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Manufacturing Technology Insights | Thursday, July 02, 2026
A production line might fulfill its daily quota and yet leave plant managers puzzled about many details. Scrap rates could increase in one shift, machinery breakdowns could take more time to resolve, and work orders might pass through the plant with no record of how exactly they have been handled. All of these problems are making manufacturing execution systems (MES) an increasingly sought-after solution as manufacturers seek more visibility in their production processes and rely not only on planning software and reporting at the end of the day.
Talks about MES are moving away from the topic of substituting paper-based documentation. Today, manufacturers see these systems as a way to combine production processes with information collected in the course of production. In contrast to waiting for the production process to finish, MES enables supervisors to monitor what is happening and detect possible problems while they are just appearing and haven’t spread to many other jobs.
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Such a perspective is becoming necessary because of the growing complexity of contemporary production environments. Plants may have to run production for various product lines, organize shorter production runs, and meet changing customer demands that require frequent reconfiguration of production equipment and work processes. All of these factors make manual monitoring of production more difficult, especially in cases where many different departments use the same production equipment and workforce.
MES enables organizing a consistent record of all activities that happen during production. Work instructions, actions taken by operators, the state of machinery, and production records form a unified manufacturing history that can explain differences in performance of similar production runs despite following identical schedules.
This information becomes useful not only for production supervisors. Quality control teams could use it to analyze defects in production, maintenance workers could use it to evaluate the state of equipment before performing the repairs, and plant management could compare actual production results with planned output without waiting for data collection from different reporting systems.
At the same time, today’s manufacturers have to be responsive to changes in the production environment. Malfunctions of equipment, material shortages, or sudden revisions of orders are examples of situations that call for quick adjustment. While MES will not eliminate such interruptions in production, it will provide current information on the status of production that is needed to make decisions faster and with fewer manual efforts.
Nevertheless, the installation of an MES is a challenge for most plants. The proximity to production processes means that an MES should be integrated with production equipment, existing enterprise software, and established work practices. The implementation of MES in older facilities can be complicated by the fact that production assets are not designed for digital connectivity.
The importance of training cannot be overlooked either. It is crucial for operators, supervisors, and production planners to know how information should be input and used in the process of production. Incorrect data entry or inadequate adoption of work processes can reduce the reliability of production records and limit the benefits that are expected from MES.
Another factor contributing to the popularity of MES is the increasing need for traceability of production processes. Manufacturers who work with regulated sectors or customers who require documentation of their orders have to create detailed production histories that go beyond finished goods reports. MES can help with this problem by providing production records along the entire production chain rather than recreating them later.
The wider importance of manufacturing execution systems should not be viewed in terms of the adoption of particular software products. Rather, the key issue for manufacturers today is organizing and managing production information in real-time.
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