THANK YOU FOR SUBSCRIBING
Manufacturing Technology Insights | Monday, December 09, 2024
Connected Worker Technology boosts productivity and efficiency, promotes operational excellence, and fosters a culture of continuous improvement.
FREMONT, CA: The connected worker, also known as the augmented worker, is seamlessly integrated into his surroundings on the shop floor and performs his daily tasks using a suite of highly advanced digital tools. These tools are collected on a mobile-enabled Connected Worker Platform (CWP), a one-stop-shop application enabling operators to accomplish work such as:
Stay ahead of the industry with exclusive feature stories on the top companies, expert insights and the latest news delivered straight to your inbox. Subscribe today.
● Conducting root cause analysis, BBS rounds, and audits.
● Keeping track of deviations, flaws, and dangerous citations.
● Obtaining information guides and step-by-step instructions.
● Conducting guided maintenance, manufacturing start-up procedures, and inspections.
The leading manufacturers may be examining why they need connected worker technology to complete these duties when they already have paper-based or digital tools in place.
One of the most compelling business cases for Connected Worker Platforms is their capacity to replace the enormous complexity of modern manufacturing IT system landscapes.
Instead of having different tools for task management, defect, deviation handling, maintenance assistance, and so on, a Connected Worker Platform provides frontline workers with a one-stop-shop application for everything they may require during their shifts.
Furthermore, Connected Worker Platforms can integrate with vital applications such as MES, ERP, and SAP, enabling operators to communicate with them via the CWP's user-friendly interface.
Major advantages of connected worker technology:
Achieving operational excellence: Numerous companies have operational excellence (OpEx) strategies in place but lack the necessary digital tools to successfully and effectively deploy them.
Connected Worker Platforms' modular and multifaceted nature provides manufacturers with a complete end-to-end digital solution for implementing ambitious OpEx approaches.
Increasing productivity and efficiency: Connected Worker Platforms increase frontline personnel productivity and, as a result, shop floor operational efficiency by digitizing, automating, or eliminating non-value-added tasks.
In other words, this primary use case for connected worker technology enables manufacturers to achieve more with the same number of employees.
Closing the skills gap: As seasoned operators from the baby boomer generation begin to retire, manufacturers risk losing vital, decades-long tribal knowledge.
Thanks to connected worker solutions, manufacturers may preserve that expertise, for example, through digital work instructions and utilize it to educate young or inexperienced operators. Furthermore, digital tools generally make factories more appealing to a new generation of digital natives, thereby addressing the labor crisis.
Complete traceability of executed work: Connected Worker Platforms automatically maintain a permanent record of completed shop floor work, ensuring that no vital information is lost and simplifying the gathering of the essential documentation for an audit.
More in News