Flex: How Manufacturers can Navigate Constant Change

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Paul Baldassari, President of Manufacturing & Services at Flex shares how manufacturers can handle supply chain disruption and maintain pace on innovation

The manufacturing industry continues to work through constant change, and 

Paul Baldassari has plenty of thoughts about it.

President of Manufacturing and Services at Flex, the third largest global electronics manufacturing services company by revenue, he has critical insights into technology and process changes in the sector. 

He shared these insights with us, expanding on how Flex is pursuing manufacturing innovation and how other companies can look to the future- as far as 2030.

Supply chain disruptions have forced manufacturers to digitally transform faster than ever before. How can they maintain this current transformation rate? 

For the manufacturing industry, bolstering collaboration technology will be critical for maintaining the speed of innovation. Connecting design, engineering, shop floor, and numerous other departments to make quick decisions is key to driving results. 

Expect acceleration of digital transformations from network infrastructure to data centres, cloud computing, and more. The companies that focus on low-latency, interactive collaboration technologies will find employees closer than ever before, despite being miles apart. And that closeness will lead to further innovation and progress.

Enhancements in artificial intelligence (AI) and big data analytics will also be critical. We’ve made significant investments into digitalisation, including IoT devices and sensors that capture real-time information on machines and processes. 

As data-capturing infrastructure builds, making sense of that data will become much more critical. Workers in every role and at every level will be able to use these tools to optimise operations, predict maintenance needs, and address potential failures before they happen.

Finally, investment in IT and network security becomes even more important. Manufacturers need to protect the success they have accomplished to date. 

Teams must ensure there are no single points of failure that an external invader could use to shut down operations completely.

Paul Baldassari speaking in a group at a Flex event

What are your takeaways from these developments?

The main takeaway for me is the power of connections. 

Restrictions have limited travel for our teams across the globe. However, just because they aren’t physically next to me doesn’t mean we can dismiss them. We learned that everyone needs to be an equal partner out of necessity. 

In business where we’re producing similar products, sometimes the same product, in China, Europe and the US, learning from one another is a top priority.

Another takeaway is the importance of digital threads. The ability to digitise the entire product lifecycle and factory floor setup increases efficiency like never before. With a completely digital thread, teams can perform digital design for automation, simulate the line flow, and ensure a seamless workstream for the entire project — all from afar.

Because of these advances, economic reasons, and geopolitical dealings, we’re also seeing a big push to make manufacturing faster, smaller, and closer. 

So, that means faster time to market through increased adoption of Industry 4.0 technology and smaller factories and supply footprints closer to end-users. Regionalisation is top of mind for many organisations.

Engineer working on Cobot

What are some of the technologies and processes supporting the push for regionalised manufacturing?

Definitely robotics and automation. As the industry faces labour shortages and supply chain constraints, automation provides flexibility to build new factories and processes closer to end-users and enables staff to focus on higher-level tasks.

Perhaps one of the most significant supporting factors isn't technology, but upskilling people. With automation and digitisation, system thinking becomes incredibly important. With so many connected machines, employees need to ensure when they change something on one section of the line, it won’t have a negative downstream impact on another area.

Continuously developing the capabilities of operators, line technicians, and automation experts to operate equipment will help streamline the introduction of new technologies.

People at Flex

What will manufacturing innovation and technology look like in 2030?

I think we’ll see manufacturing get faster, smaller, and closer. We see continued interest from governments in localising the supply base.

From a technological perspective, things will only continue to progress as the fourth industrial revolution rapidly makes way for future generations. 

A particular solution that has enormous promise is laser processing. There is a considerable investment underway because you need laser welding for battery pack assembly. 

With the push for electric vehicles from automakers, laser welding technology could be a standout technology moving forward.

To read the full article in the magazine, click HERE.


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