A controls engineer is standing at a workbench in the shipping bay with a laptop and a network diagram.
The pilot on Line 3 worked. Predictive maintenance flagged a bearing two weeks before it failed. The quality system caught a defect the operator had already approved. Executives saw the demo. Funding for plant-wide rollout was approved the following month.
Now he is looking at a network diagram that does not match what he just found on the floor.
The wireless coverage stops past the parts crib. Lines 1, 2, and 4 share a flat VLAN with the office printers. The switches in the controls cabinet have not been touched since 2014, and nobody knows the password. Machine account identity lives in a spreadsheet. The MES that worked on Line 3 cannot read the older PLC on Line 2 because nothing has ever needed it to.
The pilot did not fail. It is going to scale into a problem instead.
Smart manufacturing is treated as a technology investment. Buy the platform. Install the sensors. Train the team. Watch the dashboards.
The conversation in the boardroom is about software, AI, and what the data will reveal. The conversation that does not happen is about the network, the identity layer, the security posture, and the data path that everything will ride on.
There is a reason this keeps happening.
The Industry 4.0 conversation is built around destinations.
Leaders see where the data ends up. They do not see what it took to get there.
A pilot is contained. It runs on one line, with focused attention, on the equipment most likely to cooperate. Whatever is broken in the foundation stays out of the way because nothing else is pulling on it.
Production is not contained.
Production runs across every line, every shift, with whoever is on the floor. The same network has to carry the office, the controls, the cameras, the operator tablets, the new sensors, and the building automation. The same identity system has to know who the machine account is and who the third-party contractor is. The same security tooling has to monitor the controls switches without bricking a PLC during a patch window.
When a pilot succeeds, what succeeded was not the technology. The foundation under that one line happened to be adequate.
The pilot did not prove that Industry 4.0 works at this plant. It proved that Industry 4.0 works on Line 3.
The first pilot worked, so the team got more money.
The second deployment exposed the network. The third exposed identity. The fourth exposed the gap between IT and OT ownership. By month nine:
The technology did not fail. The foundation could not carry it.
The real risk is not a delayed rollout. The real risk is that the executive sponsor concludes Industry 4.0 does not work here, redirects the capital, and the initiative becomes "that thing we tried." That sponsor does not come back for a second attempt. Neither does the budget.
None of this is exciting. All of it is decisive.
When a manufacturer comes to us mid-roadmap, we do not start with the platform decision.
We start with what is there. We audit the network, the identity layer, the security posture, and the data path. We tell you what is in the way. Then we sequence the foundation work and the smart manufacturing work together, so the plant is not waiting on a 12-month infrastructure project before any value shows up.
The smart manufacturing roadmap and the foundation work are not done in sequence. They run in parallel, with the order on any given line being foundation first.
When was the last time someone outside your team looked at the controls network?
If your pilot worked on Line 3, what specifically made it work, and is that condition present on the other lines?
If the IT team and the OT team report through different organizations, who owns the line between them when a smart manufacturing project breaks across it?
Smart manufacturing inherits everything below it.
The platform you buy, the model you train, the dashboard you build: they will only ever be as good as the foundation they sit on. The pilot succeeded because the foundation under it was good enough.
The rollout succeeds when the foundation under it is too.
Start there.