Independent research commissioned by RS Components has identified five areas manufacturers should focus investment in to build resilience in their plant for long-term prosperity. The findings are from the newly created Resilience Index – a comprehensive and unique investigation of six datasets from the past 20 years covering manufacturing investment, productivity, and employment to track resilience across some of the UK’s most prominent industries.
The five key areas senior engineers should focus investment in to safeguard resilience for the future are:
Emma Botfield, UK and Ireland Managing Director for RS Components, comments: “The Resilience Index research shows that, while the manufacturing sector is making progress in building its resilience, there is still more to do so it can improve performance, drive growth, and unlock opportunities. By implementing proactive investment strategies in line with those identified, senior engineers can strengthen resilience, overcome challenges, and add productivity value.
“At RS, we’re committed to assisting senior engineers to build resilience. By moving from being a catalogue-based product supplier to a digitally enabled technical solutions provider, we have become more strategic and a more important part of the customer supply chain. Our inventory, procurement and maintenance solutions are an example of how we’re able to help.”
The findings of the Resilience Index also acknowledge the importance of maintaining reliable infrastructure to drive operational resilience. However, the findings highlight that planned investment in manufacturing sector machinery, hardware and software is needed to build the strategic resilience required to meet and exploit emerging market demands.
The research shows that business (plant) investment has been on an upward trajectory within the manufacturing sector since 2009. The Resilience Index reveals that plant investment per hour has been the biggest driver of gains in manufacturing, increasing by 77% over the past two decades. This is a greater rise than other sectors such as construction, financial & insurance, and agriculture. However, manufacturing investment growth has not been consistent over this period, with its biggest fall occurring after the financial crash of 2009, creating a situation that took five years to rebuild.
As far as manufacturing sub-categories are concerned, the Index shows that chemicals and engineering and vehicles have led the way in investment levels, whilst food production and metals and textiles have lagged behind, investing less than the manufacturing average.
To find out more and get a copy of the Resilience Index: Plant report, visit https://www.rs-connectedthinking.com/en/operational-efficiency/insight/the-resilience-index-plant