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Home Industry Verticals Manufacturing

Manufacturing CIOs: 3 strategies to face 2021 like a superhero

Renee Wells by Renee Wells
February 1, 2021
Photo by Kateryna Babaieva from Pexels

Photo by Kateryna Babaieva from Pexels

Driven by consumer demand and transformative technologies, the fourth industrial revolution (4IR) is challenging manufacturers to embrace new business models. The combination of big data, AI/ML, and IoT has fundamentally changed how manufacturers develop, design, distribute, and service products. Despite strained budgets and resources, manufacturing CIOs are leading the charge.

Already struggling to keep up with an industrial revolution, the pandemic and ensuing global upheaval have added new challenges. CIOs in the manufacturing sector are looking to recover from the turbulence of 2020 in 2021. Becoming a manufacturing CIO superhero as we move into uncertain future demands reprioritizing strategies now to protect growth and innovation later.

Top Nemeses for Manufacturing CIOs in 2020

To plot a Business-Driven Roadmap for what’s next, let’s review the impact 2020 has had on manufacturing CIOs. Primary challenges include:

Global uncertainty

Every sector in every country has experienced the impact of COVID-19. Pandemic-induced quarantines, social distancing, and economic slowdowns have caused drastic downturns for some, and dramatic upturns for others. Many factories had to stay opened as essential businesses. They paved the way for new work environments, new rules, and new regulations to produce the goods the world needed during lock down.

Manufacturing CIOs are now tasked with juggling growth – and supporting remote workers, adapting to new consumer behaviours, and upskilling for new technologies. Some thrived in the crisis and became heroes, working around the clock to quickly deliver needed functionality to keep the business up and running. But to become tomorrow’s superheroes, CIOs need to balance crisis response with planning for what’s next.

IT/application complexity

Though an issue before the pandemic, the ever-evolving complexity of IT environments shows no signs of slowing down. In fact, it’s getting worse. Hasty decisions and quick fixes are creating a zoo of disparate technology that will need care and feeding in the future.

Many manufacturers are tied to highly customized, legacy core systems. These systems are often the backbone of manufacturing organizations responsible for supply chain management, HR/payroll, and customer experience. But, between licensing, maintenance, and manhours, they come with high operating costs. In the Manufacturing Leadership Council’s 2020 Transformative Technologies in Manufacturing survey, 47% of manufacturing leaders identified migration from or integrating with legacy systems as one of their biggest innovation challenges.

Attempting to take advantage of more efficient, agile IT delivery methods, like cloud, serverless, and containers, requires disruptive, expensive IT transformations that leaders don’t have the time, expertise, or budget to complete. Yet, without funding and resources for transformation projects, organizations can’t harness a competitive edge.

Leveraging transformative technologies

Industry 4.0 is here. It’s being driven by data and smart devices. Nearly 60% of manufacturing organizations are scaling AI specifically to prevent failures, defects, and safety events. 3-D printing, which isn’t new, is now being used in new ways powered by AI/ML. These technologies are being leveraged to automate many processes that require expensive labour – and that’s just the tip of the iceberg. The potential for increasing revenue, improving quality, and making data-based decisions is ripe across the manufacturing landscape.

And the industry is listening. Over half of surveyed manufacturing executives are prioritizing data science and analytics for 2021 and most agree that data-driven digital business models are a requirement for long-term survival. Nearly a third of production processes now incorporate smart devices, IoT, and embedded intelligence.

Leveraging these new technologies can help manufacturers get to market quicker, produce higher quality products faster, and differentiate in the market. During this crisis, funds and resources for transformation are more difficult to find. Yet, organizations are still finding new ways to solve safety, compliance, and reporting issues with technology.

2021 Strategies for CIO Superheroes

With these challenges on the table, manufacturing CIOs need to focus on adjusting budgets to account for uncertainty while finding resources to reinvest in innovation. Turning the corner in 2021 means making tough decisions around IT priorities. The three strategies below will help CIOs free funds and resources to reinvest into initiatives that drive growth and foster innovation.

Strategy 1: Maintain business stability  

Eliminate or delay application updates and upgrades that deliver little or no value. If it isn’t broken, don’t fix it. Despite the pressure, resist vendors suggesting “change for change sake”. During a crisis, some vendors might try to sell you the cure for crisis response that could leave you locked into technology that hampers future growth – financially and technologically.

Focus on increasing ROIC (Return on Invested Capital) and minimizing disruption.

Strategy 2: Protect the budget

Audit spending to determine where you are gaining value or sinking resources. For example, many ERP licensees spend the largest portion of their budget on licensing, maintenance, and support, but aren’t getting much perceived value in the way of responsive support and value-added enhancements. At times like these, it’s important to look at what value your vendor is delivering and explore alternatives to get more value out of your dollars.

Shadow IT, common in manufacturing, also needs to be unearthed and addressed. More business units are going around IT backlogs to adopt SaaS applications in the wake of COVID-19. The use of unmanaged technology not only represents a potential threat to the budget, but also a potential threat to security and performance.   

Maintain stability in your core systems and leverage hybrid models to infuse cloud efficiencies without undertaking a complete rip and replace to help protect assets and preserve cash.

Strategy 3: Feed critical innovation

COVID didn’t significantly slow the digital economy. For many organizations, the crisis sped it up by creating a critical need for technology-enabled processes to support new needs. Companies are revamping business models to adapt to new consumer expectations and market disruptions. To help these new business models succeed, IT must find ways to quickly build resiliency and enable agility. Meanwhile, CIOs are under pressure to find creative ways to cut waste and re-invest where dollars drive tangible results.  

To trim existing costs to help create funds and make time for innovation, consider independent, third-party support to reduce ERP support responsibilities and related costs.

To survive today and thrive tomorrow, manufacturing CIOs need to maintain stability where they can and tactically gain efficiencies in areas like ERP. Instead of sweeping transformation projects, seek quick wins that help the organization pursue innovation without disrupting critical operations. By shifting budget priorities, CIOs can become superheroes by funding what’s essential, optimizing spend, and using the savings to fund the future.  

Related:  Singapore proposes banning election-related AI-generated misinformation
Tags: 4IRArtificial IntelligenceCOVID-19machine learningmanufacturing CIORimini Street
Renee Wells

Renee Wells

Renee Wells, vice president, Product Strategy, at Rimini Street, is a 27-year veteran of IT and enterprise software with extensive experience in network engineering, management consulting, product marketing, and product management. She is responsible for leading the product strategy of Rimini Street's comprehensive suite of services specifically designed to enable Oracle and SAP licensees to address new opportunities and challenges across today's dynamic IT landscape. Previously, Wells held leadership roles in product marketing, product management, strategy, and consulting at AT&T. She also held roles in Technology Solutions Co, Advanced Computer Systems, Eclipse Computer System, and IBM.

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