How Digital Manufacturing Creates Business Opportunities
It’s time to think way outside the proverbial box, according to the Manufacturing Leadership Council, the NAM’s digital transformation arm. In fact, as we get closer to 2030, manufacturers are creating entirely new boxes—including new digital business models, products and services, revenue streams, ways to serve customers and opportunities to increase competitiveness.
Collaborative innovation: By 2030, metaverse technologies will provide rich virtual environments for the collaborative development of new ideas. These shared virtual spaces will enable contributors from multiple remote locations to collaborate in real time.
- These collaborations may include manufacturers, partners, academic institutions, and research institutes.
- New concepts can be tested in a virtual world before moving to physical prototyping or production.
Outcome-based products and services: As digital platforms mature and products become increasingly smart and connected, the decade ahead may see a boom in more outcome-based services. This is where the customer doesn’t buy a physical product, but instead signs up to pay for the guaranteed outcomes that product or system delivers.
- This shift will require manufacturers to establish new infrastructure rich in predictive analytics, remote communications and consumption monitoring.
- It also requires a mindset change for traditional manufacturing, from a focus on units and costs to product lifecycles, performance levels, and usage.
Blockchain networks: By 2030, blockchain could be leveraged for most world trade, helping to provide the secure traceability and provenance needed to prevent physical product counterfeiting, grey markets in medicines, and even the adulteration of the global food supply chain.
- A blockchain is an electronically distributed ledger accessible to multiple users. Blockchains record, process, and verify every transaction, making them safe, trusted, permanent, and transparent.
- Blockchain technologies promise to be a viable solution to manufacturers’ need to automate, secure, and accelerate the processing of key transactions across industrial ecosystems.
E-manufacturing marketplaces: Digitally empowered production-line adaptability, such as the kind that emerged during the pandemic, will provide a foundation for companies to offer spare production capacity to other companies in different sectors.
- This maximizes the return on a company’s production-line investments and can generate new revenue streams for the future.
- Combined with e-commerce, e-manufacturing will enable designers, engineers and/or smaller companies to more easily connect with a large pool of qualified producers to deliver and scale a final product.
Manufacturing in 2030 Project: New Boxes is just one of the industry trends and themes identified by the Manufacturing in 2030 Project, a future-focused initiative of the MLC.
Author Unknown, for Manufacturing Leadership Council blog.