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The digital transformation is changing the way companies think and design their manufacturing environment. Both due to the increasing number of connections between IoT-Devices, tooling machines, and production lines and the phenomenon of the convergence of IT and OT, systems are becoming more complex than years ago. Organizational and cultural changes within manufacturing companies strengthen this trend and form Industry 4.0 environments and cyber-physical production systems (CPPS). As these systems do not longer stay alone but are connected to each other and the company’s outside, the size of the potential attack surface is increasing as well. Besides that, manufacturing companies, small and medium-sized in particular, are facing complex challenges based on lack of knowledge, budget, and time to understand as well as to interpret their current situation and risk level and therefore to derive necessary counter-measures. Efficient as well as pragmatic tools and methods for these companies do not exist. This paper shows a research approach in which the company-specific set-up of Industry 4.0 environment and CPPS is characterized by its potential vulnerabilities. This enables companies to evaluate their risk potential before setting up this kind of environments and to undJo,erstand the potential consequences more precisely. By doing so, companies can derive and prioritize important counter-measures and so to strengthen their level of cyber-security efficiently. This will decrease the number of cyber-security attacks and increase the company’s competitiveness.
Digitalization and Industry 4.0 continue to shape our industrial environment and collaboration. For many enterprises, a key challenge in moving forward in this matter is the integration of their shop-floor systems (hard- and software) with their office-floor systems to harvest the full potential of industry 4.0.
A multitude of different technologies and respective use-cases available on the market leave many companies startled. This paper presents a set of use-cases for IT-OT-Integration to bring transparency into a company’s digital transformation.
Additionally, a technical requirements profile for integrating IT- and OT-Systems based on the use cases is presented. Both, use-cases and their requirements, guide companies in selecting the digitalization measures that fit their current situation and help in identifying technical challenges that need to be addressed in the transformation process.
Networked digitalisation as an enabler for smart products and data-based business models presents companies with numerous and diverse challenges on their way through the digital transformation. Various reference architecture models have been developed in recent years to support these companies. A detailed analysis of these and in particular their use by companies quickly showed that currently existing reference models have major weaknesses in their practical suitability. With the Aachen Digital Architecture Management (ADAM), a framework was developed that specifically addresses the weaknesses of existing reference architectures and specifically takes up their strengths. As a holistic model, specially developed for use by companies, ADAM structures the digital transformation of companies in the areas of digital infrastructure and business development starting from customer requirements. Systematically, companies are enabled to drive the design of the digital architecture, taking into account design fields. The description of the design fields offers a detailed insight into the essential tasks on the way to a digitally networked company. The model is not only a structuring aid, but also contains a construction kit with the design fields to configure the procedure in the digital transformation. The procedure differentiates between the development of the digitalisation strategy and the implementation of the digital architecture. Three different case studies also show how ADAM is used in industry, what structuring support it can provide and how the digital transformation can be configured. The breadth and depth of ADAM enable companies to take the path of digital transformation systematically and in a structured manner, without ignoring the value-creating components of digitalisation. This qualifies ADAM as a sustainability-oriented framework, as it places the economic scaling, needs-based adaptation and future-oriented robustness of solution modules in the focus of digital transformation.
The digital transformation brings up various new tasks to manage new business application software and integrate them into existing business processes and legacy systems, which are necessary to keep e.g. a production system running. Today, all these tasks are on the one hand not clearly defined and on the other hand, responsibility of these cross-disciplinary tasks is unclear in companies being mostly structured in a function-oriented way. While quality management has developed to a firmly established function of process excellence years ago, IT-application management is still to become an inevitable part of the digital transformation. There are just a few authors trying to define and describe this part, the related tasks, and necessary roles in an organization. In this paper, we show how the business needs of a company can influence the ideal adaptation of the digitization solutions and thus become the success of the digital transformation. We base the paper on a use case in manufacturing companies. We then describe how companies deal with business application systems today. Based on the framework Aachen Digital Architecture Management we describe how a company can holistically improve the management of business application systems.
Durch die steigende Vernetzung in produzierenden Unternehmen nimmt die potenzielle Gefahr durch Cyberangriffe zu. Die meisten kleinen und mittleren Unternehmen (KMU) sind sich heute bewusst, dass hierbei nicht mehr ausschließlich Großkonzerne ein beliebtes Angriffsziel darstellen. Durch automatisierte Malware-Kampagnen und die wachsende Anzahl von Cyberangriffen rücken alle Akteure der Wertschöpfungskette produzierender Unternehmen zunehmend in das Visier von Angreifern – dabei können KMU direkt oder indirekt, zur Schädigung ihrer Partner, angegriffen werden. Die steigende Bedrohungslandschaft ist allerdings nicht die einzige Herausforderung, mit der sich KMU konfrontiert sehen. Besonders schwerwiegend und besorgniserregend ist ihr Umgang mit Cybersicherheit: Viele KMU setzen sich trotz zunehmender Digitalisierung bislang nur unzureichend mit ihrer Cybersicherheit auseinander. Durch die Verschmelzung unterschiedlicher Domänen steigt nicht nur die Komplexität der Technologien, sondern auch die der Prozesse sowie der Organisation in Unternehmen. Die Sicherheit von Systemen definiert sich nicht mehr nur über einzelne Komponenten, sondern durch die Sicherheit des unternehmensübergreifenden Gesamtsystems. Klassische Lösungsansätze zur Absicherung einzelner Komponenten decken die gestiegenen Schutzanforderungen nicht mehr ausreichend ab. Um KMU einen selbständigen und pragmatischen Einstieg in die Thematik zu ermöglichen, muss diese Komplexität beherrschbar gemacht werden. Aus Sicht der Cybersicherheit darf die Komplexität jedoch nicht dadurch reduziert werden, relevante Aspekte zu ignorieren. Es bedarf neuer und angepasster Sichtweisen, die KMU den Einstieg erleichtern.