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Manufacturing Technology Insights | Thursday, April 07, 2022
A quality intelligence solution offers each of these jobs a focused view of the required information and when and when they need it.
FREMONT, CA: The manufacturing business utilizes various systems, each with a slightly distinct business focus. The interconnection of multiple systems results in custom enterprise application architecture. The health—and successful integration—of these systems is critical to the success of the manufacturing ecosystem.
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Manufacturing Execution System (MES): This digital system interfaces with and monitors manufacturing equipment, giving real-time data throughout the product's lifecycle. Manufacturers collect and analyze data about different inputs using MES to record the processes and results in plants. MES can be used to collect data for various purposes, including operations management, product tracking, performance analysis, resource allocation, and quality monitoring. The objective of this system is to optimize operations.
Enterprise Resource Planning (ERP): This type of business management software delivers a consolidated picture of r critical business activities in real-time. Utilize an ERP system to keep track of raw supplies, production capacity, and orders, among other resources. Financial and managerial accounting, human resources, manufacturing, order processing, and supply chain management are only a few functional domains. The objective of this system is to maximize the utilization of resources across departments and divisions.
Manufacturing Operations Management (MOM): This system manages several manufacturing processes, such as interactions between people and systems, information technology security services, asset and production model tracking, and data aggregation. A MOM system's objective is to maximize efficiency across corporate divisions.
Quality Management System (QMS): This system establishes the processes and procedures for monitoring and maintaining the quality of products and services. While many businesses acquire high-quality data manually, the most successful and efficient methods are software-based and can automate data collecting wholly or partially. A QMS's objective is to optimize quality management throughout the broader enterprise's divisions.
As a purpose-built, powerful quality intelligence platform, it transcends the limitations of conventional plant floor quality management. It enables manufacturers to collect, visualize, organize, standardize, and analyze data strategically—regardless of its source—and provide critical integrations with other business systems to provide meaningful analysis and actionable insights.
Through a quality intelligence platform, manufacturers may automate the acquisition of high-quality data from various systems and then standardize and centralize it in a unified data repository. Why is this step critical?
Standardizing data is critical if manufacturers want to conduct a true and accurate examination of quality—as if there were a single version of the truth. From naming standards to measure units to techniques, they cannot expect to obtain reliable, actionable information by comparing apples to oranges.
A centralized repository is critical when formalizing data for Statistical Process Control (SPC) analysis and business analytics. Manufacturers can rest assured that data is consistently collected, tagged, and stored—regardless of its source.
A relational database is an optimal choice for data centralization because it enables manufacturers to use and harness data in various ways.
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