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The Critical Role of an Asset-Centric Approach

An asset-centric, lifecycle management approach enables critical data to be fed back to engineering. Asset and service data allows organisations to understand the location, current condition, usage, performance, and service history of assets over their lifetimes. By aggregating this data, designers and decision makers can start to answer some pressing questions around product sustainability, costs and organisational performance.

Culturally, it may be a shift for some organisations, as most product development teams traditionally take a methodical approach to research. However, this is because they’re often not aware of – and not leveraging – the best information available, which already exists within their organisations – asset data. By turning thinking on its head, organisations can begin to solve some challenging questions around product circularity and carbon impact. It means looking deeply at data availability, infrastructure and service management, to ensure connectivity across the lifecycle of assets.

There are some good examples of this. Engineering business 3D Systems produces 3D printing products and on-demand manufacturing services. Its goal to improve service response times, maximise asset uptime, reduce repeat service visits and better forecast future demand of products, led to technology change. Through a field service management transformation, the business now takes an asset-led approach to customers, with data flowing back and forth so that asset performance is fundamental to decision making.

In short, this has seen 3D Systems record a 195% increase in its NPS score in two and a half years – from 22 to 65, a 195% increase – a 62% reduction in parts usage and a 39% decrease in repeat visits. Data is now being fed into product development, improving design and longevity of assets, adding to its increased reduction in carbon impacts.

It’s a great example of a business moving towards a circular economy, in which service sits at the heart. We know reverse logistics to handle the return, refurbishment and remanufacturing process that is so critical to the circular economy is increasingly reliant on asset data to inform the entire function. It’s about not acting blind but understanding products throughout their lifecycle so that you can make them even better, for customers, for the environment and of course, the balance sheet.