Manufacturers ramp up IT infrastructure cloud adoption
John E. Kaye
- Published
- Home, Technology

An exploration of a recent survey commissioned by NiceLabel, polling the views of IT directors across the globe
Nearly one in five (18%) IT directors in manufacturing say all their organisation’s IT infrastructure is based in the cloud today, while a further 38% say their organisation have moved most of their IT infrastructure to the cloud.
The survey did reveal some concerns about cloud migration. More than a quarter (27%) of IT directors in manufacturing are concerned about slow performance when running applications in the cloud, while 26% note a lack of integration with legacy systems as a key obstacle.
However, eliminating issues around performance and legacy systems integration would spark a faster migration, with 50% of respondents saying they would be ‘much more likely to move their applications to the cloud’ as a result.
Ken Moir VP Marketing, NiceLabel, said: “Both a lack of legacy systems integration and performance issues can be addressed by a modern cloud system. With regards to the former, when it comes to labelling, manufacturers need to integrate seamlessly in the cloud with other key industry platforms, including enterprise resource planning (ERP) and warehouse management systems (WMS). Cloud-to-cloud integrations can typically be done via Cloud APIs, whereas cloud-to-on-premise integrations require a proxy on-premise. The use of out-of-the box connectors for most major business systems can also help achieve a rapid integration with other platforms.”
“Manufacturers can also enhance performance levels for labelling in the cloud by using a printing application or integrating with a business system,” continued Moir. “Both these ’executables’ actually run on-premise utilising local CPU processing power. This architecture provides the benefits of a cloud based label management system combined with the performance of on-premise printing.”
Often, it is a simple understanding of the broader benefits of cloud that drive uptake. The survey shows that among the top reasons why manufacturers decided to use cloud solutions were better and easier global collaboration (33%) and efficient traceability and tracking across the supply chain (30%).
According to Moir: “Vendors can also help to accelerate the move to the cloud for manufacturers through services teams doing discovery and building solutions that deliver best practice, and, from the perspective of labelling, through tools that help convert label templates from different providers. All this together helps significantly shorten migration time from months to weeks.”
The move to the cloud is part of a wider digital transformation. The study by NiceLabel, who combined with Loftware early this year finds that while there is a long way to go, many manufacturers plan to increase investment in major IT infrastructure. In fact, 80% of IT directors surveyed expect their organisation to increase its investment in IT systems like ERP, MES and WMS by more than 25% over the next three years.
Further information
RECENT ARTICLES
-
Europe eyes Australia-style social media crackdown for children -
Europe opens NanoIC pilot line to design the computer chips of the 2030s -
Building the materials of tomorrow one atom at a time: fiction or reality? -
Universe ‘should be thicker than this’, say scientists after biggest sky survey ever -
Lasers finally unlock mystery of Charles Darwin’s specimen jars -
Women, science and the price of integrity -
Meet the AI-powered robot that can sort, load and run your laundry on its own -
UK organisations still falling short on GDPR compliance, benchmark report finds -
A practical playbook for securing mission-critical information -
Cracking open the black box: why AI-powered cybersecurity still needs human eyes -
Tech addiction: the hidden cybersecurity threat -
Parliament invites cyber experts to give evidence on new UK cyber security bill -
ISF warns geopolitics will be the defining cybersecurity risk of 2026 -
AI boom triggers new wave of data-centre investment across Europe -
Make boards legally liable for cyber attacks, security chief warns -
AI innovation linked to a shrinking share of income for European workers -
Europe emphasises AI governance as North America moves faster towards autonomy, Digitate research shows -
Surgeons just changed medicine forever using hotel internet connection -
Curium’s expansion into transformative therapy offers fresh hope against cancer -
What to consider before going all in on AI-driven email security -
GrayMatter Robotics opens 100,000-sq-ft AI robotics innovation centre in California -
The silent deal-killer: why cyber due diligence is non-negotiable in M&As -
South African students develop tech concept to tackle hunger using AI and blockchain -
Automation breakthrough reduces ambulance delays and saves NHS £800,000 a year -
ISF warns of a ‘corporate model’ of cybercrime as criminals outpace business defences


























