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Smart manufacturing in 2026

Today’s smart manufacturing coordinates people, processes, and technology so production and operations can adapt, improve, and stay resilient over time.

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Smart manufacturing in 2026

  • What is smart manufacturing?
  • What is manufacturing 4.0? 
  • Importance of smart manufacturing
  • Smart manufacturing systems
  • Smart manufacturing technologies
  • Examples and industry use cases
  • Smart manufacturing vs. smart factory
  • FAQs

With modern operations growing more complex and challenging by the day, smart manufacturing has become less of a distant goal and more of an immediate necessity. In 2026, the pressure isn’t to simply “do more with less” – it’s to respond faster, with fewer blind spots, across production and the wider global operation. Demand is increasingly fragmented and less predictable, supply chains are constantly exposed to new and unexpected disruptions, and skilled labor is harder to find and harder to replace. At the same time, customers and regulators expect tighter proof of quality, safety, and sustainability. To respond, businesses need solutions that provide connected information across the entire production process – from the shop floor to suppliers and the executive level. This shared, real-time visibility replaces informed guesswork with an accurate picture of what’s actually happening, letting you stay in control across sites, regions, and markets.

What is smart manufacturing? 

Smart manufacturing is an approach to production that uses connected data, digital systems, and intelligent, AI-powered tools to coordinate, monitor, analyze, and continuously improve manufacturing operations.

What is manufacturing 4.0?

Manufacturing 4.0 is an offshoot of the term “Industry 4.0,” which refers to the fourth industrial revolution – marked by the widespread use of connected systems, automation, and data across industrial environments. Because smart manufacturing draws on many of the same technologies and ideas, the two terms are often confused. They are related, but not the same.

As we enter the second quarter of the 21st century, this distinction matters because most manufacturers are not trying to “arrive” at a fully automated factory state all at once. Manufacturing 4.0 is a conceptual term, describing what highly digitized, deeply automated operations could look like at full maturity. Smart manufacturing is more immediate and operational: it’s how you apply connected data, real-time shop floor signals, and intelligent workflows right this minute – so teams can coordinate faster, keep quality and traceability tight, and make better decisions while there’s still time to apply them.

Focus Smart manufacturing Manufacturing 4.0
What it represents A practical approach to improving manufacturing using connected data, systems, and intelligence A broad industry vision describing the digital transformation of manufacturing
Primary purpose Avoid disruptions, improve daily operations, coordination, and decision-making Define the long-term direction of modern industrial systems
Time horizon Immediate and ongoing Long-term and evolutionary
Level of abstraction Operational and execution-focused Conceptual and strategic
How organizations engage Through concrete initiatives, systems, and process changes Through frameworks, roadmaps, and transformation goals
What teams interact with Schedules, production data, quality signals, workflows, and analytics Principles such as connectivity, autonomy, and cyber-physical systems
Measure of success Better visibility, responsiveness, reliability, and performance Progress toward a more connected, automated, and intelligent industry
Relationship between the two Puts Industry 4.0 ideas into action Provides the context and ambition that smart manufacturing supports

Why is smart, connected manufacturing so important right now? 

Smart manufacturing matters more than ever because if businesses are to compete, they no longer have the luxury of slow feedback loops. When orders change mid-run, materials arrive late, or a line underperforms, waiting days – or even hours – for answers and clarity is no longer workable in today’s highly competitive landscape. At the same time, AI-powered and connected manufacturing is becoming standard practice, raising the bar even higher for responsiveness and execution. Smart, connected solutions give teams immediate visibility into what’s happening and why, so they can respond while there’s still time to influence the outcome and minimize risk. It’s less about chasing ambitious transformation goals and more about staying in control of daily operations – and not falling behind competitors who are already adapting faster in an environment where delays, surprises, and constraints are now routine.

