COOs drive investment in automation, real-time data and Industry 4.0. But here is the inconvenient truth that consulting firms avoid mentioning: more than half of digitisation projects fail, not because of the technology, but because of a lack of human adoption.
The risk is not advanced software; it's the Digital Manufacturing Gap that exists between the capability of your new systems and the ability of your people to operate them.
The solution is not to fire and rehire. The solution is Industrial Reskilling.
Reskilling is the only operational strategy that ensures the talent that knows your business acquires the 4.0 skills needed to operate, maintain and, crucially, extract maximum value from your new infrastructure. In this guide, we show you how to turn this need into your plant's greatest competitive advantage.
Industrial Reskilling (total retraining) is now an operational survival strategy. It seeks to transform existing roles so that they can take on functions profoundly changed by digitalisation.
While Upskilling improves an existing competency (e.g. being faster in corrective maintenance), Industrial Reskilling completely reorients the role (e.g. the maintenance technician moves from fixing faults to diagnosing network anomalies and applying predictive maintenance). It is a necessary metamorphosis for the management of technological change.
Inaction has a direct price in your Operational Efficiency (OEE):
Operational errors: an untrained operator enters erroneous data that contaminates your inventory planning and performance dashboard. The system lies because the human source is weak.
Invisible micro-stops: Personnel do not know how to diagnose simple network or industrial software faults, lengthening micro-stops and reducing real machine availability.
Loss of Know-How: If you don't invest in the experienced technician, he will leave, taking with him decades of irreplaceable knowledge.
For an Operations Manager, the Industrial Reskilling plan should focus on these 5 high-impact areas that ensure maximum productivity:
| Critical Skill | Why is it vital to the operation? | Immediate Impact |
| 1. Data Analytics |
Move from intuition to evidence. Ability to read performance dashboards, identify the root cause of failures and optimise the line in real time. |
Directly increase OEE through fast and accurate decisions. |
| 2. OT/IT Interaction |
The new maintenance. Ability to diagnose connectivity and safety problems in machinery (PLC, SCADA), not only mechanical failures. |
Reduction of unplanned downtime. |
| Digital Workflow Management |
The end of paper. Ability to use digital interface to record tasks, stock movements and manufacturing orders, ensuring clean data flow. |
Accuracy in inventory and reduction of errors in manufacturing orders. |
| 4. Critical Thinking and Adaptability |
Change Management. Overcoming the fear of the new system. Fostering a culture of continuous learning and proactivity. |
Accelerating Technology Adoption and Corporate Resilience. |
| 5. Security and Compliance | The risk of the connected network. Understanding basic cybersecurity protocols on the plant floor to avoid being an attack vector (e.g. phishing). | Industrial security breach risk mitigation. |
At Overtel, we transform the concern for Industrial Reskilling into a clear roadmap for operations management.
Operational Gap Audit: We analyse which roles are at risk of obsolescence and map the skills needed for Industry 4.0.
Practical and Relevant Itinerary Design: We create Reskilling paths focused on practical use and solving real problems in your plant, avoiding generic theoretical training.
Mentoring and Continuous Consolidation: We provide post-implementation follow-up and on-the-job support to ensure that new knowledge is consolidated and consistently applied to daily productivity.
The Turrones Picó case demonstrates exactly what this article highlights: the success of digital transformation does not depend solely on software, but on human adoption and the reskilling of the workforce.
During the implementation of the INEXION MES system and the RPS Next ERP, one of the greatest challenges was not technical but human: training and supporting plant personnel so they could use the new tools easily and naturally.
As their manager, Ana Picó, explains:
“The most difficult phase was training the staff and adapting the system so that a plant operator could use it easily.”
This investment in training and ongoing support enabled every worker to understand the data, trust it, and transform the way they worked. The result was complete technological adoption, free of resistance, and full traceability even during the demanding Christmas production campaign.
In other words, Industrial Reskilling is not a theoretical concept; it is the factor that turned Turrones Picó into a real success story in Industry 4.0.
Discover the full case on our website: Turrones Picó: From Tradition to Innovation