Trade-offs in Performance Objectives and Automation in Production; A case study for SKF Industrial Gothenburg
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As manufacturing companies face increasing pressure to balance cost efficiency,
flexibility, and technological advancement, decisions regarding production setup and
automation level have become central to long-term competitiveness. This thesis
investigates how different levels of automation and production setup influence
operational performance in a large-scale industrial setting, using SKF's D-factory in
Gothenburg as a case study.
The study is conducted through a combination of qualitative and quantitative
methods, including semi-structured interviews with operators, production managers,
and automation specialists, direct factory observations, and analysis of internal
documentation and literature. The theoretical framework includes Hill's
Manufacturing Strategy Framework, process design theory, levels of automation,
manufacturing planning and control systems, and key performance indicators.
The findings reveal a gap between the maturity of physical automation on the factory
floor and the cognitive and systems-level automation required to support it.
Disruptions in system integration, incomplete data flows, and varying knowledge
distribution among operators are identified as key operational challenges.
Furthermore, the study shows that strategic decisions regarding automation must be
derived from a clear alignment between corporate objectives, market strategy, and
manufacturing strategy, approached from both a top-down and bottom-up
perspective.
The thesis concludes that standardisation of processes, data structures, and
automation frameworks is a prerequisite for SKF to achieve its 2030 strategic
ambitions. Flexibility is identified as the primary performance objective, and the
ability to adapt production strategy to evolving market requirements, including a shift
toward smaller batch sizes, shorter lead times, and a postponed customer order
decoupling point, is central to sustaining competitive advantage. The findings are
intended to serve as a foundation for data-driven and context-aware decision-making
in future automation projects at SKF Industrial in Gothenburg.
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Ämne/nyckelord
Automation, Manufacturing strategy, Production layout, Cell production, System integration, KPI, SKF, Industry 4.0, Flexibility, Performance objectives, Standardisation