Core capabilities of smart manufacturing systems

Rather than replacing longstanding processes, smart manufacturing reviews, diagnoses, and enhances them – for more visibility, better connected teams, and insights that turn raw data into actionable strategies.

Magnifying, glass, transparency, inspect, investigate, search, zoom, find, look, enlarge, finder, tool

Real-time visibility across production

Teams can see a unified view of activity like machine status, material flow, quality checks, and output across teams and production processes. This shared view reduces surprises and makes sure everyone can see what’s happening – whether on the plant floor or across the supply chain - as work progresses. This supports quicker, more confident decisions.

Data, information

Coordinated, data-driven workflows

When processes are centralized on a single platform, it means that production, quality, maintenance, and supply chain teams can all stay aligned. When one area changes, the others have the information they need to adjust without disrupting the wider operation.

Scale, growth, square, arrow, measure, growth, expand, bigger, resize, full screen, transform, scalability

Adaptive, flexible production

Ever-shifting conditions have traditionally made it hard to adjust run lengths, product mix, or line assignments. With smart systems that learn and improve, you’re able to ramp up the accuracy and speed of your responses and ensure that your production can pivot as needed.

checklist, tick, check mark, clip board, approved

Stronger quality management and traceability

Modern systems use a range of AI tools to perform digital checks, capture process data, track materials, and spot/flag anomalies or patterns. This helps teams catch issues earlier and trace root causes more easily. This supports consistency, compliance, and faster problem resolution.

Lightbulb, idea, inspiration, thought, brainstorm, innovation, power, electricity, ideation, energy, inspire

Better use of equipment, labor, and materials

Smart solutions such as process intelligence, GenAI, and AI agents not only spot bottlenecks, slowdowns, and risks, but they also help explain their cause and what actions to take to fix them. This lets you set more aggressive targets, confident in minimal downtime or unplanned interruptions.

Group-of-people, employees, team, collaboration, customers, staff, crowd, community, people, leadership, meeting

Contagious improvement

Because performance data is captured and shared, teams can compare shifts, lines, or products to identify where changes will have the biggest impact. Improvements become part of the daily rhythm instead of occasional projects.

Smart manufacturing technologies

Smart manufacturing is – as the old cliché goes – more of a marathon than a sprint. The best businesses tend to approach their digital transformation journeys as a gradual optimization rather than an overnight miracle. The good news is that today’s best solutions are built with manufacturing-specific needs in mind, and possess a full complement of intelligent and integrated tools no matter where you start.

  • Industrial IoT solutions for smart manufacturing

  • Industrial Internet of Things (IIoT) devices stream data from equipment, sensors, and production lines. This data can then be integrated into the MES, ERP, and cloud platforms that capture, contextualize, and analyze real-time operational signals.

  • AI and machine learning

  • AI and machine learning come together to analyze production, quality, and maintenance data – uncovering patterns, predicting issues, and flagging unusual behavior. The insights delivered help you anticipate problems earlier and undertake efficient responses.

  • Cloud-based integration and data platforms

  • Cloud platforms connect production, planning, supply chain, quality, and maintenance systems. The best cloud systems use a shared data fabric to unify processes across sites and support scalable, multi-tenant deployments – minimizing risk and maximizing power.

  • Advanced analytics, process mining, and big data processing

  • Customized analytics tools and engines help you understand performance, variability, process deviations, and root causes. Unified platforms and data fabric architectures help to support large-scale analytics and contextual insights that guide better production decisions.

  • Digital twins and simulation

  • Digital models allow teams to test scenarios, compare alternatives, and understand how changes will ripple through the system. Modern supply chain planning tools support scenario simulation to allow robust testing before taking the risk of trying them in the real world.

  • Robotics and autonomous systems

  • Robots, cobots, and automated vehicles offer an almost infinite array of manufacturing applications. These assets can be integrated within supply chain and IIoT systems, with workflows optimized and coordinated by agentic AI, and their data outputs used to inform analytics.

