Fundamentals: Manufacturing Innovation

Error message

  • Notice: Undefined index: browser in om_preprocess_html() (line 213 of /var/www/sites/automationworld.com/sites/all/themes/om/core/template.php).
  • Notice: Undefined index: browser in om_preprocess_html() (line 214 of /var/www/sites/automationworld.com/sites/all/themes/om/core/template.php).
  • Notice: Undefined index: version in om_preprocess_html() (line 214 of /var/www/sites/automationworld.com/sites/all/themes/om/core/template.php).

Fundamentals: Manufacturing Innovation

Print
Over the past century, manufacturing has driven America’s growth and provided the world with some of the best products ever created.
Manufacturing is a primary wealth-producing sector and is historically responsible for this country’s relatively high standard of living compared to other countries.

The current recession has stimulated a review of the fundamentals. It’s being recognized that major parts of the economy—government, banking, insurance, health care, consumer services—use physical wealth, but do not create it. Financial services now comprise 45 percent of earnings of companies on the S&P 500 index, up from 10 percent a quarter-century earlier.

General Electric, the fifth-largest company in America, has apparently learned that lesson; its shares have lost some 58 percent of their value over the past year, largely the result of falling profit at GE Capital, its finance unit that generated 50 percent of its profits before the downturn. GE Chairman and Chief Executive Officer Jeffrey Immelt has stated, “Real engineering was traded for financial engineering. In the end, our businesses, our government and many local leaders lost sight of what makes a nation great: a passion for innovation.” Immelt is now restructuring GE so it will count on finance
for just 30 percent of its profit, down from half before the downturn.

Immelt publicly admits that, like many U.S. companies, GE has turned too many core technological functions over to outside contractors and foreign operations. He insists that the United States should now aim for manufacturing jobs to be at least 20 percent of total employment, about twice what it is now.

Coincidentally, Harvard Business Review (July/August 2009) makes the same case about the importance of manufacturing. It warns that the erosion of the U.S. manufacturing base is seriously undermining the country’s ability to innovate. We cannot succeed by letting other countries manufacture the products we supposedly invent; sooner or later, they’ll “invent” their own products, and we’ll be left behind.

A lot of attention is now focused on restoring the ability to develop and manufacture high-technology products in America. Reversing the decline in competitiveness requires two drastic changes:

•  Corporate management must stop the focus on short-term profits and target new growth through new product innovation.
•  Government must support scientific research and promote broad collaboration with business and academia to tackle big problems.

The accelerating pace of technological innovation is setting the stage for a new set of worldwide manufacturing transformations. Advances in information technology, nanotechnology, biotechnology and other arenas are creating opportunities for economic, social and environmental benefits. Realizing these benefits will require advanced manufacturing capabilities that will result only from focused manufacturing innovation.

Changes coming

The Society of Manufacturing Engineers (SME) has an initiative that identifies emerging technologies that are making a positive impact on manufacturing, and provides an educational framework for manufacturers to keep up-to-date on the industry’s latest and greatest innovations. SME’s Manufacturing Enterprise Council collaboratively selected five “innovations that could change the way you manufacture”:

•  Direct Digital Manufacturing (DDM): Use of additive fabrication processes; manufacturing components layer by layer, direct from 3D digital data, without machining, molding or casting.
•  Ultra capacitors: Electrochemical capacitors that have an unusually high energy density and provide significantly more storage power, with unparalleled life span.
•  Self-Assembling Nanotechnology: Manufacturing at the microscopic level.
•  Intelligent Device Integration (IDI): Monitoring, managing and servicing of intelligent devices over the Internet.
•  Integrated 3D Simulation and Modeling: Desktop supercomputers will revolutionize simulation and modeling, acting through microscope, telescope and time-machine operations to manage, view and tool a complete manufacturing system.

Perhaps a fortuitous result of the current recessionary environment is that manufacturing decline is being recognized and addressed.

Jim Pinto is an industry analyst and commentator, writer, technology futurist and angel investor. You can e-mail him at: jim@jimpinto.com. Or review his prognostications and predictions on his Web site: www.jimpinto.com.

 

Subscribe to Automation World's RSS Feeds for Columns & Departments

Comments(0)

Add new comment

By submitting this form, you accept the Mollom privacy policy.

Follow Us

 

Newsletters

Click on any newsletter to view a sample.

 News Insights 
News & Analysis (2x Month)   Product Insights
Latest Automation Products (2x month)  TalkPoints
Automation Columnists (1x month) Feed Forward
Latest from Gary Mintchell (1x month)  Automation Focus
Sponsored white papers, videos and products (1x month)
Process Automation
Industry Trends & Applications (1x month)  Motion Control 
Machine & Motion Control (6x year)  Automation Skills
Improve Industry Skills (1x month)   Industrial Ethernet Review
Network Application of IE (4x year)
Packaging Automation Review
Trends in Packaging Automation (4x year)  Safety Automation Insights
The How & Why of Safety (6x year)

 

OPConnect Newsletter
OPC Foundation Developments (4x year) PROFInews NA
PI News in North America (6x year)
Totally Integrated Automation
Applications and News from TIA (1x month)  Automation Catalyst
Igniting Ideas to Solve Automation Challenges
 Manufacturing Intelligence
Your Source for Operation Trends (3x year)

Once monthly. Don’t miss intelligence crucial to your job and business! Click on any newsletter to view a sample.

 

Feedback Form