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CIMdata Publishes Industrial Machinery Research

ANN ARBOR -- CIMdata, the leading global Product Lifecycle Management  management consulting and research firm, announced a new research paper focused on the global industrial machinery market.

Entitled "The Next Industrial Revolution," the research describes the business, product development, and information technology challenges faced by competitors in the industrial machinery market.

Estimated at over $400 billion in 2011, the global industrial machinery market includes a wide range of segments, including: machine tools; heavy machinery, such as mining and construction equipment; farm machinery; packaging machinery; paper industries machinery; air conditioning refrigeration and heating machinery; printing trades machinery; food products machinery; and textile machinery.

Based on data from CIMdata's annual PLM market survey, industrial machinery is one of the largest markets for investment in PLM-enabling software.

While the end use of an industrial machine may vary, the companies in this market share some common problems. Suppliers of these products are under constant pressure to innovate, as well as hold to high quality and performance standards and competitive costs. Machines are often designed and made to order, working from a base design. Industrial machines can be complex products involving many subassemblies; electronic, software, and mechanical components; and close tolerances. The manufacture of these products involves complex bills of materials, and a combination of in-house and contracted manufacturing of parts and assemblies. Machine manufacturers have to share product information with their customers as well as their suppliers, as almost no industrial machinery manufacturer builds every component of every machine. Because of the global nature of the industrial machinery business, this sharing and collaboration needs to flexibly support global collaboration.

These products are major capital investments for industrial customers and have long lifecycles. Manufacturers are required to provide clear documentation of maintenance information and in many cases, actually perform the maintenance for their customers. From time to time, upgrade packages can be made available to customers to improve performance without replacing an entire machine. When these upgrades are released, clear design and installation information is essential.

The research focuses on how existing PLM enabling technologies can be used to address three critical problems facing industrial machinery firms: winning bids profitably; enabling efficient business processes across the extended enterprise; and installation, commissioning and maintenance.

"The Next Industrial Revolution" is available for download free at  www.cimdata.com/publications/reports_complimentary/white_papers.html.

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