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Thomas R. Cutler, President and CEO
GJ: To create more intuitive and useful software, many companies are harvesting Big Data and applying AI and Machine Learning techniques for incremental improvements in efficiency and uptime of automation solutions. Many of these techniques require processing power and storage availability, so cloud solutions enable the raw infrastructure required to make these adjustments in real-time. Many SMEs have bandwidth limitations and intermittent latencies that 5G promises to overcome; only then can higher layers of technologies ensure that the cloud-based solutions will impact a process or machine in real-time for the biggest benefit. While such optimization will occur, many smaller manufacturers must crawl before they walk and walk before they run.
TRC: Are autonomous forklifts the logical way for small and mid-sized manufacturers to tiptoe into higher technologies? Is buy-in of this simple value proposition (moving product from A to B without a forklift driver) a good way to get started?
As manufacturers seekto improve production processes, there are many considerations. Facing an array of technologies that promises to help reach future state Value Stream Mapping (VSM) goals, small and midsized manufacturers must carefully evaluate options.
49% plan to acquire 9 or fewer forklifts this year, with 17% planning on< 3
GJ: With nearly half of manufacturers testing single autonomous forklifts during COVID to adhere to strict social distancing, the benefits become obvious; equipment operates 24/7 and the A to B pragmatic solution is creating SME believers. For large manufacturers, about 20% looking to invest in large fleets of 50-100+ units, deployment of mobile technologies for intralogistics such as 3PLs (third party logistics) makes sense. For everyone else, a single autonomous forklift is where the journey begins.