Here’s How Blockchain Will Change the OEM Business Model

New technology platforms that leverage a secure, distributed, digital ledger will transform the way OEMs and end users interact.

Blockchain OEM Magazine machine builders packaging and processing
Blockchain OEM Magazine machine builders packaging and processing

Blockchain technology is commonly associated with the cryptocurrency Bitcoin, which is a form of electronic cash. And, while you may hear the term bandied about during industry discussions, many OEMs wonder why they should care anything about it—other than if they were the victim of a ransomware attack. Truly, they can’t comprehend how a blockchain investment could be valuable to their business. 

But management take note, because blockchain is not just another buzzword. Functioning as an open distributed digital ledger, blockchain is the technology that underpins cryptocurrencies, but it can also be used for many other applications by providing a secure, decentralized approach to distributing digital information in a way that can be shared but not modified.

“It’s an immutable database of ordered transactions, roughly like a financial ledger. These transactions can be literal debits and credits, like the original Bitcoin, but for other blockchains, it has expanded to include any data that you want to put on it such as pictures, weather reports, purchase orders, all ordered in a sequence,” says Bill McBeath, chief research officer at ChainLink Research.

For this reason, blockchain is gaining traction as a way to verify transactions across the supply chain. 

The fact that it is “immutable” is key, McBeath says, because the information cannot be changed. And it is shared, so multiple entities see the same data as a single version of the truth. This is the most powerful part of blockchain. Without blockchain, you end up with discrepancies between systems. One company with its own enterprise resource planning (ERP) system might send an electronic data interchange (EDI) message or a PDF to another company to order supplies, but when they put it into their system, the data may be converted, incorrectly keyed-in, or interpreted so it is not necessarily the same. “With the blockchain, everyone sees exactly the same data,” McBeath says. 

Because of that, there are a number of applications that are ripe for blockchain prototyping. In the food supply chain, it can be used for product authentication to verify the food source, keep counterfeit products out or for shipping and logistics management, for example. 

But the applications are rapidly expanding into other areas. For OEMs, it could be applied to contract management, warranty management and automated service agreements. Perhaps the most interesting area OEMs will want to explore has to do with usage-based financing, which means machine builders receive financial compensation based on the number of units produced at the end user’s site. 

Otherwise known as Machine-as-a-Service (MaaS), it’s the ability to pay based on equipment performance, and it has the potential to completely transform an OEM’s current sales model. Meaning, instead of selling a customer a $200,000 machine outright, the system could be paid for on a per unit basis.

It might sound far-fetched, but there are some pioneering OEMs that are moving in this direction. Specifically, Pearson Packaging Systems, which will introduce its first blockchain-based machine in a pilot project this April. 

 

The making of Machine-as-a-Service

Michael Senske, president & CEO of Pearson Packaging Systems, had been toying with the idea of offering the company’s end-of-line case erectors, packers and sealers in a Machine-as-a-Service model for a few years. The idea came to him out of necessity, really, as Pearson Packaging had offered such a set-up a few times before to loyal customers, which, for whatever reason, lacked access to capital but still needed the equipment. “They said, if you are willing to provide us with the equipment we’ll pay on the successful output,” Senske remembers. “And it worked incredibly well.”

The problem, however, was that it was very difficult to keep track of the performance of the machine and tie it into a real-time payment process. That problem has been solved, he says, with the help of Steamchain Inc., a start-up company co-founded by two former Rockwell Automation engineers, Michael Cromheecke and Tom Tichy. 

Steamchain, founded in 2017, has developed a MaaS platform geared specifically to machine builders who can use the blockchain-based software to measure a variety of critical machine productivity parameters in real-time and use them to calculate transactional payments based on the machine’s overall performance. 

“The idea for Steamchain was formed by my experience as a field service guy in the motion control business,” Cromheecke says. “I’d get called in when they had large commercial issues between the people who built the machines and the people operating them. When the machine was not operating to expectations, both parties ended up looking at each other to rectify the situation, often times bringing in the automation vendor to assess the situation. I spent three years of my career flying around on behalf of the business and sitting down at a table with the end users and the OEMs to discuss the challenges they faced with equipment and trying to provide some kind of path forward.”

 

And that is how the idea for Steamchain was born. 

 

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List: Digitalization Companies From PACK EXPO