ICYMI: 🏭 Technology is changing manufacturing, driving greater efficiency while exposing supply chain vulnerabilities. It all means the traditional ways of making things are transforming. In our latest episode of Take on Tomorrow, we spoke to Kiva Allgood, Head of the Centre for Advanced Manufacturing and Supply Chains at the World Economic Forum, about the impact of automation on the workforce. We were also joined by Cara Haffey, Leader of Industry for Industrial Manufacturing and Services at PwC UK, about the opportunities this shift brings for new types of businesses. Listen here and subscribe to never miss an episode: https://pwc.to/3JNJTWm #TakeOnTomorrow
Such an eye-opening episode. The insights on automation, talent shifts and new business opportunities were spot on. Thanks for breaking it down in a way leaders can act on.
Technology driving efficiency while exposing supply chain vulnerabilities is the paradox every manufacturer is living right now. The conversation with Kiva Allgood about automation's workforce impact must be fascinating, especially with the WEF perspective on how this plays out globally. That Tabtrack comment about breaking it down so leaders can act on it is key. What's the 1 workforce shift Kiva highlighted that most manufacturing leaders aren't preparing for yet?
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The real shift isn’t automation — it’s convergence. Factories are becoming software-defined environments, where machines, data, and human judgment operate as one. When workforce intelligence aligns with real-time automation, productivity becomes a byproduct of coherence.