, discover control issues before support staff goes onsite, predict future performance challenges/opportunities, simulate line changes to keep up with ever-changing customer demands, and train new staff on systems without consequence. Gartner estimates that businesses will save $1 trillion (US) each year in asset maintenance by using IoT through digital twins. IDC suggests that 30 percent of Global 2000 companies will be using data from digital twins of IoT connected products and assets to improve product innovation success rates and organizational productivity, achieving gains of up to 25 percent. In 2021, organizations will use digital twins, enabled by digital thread, to solve lifecycle challenges in the digital world before they turn into “if only” moments in the real world, lowering overall manufacturing costs and increasing factory productivity.

Pandemic Promotes AR Training as the New Standard for a Distributed Workforce

About 70 percent of manufacturers say the biggest impacts of robotics on the workforce in the next five years will be an increased need for talent to manage in a more automated, flexible production environment and the opening of new jobs to engineer robotics and their operating systems. Since on the job training is no longer possible due to social distancing requirements, manufacturers will fill the gap with remote training tools, such as AR and 3D-based work instructions, to allow workers to train with experts remotely and optimize capture and delivery. Using advanced technologies to train workers will enable them to analyze performance in real-time, troubleshoot issues more quickly, improve productivity, and avoid significant downtime for unforeseen repairs. This will ultimately make the manufacturing workforce more connected and data-driven, narrowing the skills gap while avoiding safety and compliance risks.

Automation Accelerates Employee Advancement Through Human-Machine Interface

With COVID-19’s impact on factory capacity and new social distancing regulations, technology is vital for success, but people are still the heart of the operation. With Industry 4.0 comes the opportunity to evolve jobs. Automation will prevent a crowded factory floor while replacing tedious, repetitive tasks. This frees up workers to leverage their creativity and expertise to find unique ways to use technology to improve operations or solve critical issues. For example, a worker may oversee analyzing data from connected machines to forecast downtime or find ways to consolidate processes to reduce the number of steps needed to create a product. By upskilling workers with human-machine collaboration, manufacturers will safely comply with new health regulations and accelerate production amid the pandemic and beyond. Since people are critical for machines to reach their full potential, manufacturers must enter projects with a human-first mindset focusing on employee needs and adapting processes accordingly to remain competitive.

Manufacturers that leverage data to make real-time, informed decisions, take advantage of digital twins to simulate evolving conditions, and use advanced technologies to upskill their workforce will ultimately see digital improve its bottom line in 2021.

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