  • Cybersecurity and secure connectivity

  • The more connected devices there are in any environment, the greater the risk there is of a cyber threat. Fortunately, modern systems are built with this in mind and offer secure access, monitoring, and threat protection. But it’s important to always confirm and check your security measures.

  • System integration and interoperability

  • System integration connects operational technology with enterprise systems like planning, quality, and supply chain applications. Interoperable platforms allow data to move consistently across these layers, reducing silos and boosting collaboration across manufacturing.

  • Additive manufacturing (3D printing)

  • Additive manufacturing supports rapid prototyping, small-batch production, and on-demand spares. While it’s not standard in most factories, its ability bring supply, demand, and production into a single smart machine is compelling, making it a technology to keep an eye on in the future.

  • Augmented and mixed reality (AR)

  • AR tools support guided work instructions, remote assistance, and quality checks. Again, it’s not standard-issue tech at this stage, but it is a good example of cyber-physical collaboration and how human experience and AI capabilities can become so powerful when they work together.

  • Edge computing

  • Edge computing processes data nearby to machines or sensors for ultra-fast response times, when milliseconds count. Again, not for use in every business, but edge is certainly something to keep an eye on as 5G advancements allow it to work in areas far away from internet connections.

Smart manufacturing examples: Industry use cases

All manufacturers share common concerns, regardless of what they produce. But to compete in today’s environment, modern businesses are increasingly seeking automation and smart solutions that are built to tackle the unique needs of their sectors.

Industrial, machinery, construction, equipment, hook, build, site, crane, lift, lifting

Industrial machinery and equipment

Machinery manufacturers handle a mix of engineered-to-order and configure-to-order jobs. It is challenging to coordinate labor, parts, and subassemblies across multiple bays. Smart manufacturing links scheduling, material staging, and work instructions so that when priorities shift, teams can respond fast and with less disruption. This means steadier throughput and fewer delays caused by misaligned tasks.

Technology High Tech gray ICON outline

Electricals and electronics

Electronics assemblers often struggle with the need for rapid design refreshes and shifting component availability. Smart manufacturing synchronizes demand signals, production schedules, and inventory status so planners and supervisors can adjust batch sizes fast or route work to alternate lines. This reduces scrap when specs change and helps businesses stick tightly to their delivery commitments.

Aerospace and defense gray ICON outline

Aerospace and defense

Aerospace plants use complex assemblies with sophisticated supply chains, encountering delays whenever inspection results, torque data, or serialized component histories are hard to trace. Smart manufacturing unifies these records so engineers and quality teams can instantly see and trace the pedigree of the full build. This reduces rework, shortens investigation cycles, and keeps programs moving despite very long lead times and strict compliance demands.

car, front view, driver, automotive

Automotive

Recent tariffs have forced OEMs and tier-1 suppliers to reassess sourcing and assembly strategies. Smart manufacturing delivers real-time visibility and clearer insight into which components are subject to tariffs, and where inventory shortfalls may occur. Teams can then resequence work orders, trigger part substitutions, and rebalance station workloads to keep assembly flows steady and avoid stoppages or downtime.

Nucleus, talent, science, research, medical, chemical, atom, atomic, electron, molecule

Chemicals and specialty materials

When reaction times differ or when shared resources like reactors or filtration units become bottlenecked, batch processes have to shift. Smart manufacturing collects processing data as it happens and highlights when a batch is drifting from the conditions expected for it. With earlier visibility, teams can adjust workloads, reassign equipment, and preserve throughput – without risk to product integrity and safety.

Fashion, ACCESSORIES, retail, purse, handbag, shopping

Fashion and apparel

The fashion sector struggles to keep up as trends and demands now shift more quickly than ever. Or when fabric availability or dye-lot variation disrupts planned production runs. Smart manufacturing brings real-time visibility into material readiness, line schedules, and quality checks, helping teams adjust order quantities, reroute work, or sequence colorways with fewer delays – reducing both shortages and surpluses.

