Packaging line integration—how should it be approached?

Like anything else in manufacturing, there are several ways to skin the cat when it comes to packaging line integration. Our exclusive survey sheds light on this important topic.

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Handle it internally or outsource it? If outsourced, is the task performed by a systems integration firm or by a packaging machinery OEM acting as contractor for the entire line? What about the role of the IT department—do you see it growing in importance?

These are but a few of the questions about packaging line integration that have been rattling around in our collective editorial brain, questions that persuaded us it was time to conduct a survey on the topic. More than anything else we wanted to learn if the responsibility for integrating packaging lines these days is borne by inside or outside personnel. As Figure 1 shows, 60% of respondents indicated it’s being handled by an internal engineering staff. And when the responsibility is outsourced, the likelihood of it going to a systems integrator is just slightly greater (22%) than to a machine builder acting as contractor (18%).

Figure 2 illustrates the breakdown of respondents grouped by the size of their company. In companies employing fewer than 100 people, an internal engineering staff handles packaging line integration 70% of the time compared to 53% for companies with more than 2,000 employees. So the smaller the firm, the more likely it is that packaging line integration is handled internally. It’s likely that cost issues are what cause the smaller firms to try managing integration internally without having to pay an outsider.

When integration is not handled internally, in companies employing fewer than 100 people the same percentage of companies (15%) have an outside systems integration firm do the job as have a machinery builder acting as contractor. For the larger firms who outsource integration, a considerably higher percentage (30%) go to outside systems integrators than to machinery builders (17%).

One final observation on the question of who performs packaging line integration. When we directly compare Beverage respondents to Healthcare/Pharma respondents (Figure 3), we learn that 50% of Beverage and 54% of Healthcare/Pharma respondents have it performed by an internal engineering staff. So basically half for each industry. If integration is outsourced, 23% of Healthcare/Pharma respondents pick outside systems integration service firms and the exact same percentage picks a machinery builder acting as contractor for the entire line. Beverage respondents who outsource integration, on the other hand, pick machinery builders far more often at 44% than outside systems integration service firms, at only 6%. This comparative preference on the part of Healthcare/Pharma respondents for outside systems integration service firms is probably due to the tangle of regulatory issues Healthcare/Pharma companies face compared to what Beverage respondents face, a situation that makes a specialized outside systems integration provider more attractive to Healthcare/Pharma respondents than a mere packaging machinery OEM.

Verbatim comments
Some of the questions we posed were aimed at teasing out verbatim comments and observations from the respondents. For example: “What was positive about your most recent experience with an outside or third party systems integration service?” We expected the fairly predictable comments about how welcome the additional resources were and how helpful it was to have an outside opinion. Or as one respondent put it, “It widened the thinking space.” One respondent was especially grateful for the “high-level expertise in PLC control,” another for “open platform support such as OPC,” and another for “good quality programming, good documentation, and an overall good result—but partly because we provided a clear and comprehensive functional specification.” Having a single point of contact was mentioned repeatedly, too, as a very welcome thing.

We also asked what was negative about recent experience with an outside or third party systems integration service, and one thing that cropped up frequently was the high cost of the service provided. One respondent appeared to have difficulty with an outside integration service because they didn’t know the product well enough. He put it this way: “They need to know the product well to provide the best recommendation for integration because this will be a long-time commitment.” Also showing up was evidence that the packaging machinery OEMs represented on a new line and the outside integrator responsible for roping them all together aren’t always on the same page: “The integrator didn’t take responsibility for delivering a working system and none of the machine suppliers would own up to the fact that their machine was a problem.” Finally, one respondent felt the outside integrator was too fond of complexity: “It’s like that cartoon about the Marketing Department asking for a swing from a tree limb and the Engineering Department delivering instead a massive construction of beams and girders.” Apparently there can also be issues surrounding controls options: “We are sometimes pushed to stray from our preferred PLC/HMI or drive preferences in order to avoid delays in machine delivery.”

We also asked about positive and negative experiences with packaging machinery OEMs acting as packaging line integrators. On the positive side came these comments:

• “The benefits to a single, qualified, OEM integrator were lower TCO, faster time to startup, and reliable support through design, build, install, startup, and running support.”

• “As the OEM we chose got involved in selecting other pieces of packaging equipment needed in the line, they became a key part of the project team.”

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