Get Started with ThingWorx Digital Performance Management

  Download Success Path IMPORTANT: When saving the file, in the Print window please do the following:
Destination or Printer: select Save as PDF
More Settings: In the Options, be sure the boxes Headers and footers and Background graphics are selected.
Recommended Steps
Overview: Get Started with ThingWorx Digital Performance Management

Assess Existing Enterprise Infrastructure and Processes

You can plan where you are headed by documenting your current infrastructure and processes. 


Before you begin, complete this step:

01. Review Current Technological Landscape

Start by documenting your current enterprise architecture. Think about how different parts of your organization flow together. Next, document the architecture that supports your organization’s manufacturing operations, including hardware, software, and network materials. With the assistance of a controls engineer and manufacturing IT, gather at a minimum the following information:

  • Wi-Fi
  • Network connectivity
  • Directional data flow
  • Existing KPI’s
  • Networking status
  • Data storage

Your equipment list defines the pieces of your operations in a hierarchical organization, from the enterprise level down to individual machines on the factory floor. The primary purpose of the equipment list is to define how data rolls up throughout your organization.

DPM supports the following hierarchy of equipment, from top to bottom:

EQUIPMENT TYPE

DESCRIPTION

Enterprise

The entire company, including all factories across the globe

Region

A geographic collection of factories

Site

The entire operation is at a single site. Also known as a factory.

Area

A functional grouping of work centers within the site across all materials. Also known as a department.

Work Center

A collection of work units performing different tasks to output a common material. Also known as a line or work cell.

Work Unit

A single workstation against which loss events and production are being tracked. Also known as a machine, asset, or piece of equipment.

While you are documenting what exists, start inquiring about what is not working today and what you would like to change in the future to support your use case.

02. Evaluate Manufacturing Processes and Map to DPM

Spend time evaluating your existing processes. First, find what causes bottlenecks and significant revenue losses. Then, consider the different parts of your manufacturing operations.

Next, evaluate how you currently analyze data. For example, are there inconsistencies in how you measure and report performance? Is the data kept separate across multiple different systems and dashboards? Can your team identify and compare losses to each other? The DPM Waterfall or Pareto Loss analysis tool helps identify the top losses for each bottleneck and pinpoint their root causes. Utilizing this information, your team can start well-informed improvement projects.

Does your current process lack visibility of shift performance? Are your standard KPIs not helping you analyze root causes? Think about your frontline workers. Are there multiple systems they must interact with that require extensive training and time for onboarding? With DPM’s Production Dashboard, your organization can improve operator engagement and drive accountability within your organization.

Once the team identifies areas of improvement, track your project’s actions thoroughly. First, evaluate your current process for action tracking. Then, determine if you can easily confirm the value. Are your essential resources appropriately allocated? Are your team’s current Industrie 4.0 investments not based on P&L impact? DPM’s Action Tracker confirms the delivered value and facilitates team huddles with continuous initiatives tracking.

Continue to review your current processes and needs. A customer success manager can help with mapping these needs.

03. Review Strategic Priorities, Goals, and Operational Challenges

Now, consider your company’s goals and priorities. Identify which factors create the most value for shareholders. Consult executives about these high-level business drivers. Important business drivers may include revenue growth, asset utilization, or margin optimization.

Discuss the following questions with your team:

  1. What level of performance visibility do you have today?
  2. How is your company’s management using performance visibility to inform decisions and prioritize improvements today?
  3. How would you characterize the ideal state of performance management might look like across your network?
  4. How does your company’s factory use performance visibility to identify and resolve problems on the shop floor today?
  5. What are the biggest roadblocks preventing you from achieving the level of performance management you seek for your company?
  6. What performance management improvement opportunities could be unlocked with a single source of truth across the enterprise?
  7. Does your company have a standardized way of viewing performance across lines, departments, and factories?
  8. Are you able to easily track returns on your initiative improvements?
  9. Are your operators engaged and empowered to support performance improvements?

 

Document your answers and prepare to map them to how they bring value to your organization.

Did you find this helpful?


Previous Step

Mobilize Executive Team

Next Step

Assemble a Team

ADDITIONAL RESOURCES
Product Documentation Find detailed technical documentation on Creo+ in our Help Center
Ask the Community Visit PTC's Creo Community to get support Peer-to-Peer, from our product management and assistance teams. Share ideas, give feedback and browse the wealth of information on using Creo+
Technical Support Need help from our support team? Log a case with eSupport using our Case Logger or find an answer using our new Creo Admin Troubleshooter tool. 

Contact Us

Have a question? Submit your contact information and we’ll reach out within 1 business day. You’re never obligated to purchase or commit.
Get in Touch