Procter & Gamble’s Cloud-Based Approach to Manufacturing Data Author Sticky Stephanie Neil Senior Editor Automation World Stephanie Neil has been reporting on business and technology for 20+ years covering enterprise IT and industrial automation news. Prior to joining Automation World, she was Senior Editor at Thomas Publishing’s Managing Automation and a community manager for Manufacturing-Executive.com. Her journalism career began as a beat reporter for the Ziff-Davis IT journal eWeek (formerly PC Week) where she spent over a decade and became Managing Editor of the Features Department. At Automation World, Stephanie covers CPG, food and beverage, and pharmaceutical technologies and trends. Sep 03, 2024 3 minutes Share It wasn’t too long ago that manufacturers would not consider cloud technology for fear of compromising critical production data existing outside of the factory’s four walls. Now, with so much information flowing through the digital enterprise, the cloud is the only logical place to store, analyze and manage that information.Now that the cloud is an acceptable platform for enterprise data, the next step is to move manufacturing information to the cloud.That’s what GE Vernova announced with the launch of its Proficy cloud-based manufacturing data solution, a purpose-built platform designed to consolidate and transform manufacturing data across plants for enterprise cloud storage and analysis. Used in concert with a traditional manufacturing execution system (MES), the Proficy manufacturing solution gives manufacturers operational analysis in the cloud and greater flexibility of deployment, helping reduce the size of on-premise systems to make them run more efficiently.One of the first adopters is Procter & Gamble (P&G), one of the world’s largest consumer packaged goods (CPG) companies. P&G has been a long-time customer of GE Vernova’s Proficy Plant Applications manufacturing execution system (MES) and is leveraging the new capabilities by moving manufacturing data to the cloud to run analytics.After an initial pilot phase at three P&G sites, the company is expanding use of the platform across multiple manufacturing sites. P&G has already gained a detailed, data-supported view into their manufacturing processes, providing insights that drive efficiencies across plants. Plus, the new offering is helping the CPG company meet data compliance regulations and significantly increase the speed of its on-premise MES.According to GE Vernova, the cloud-based MES enables the consolidation of three data sets required for process optimization and analytical applications: asset data, ERP data and manufacturing data. In addition, the cloud structure is secure-by-design and managed 24/7. It ingests incremental data automatically without having to rely on human intervention and edge technology includes monitoring and remote configuration.“Most companies are only just scratching the surface of realizing their data’s potential. In fact, today manufacturers are losing the value of 70 percent of collected manufacturing data,” said Matt Wells, vice president for GE Vernova. “Our cloud-based Proficy MES delivers the power of cloud computing to manufacturers, taking the burden of heavy compute loads out of the plant, enabling users to aggregate data from across the business and run analytics that can uncover new insights and unlock even greater efficiencies.”According to GE Vernova, Proficy speeds up process implementation by up to 50 percent and gives users with views into information captured at individual sites, as well as the ability to run analytics and comparisons across various locations and data types. Additionally, the solution can reduce on-premise storage and maintenance costs, freeing up computing systems to focus on core capabilities. And, by moving and storing manufacturing data in the cloud, manufacturers get an additional level of certainty around data retention for regulation compliance and auditing purposes. There is a bigger benefit here around innovation through digitization of operations, and how IT supports that innovation. Kevin Prouty - Group Vice President, IDC Energy and Manufacturing Insights “IT is being told they have to be able to support, and not inhibit, innovation," Prouty said. "An industry cloud platform like Proficy can become the foundation for that support. The end result is IT and operations supporting innovation through a platform that secures data and provides rational access to operational data."Proficy’s MES can be used in a variety of manufacturing segments, including food and beverage, packaging, pulp and paper, automotive, chemical, pharmaceutical and life sciences. In addition, Proficy software is compatible with any third-party application that supports REST APIs for data sourcing, user interface, visualization, analytics and reporting. Author Section Author Stephanie Neil Senior Editor Automation World Stephanie Neil has been reporting on business and technology for 20+ years covering enterprise IT and industrial automation news. Prior to joining Automation World, she was Senior Editor at Thomas Publishing’s Managing Automation and a community manager for Manufacturing-Executive.com. Her journalism career began as a beat reporter for the Ziff-Davis IT journal eWeek (formerly PC Week) where she spent over a decade and became Managing Editor of the Features Department. At Automation World, Stephanie covers CPG, food and beverage, and pharmaceutical technologies and trends.