
Walk into just about any manufacturing facility right now, and the story looks good. Production is up. Quality is solid. The dashboards are doing exactly what they're supposed to do.
But spend a little time on the floor and you start to hear something different.
The people who used to catch problems before they showed up in the data are retiring. The ones who knew the sounds, the smells, the subtle shifts in a machine that didn't feel right. That knowledge isn't being replaced. It's fading out, one person at a time.
I've spent years talking with plant managers, operators, and executives through my podcast and client work, and the same pattern keeps showing up. Companies are getting more efficient, but they're also getting more fragile. Everything looks fine until it suddenly isn't.
Smart Plant is about that gap.
It's not a book telling you to slow down automation or ignore technology. That ship has sailed. It's about understanding what gets lost when we move too fast without thinking about how people fit into the system.
You'll see what happens when decision-making shifts completely to dashboards, even when the numbers say everything is fine. You'll recognize the moments where experience used to step in and now doesn't. And more importantly, you'll start to see where leadership actually has control over this, even in highly automated environments.
This isn't theory. It's built from real conversations, real operations, and the kinds of decisions leaders are making every day, whether they realize it or not.
Because the plants that struggle in the next decade won't be the ones that failed to automate.
They'll be the ones that forgot how to think once they did.
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