FOOD & BEVERAGES, distribution, restaurant, hospitality, production

Food and beverage

A beverage plant frequently loses production time when incoming ingredients vary in quality or when tank and line availability don’t match daily demand. Smart manufacturing improves coordination by integrating inventory quality data, tank status, and production schedules. This results in faster responses to quality issues or supply fluctuations – and leads to less waste and tighter control over freshness and shelf life.

shipping box, global logistics, storage, distribution, warehouse, scm, supply chain, delivery, crate, shipment, pallets, tracking, package, order, cargo, wooden box

Packaging and consumer goods

Packaging plants often find it hard to balance short runs, frequent color/spec changes, and tooling constraints across a large number of extrusion and printing lines. Smart manufacturing provides a connected view of changeover times, material readiness, and line performance. This gives teams the information they need to sequence jobs more effectively and reduce the downtime associated with constant transitions.

Medicine, tablets, capsule, medication, pharmaceuticals, prescription, dosage, HCL, health, hospital, pill, drug, cure, treatment, prescription, pharmacy, rx

Pharmaceuticals and life sciences

A pharma site experiences long delays when deviations or out-of-spec test results slow down release. Smart manufacturing brings together production records, test data, and genealogy so quality teams can spot and assess issues much faster. This means shorter release cycles and reduced waiting time between steps. It also helps the site maintain compliance even as it increases output.

Top 6 benefits of smart manufacturing

As part of a unified cloud platform, modern manufacturing solutions integrate with teams and systems across operational areas. Data-driven insights and powerful analytics help to drive outcomes that can lead to measurable and meaningful benefits company-wide.

  1. Higher profitability and healthier margins
  2. Better resource use, fewer production losses, and steadier output help you to improve margins without having to expand capacity more than needed. Intelligent, connected tools let you turn operational insights into actual financial advantage.

  3. Improved customer satisfaction and delivery performance
  4. In the end, this is what it’s all about, right? When production is more predictable and issues are resolved sooner, customers get their products on time and with consistent quality. This builds trust and protects long-term relationships in today’s competitive markets.

  5. More adaptable and resilient operations
  6. The past few years have highlighted the extent to which global, political, and social factors can influence business. Data-driven coordination helps teams not only respond fast when disruptions happen – but lets them pivot and get back on course before it gets costly.

  7. Better support for innovation and product launches
  8. When manufacturing is efficient and accurate, businesses are more confident to introduce new products, adjust mixes, or run short, specialized campaigns. This supports faster time-to-market performance and more meaningful responses to evolving customer expectations and requests.

  9. Stronger compliance and traceability
  10. Trying to navigate all of today’s regulatory, sustainability, and compliance requirements is not for the faint of heart. Accurate, digitally connected records make it easier to stay current, maintain audit readiness, and trace issues quickly. This reduces brand risk and helps to maintain high safety standards.

  11. Reduced waste and environmental impact
  12. More efficient production, tighter quality control, and fewer rework cycles lead to less energy usage and reduced amounts of waste. Smart manufacturing helps you support your sustainability goals without slowing down operations.

Next steps: Tips for getting started with smart manufacturing

Smart manufacturing doesn’t have to start with a “big bang” transformation. The strongest programs often begin with one or two high-value operational problems, then gradually build a connected foundation that can scale across lines, plants, and regions. This gives both your teams and your systems time to adapt to and embrace new solutions.

  • Pick one operational problem worth solving first
  • Choose a pain point where faster feedback really moves the needle (e.g., schedule adherence, quality escapes, unplanned downtime, material shortages). Define what “better” looks like in plain operational measures and who owns the result.

  • Digitize and standardize what’s happening on the shop floor
  • Capture production, quality, inventory, and maintenance execution in a consistent way, so the line’s source of truth isn’t split across spreadsheets and tribal knowledge. Leverage your manufacturing execution system (MES) to orchestrate production and connect execution with planning.

