Digital Transformation Partnership

PTC Academic's strategic relationships with companies helps to build a successful ecosystem for exploring and implementing digital transformation. Alexander Ouellet of PTC and Megan Fink of Rockwell Automation presented, 'ThingWorx for Digital Transformation,' at the PTC Academic Summit at LiveWorx 2019. The presentation covered the strategic relationships between Rockwell Automation, PTC, and Microsoft and how their collaborative work using PTC's digital transformation suite of products is defining and creating solutions for digital transformation in manufacturing.

Defining Digital Transformation

Ouellet began the presentation by aligning the definition of digital transformation with PTC's strategic business concept of people, products, and processes. Breaking down each category, Ouellet explained, 'people have information when they need it… [and] when it's convenient.' The 'products are connected-we're in the smart, connected age-and the data they generate, and the awareness of that data can help drive better products in the future. Those things playing together are essentially what create the processes.'

In today's age of technology, 'the more we know, and the more information that is available, we can start making more educated decisions with processes that become more predictive, and active, and less reactive,' said Ouellet. Having access to this information through a cloud-hosted IoT platform like ThingWorx and Azure gives real-time information so that processes can become more efficient and faster over time.

Why Connected Processes Are Important

Fink then addressed why using ThingWorx is necessary and how it applies to industry. An example of how ThingWorx helped improve workflow efficiency with Rockwell Automation hardware was, 'when a machine had an issue, there was no easy way for a maintenance technician to pinpoint the issue. When one was down, the whole production stopped,' Fink explained. She then discussed that, 'the goal of this solution was to predict issues and provide maintenance to technicians to minimize downtime as much as possible.'

The strategic relationship of PTC, Rockwell Automation, and Microsoft becomes increasingly necessary to execute a successful initiative for improved workplace efficiency. Ouellet emphasized, 'the reason you need a partner ecosystem is because industry is growing too fast. If you can't leverage a solution with capabilities to help a customer, it will not be valuable-it will be wasteful.' Wasteful is a word no company wants to associate with, which is why Ouellet and Fink decided to use a framework to customize a solution for each of the companies involved: connect, contextualize, control.

As shown in the image above, each company has its own role in this framework. In varying use cases, Fink noted that a knowledgeable user input for the framework is important because, 'there are a lot of skills and roles needed to make this successful… to know the people, processes, and products to make the product valuable.' The image below shows how the data is orchestrated from the machine to end user in the PTC, Rockwell Automation, and Microsoft relationship.

Creating a scalable system adds visibility and means, 'the solution could be carried over in similar use cases. This is only possible because of the framework.'

Looking Ahead with Digital Transformation


Going forward, companies will need to form strategic partnerships like the one between PTC, Rockwell Automation, and Microsoft, to build the solutions that will transform production. These partnerships will leverage each stakeholder's platforms, technologies, and subject matter experience to create the best possible solutions.

'The world is changing, and as it evolves faster and faster, digital transformation isn't just a convenience, it is a necessity for companies to survive as they compete against the market pressures to produce more, better, faster products,' says Ouellet.

These solutions are so complex and labor intensive, they need to be scalable so that they aren't a one-off endeavor. The systems we create going forward need to be able to grow and adapt to a wide variety of settings and use cases so as not to become a function albeit wasteful proof of concept.

Read these case studies to see how ThingWorx is being used in university classrooms and research labs to explore its impact on digital transformation all around the world.

About the Author

Delaney McDevitt

Delaney McDevitt is the marketing copywriter for the PTC Academic Marketing team. In her role, she creates content that embodies the Academic team's mission to empower students and educators to succeed in the digital transformation era.

As a professional writer, she has experience in copywriting, editing, email marketing, content strategy, blogging, document design, and creative writing.

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PTC Inc. published this content on 27 June 2019 and is solely responsible for the information contained therein. Distributed by Public, unedited and unaltered, on 27 June 2019 19:09:02 UTC