
Transformation into a digital factory: KSB’s pump plant in Pegnitz
Many companies in the industrial world are currently in the same boat. They are in the midst of an all-encompassing digital revolution which is sweeping through virtually every branch of industry. To continue to operate as a pioneer, KSB charted a course for its digital transformation at an early stage – and selected its pump plant in Pegnitz as the pilot plant for a smart digital factory. Its transformation into a smart factory is being driven forward with great momentum via individual ‘use cases’, serving as a model for other KSB plants and customers around the world.
Many companies in the industrial world are currently in the same boat. They are in the midst of an all-encompassing digital revolution which is sweeping through virtually every branch of industry. To continue to operate as a pioneer, KSB charted a course for its digital transformation at an early stage – and selected its pump plant in Pegnitz as the pilot plant for a smart digital factory. Its transformation into a smart factory is being driven forward with great momentum via individual ‘use cases’, serving as a model for other KSB plants and customers around the world.
What is a smart or digital factory – and what does that mean for KSB?
KSB is systematically pursuing the path to digitalisation
A digitalisation pioneer: KSB’s pump plant in Pegnitz, Germany
From pilot project to benchmark: Digitalisation based on the example of KSB’s pump plant in Pegnitz
- 12 pilot use cases started
- 7 of which are already being rolled out
- 3 more pilot use cases are in planning
- 36 rollouts started
- 16 use case rollouts completed
One of several use cases in Pegnitz: The new smart screwdriver technology uses a barcode to ensure that each screw is automatically tightened to the prescribed torque.
Major opportunities come from major challenges: 10 key learning takeaways on the path to digitalisation
- It is important to focus on just a few topics and not to start too many projects at once. Allow a sufficient personnel buffer in your planning.
- Change management is not a one-off event that is finished at some point; it is an ongoing journey with phases of varying lengths. Targets are only ever interim targets.
- A structured approach with lean processes and flat hierarchies provides the basis for successful project management.
- Extremely important: ensuring the acceptance and involvement of the affected employees. It often takes more time and effort to get the employees on board than to introduce the software at the technical level.
- Modern, inclusive, team- and solution-oriented leadership methods are needed.
- If you do not have the necessary expertise in digital transformation yourself, it is advisable to find a strong external partner.
- Rolling out a use case is often more difficult than setting up the pilot project. Even if numerous colleagues were involved in designing the pilot, their perspective changes when the employees themselves are affected during the rollout.
- Not all digitalisation use cases make sense for all production operations or, more generally, for all companies. Digitalisation should never be an end in itself.
- A powerful IT infrastructure is essential for any form of digitalisation.
- When selecting suitable software at the beginning of the project, it emerged that KSB had taken an approach that was too Europe-oriented. As the price level in non-European countries is completely different, a use case may not turn out to be economical abroad. A clear geographical limitation or an international software selection setup/team is therefore recommended.