  • Connect execution to planning and the business system of record
  • Ensure shop-floor signals feed directly into the systems that manage orders, materials, and constraints. When execution and planning stay aligned, your teams are able to quickly see where reality diverges from plan – and adjust before issues cascade.

  • Unify data across teams before you scale analytics and AI
  • Insights are only valuable/actionable when teams trust the numbers behind them. Establish guidelines and a shared data foundation that connects information across functions, systems, and sites. This lets analytics and automation operate from a consistent context.

  • Use process intelligence to find friction and prioritize fixes
  • Before redesigning workflows, be sure to understand where work actually slows down, loops, or deviates from what it’s supposed to look like. Analyzing real execution paths helps teams focus improvement efforts where they will have the greatest impact.

  • Introduce AI support where decisions and handoffs bog down
  • Once data and workflows are connected, use generative AI and agentic AI to surface relevant information, summarize status, resolve exceptions, and support handoffs. This puts everything in an understandable context and makes it easier to act and make decisions.

  • Pilot, prove, and then replicate across sites
  • Start with a controlled pilot on one line or plant, document what changed, and define a repeatable operating model. What you learned there can then be used to roll out in stages across sites and regions, maintaining consistency while also allowing for local variation.

  • Anchor change in real roles, not abstract transformation goals
  • Make role impacts explicit early. Using realistic, concrete examples that show how automation gets rid of repetitive tasks, improves outcomes, and shifts experienced staff into more skilled, decision-focused responsibilities rather than replacing them.

  • Set a sustainable pace and build confidence as you scale
  • Assess digital skills across your teams, provide targeted training, and identify local champions who can support the others. A measured and realistic rollout helps prevent frustration and self-doubt and allows team confidence to grow through use, not pressure.

Smart manufacturing vs. smart factory: How are they different

“Smart manufacturing” and “smart factory” are often used interchangeably. Although smart manufacturing and smart factories are closely linked, there are important differences between them. Understanding these distinctions is essential for a complete grasp of both concepts.

Dimension Smart manufacturing Smart factory
What it is A broad strategy for using data, intelligence, and connected processes to modernize manufacturing A digitized production facility where that strategy is executed on the shop floor
Scope Enterprise-wide: planning, production, quality, maintenance, supply chain, workforce Plant-level: machines, lines, operators, materials, in-process quality, maintenance tasks
Primary focus Improving coordination, visibility, and decision-making across the entire manufacturing ecosystem Running daily production more predictably through real-time insight and responsive workflows
What drives it Policies, systems, data models, and cross-functional processes that keep operations aligned Real-time conditions, equipment behavior, operator tasks, and plant-floor constraints
Who uses it Leaders, planners, engineers, IT/OT teams, supply chain roles, corporate decision-makers Operators, supervisors, technicians, quality teams, maintenance, plant managers
Where value appears Across business performance: cost, service, agility, sustainability, resilience In plant-floor outcomes: throughput, uptime, yield, safety, consistency
Relationship to technology Defines how data, analytics, AI, and connected systems are used across functions Applies those tools directly to machines and processes in a specific factory
How to think about it The strategy and system that makes manufacturing smarter The place where that strategy becomes real

Conclusion

The beauty of AI-powered cloud solutions is that they don’t just capture and organize data – they help connect it across planning, production, quality, and maintenance so teams can see the same operational truth and act on it together. In 2026, that shared clarity is what turns “more data” into better outcomes: faster decisions, fewer surprises, tighter traceability, and steadier performance from day to day. You don’t have to wonder if it’s working – you can see where processes are improving and where attention is still needed. Smart manufacturing helps organizations run with greater confidence. Connecting teams, guiding decisions, and supporting continuous improvement create a steadier path through daily complexity. 

See how Infor’s smart, AI-powered manufacturing solutions can help you transform production and run with greater confidence, speed, and agility. 

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