All the best for the year a season, it has been an interesting ride in 2014, with many evolutions in the the thoughts around operational systems. With the acceleration in talk, and smarter devices and the introduction of initial digitization industrial platforms, that we will no doubt see significant evolution in 2015.
Discussing the trends, effects and directions in automation/operational management systems on the journey for Operational Excellence in one of the most dynamically changing times.
Thursday, December 25, 2014
Saturday, December 13, 2014
The Industrial Software space continues to outgrow its labels!!!!
As the 2014 draws to a close, I seem to be sitting in a
growing amount of long term strategic meetings both within Schneider-Electric
and within customers and discussing the landscape of 2020 -2025. What immediately happens is the labels we have used
for years for products, spaces, and roles no longer mean the same thing. We
rapidly find ourselves setting up a glossary of labels and what they will mean
in 2020-25 in order to gain alignment.
Putting a label on this space has been challenging because
it has evolved over the last 20 years and will
continue to change as many technologies converge towards an integrated industrial
software platform strategy.
1990 - 2010: The label “MES” was first introduced in
1990 to refer to a point application at a single site (typically Quality
Management). Over the next 20 years, more functionality was added to MES to
keep pace with Automation trends.
2010-2015: In recognizing its evolution, some
industry analysts have offered new acronyms like MOM (LNS Research), while
others have redefined MES as follows:
“For many, MES is no
longer a point application, but a platform that serves a dual purpose:
integrating multiple business processes within a site and across the
manufacturing network, and creating an enterprise manufacturing execution
capability.”
-
Gartner Group, Vendor Guide for MES 2012
Saturday, December 6, 2014
The Workforce Crisis of 2030!! And how to start solving it now
“People, workforce planning
will become more important than financial planning.” Rainer Strack
This is a statement from good TED talk by Rainer on his
interpretation of the workforce challenge of 2030. Supporting much of what this
blog has been looking at this past year, but bringing another angle. The key we
both trying to get over it is not about the changing workforce it is about the
operational workforce transformation to a new workforce landscape of skill shortage,
labor shortage and cultural and people change.
You can go to Ted talk with the following link.
A couple of extractions:
The investigation and determination of a significant
workforce shortage by 2030, but starting now:
The
required strategies that will dominate
much the thinking
Rainer is talking general workforce,
if you take this and bring it into manufacturing, industrial world, the
shortages will be all more acute. As
pointed out in other surveys from Accenture and others.
This shows in US survey
results on filling skilled and highly skilled roles, below is worked example of
mid sized company in mid west.
This is why the move from
knowledge to wisdom is key, and emedding of knowledge and wisdom , actionable
decisions into the systems is key to accommodate the transformation to
dramatically reduced dependency on skilled people. From Rainer’s and other
investigations that Operational Systems of the future in the industrial market
have 50% + reduction in dependency in skilled and highly skilled workforce.
This Ted talk supports this will be the biggest issue in the next 10 years to
sustain competitive agility. Like we have seen in 2014, I believe 2015 this acknowledgment
and strategies building around workforce change will intensify.
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