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A complete guide on how digital transformation is shaping shared services in manufacturing
Innovation in Manufacturing Is Reshaping Operations
Today’s manufacturing shop floors are not what they used to be. Machines talk to each other. Inventories are monitored by IoT sensors. Machine learning detects a problem before it occurs.
This is the digital transformation of manufacturing and it is happening now. It is real, in smart factories, supply chains, and operations around the world.
But what manufacturers are still grappling with is this:
Investing in technology, ONLY, does not lead to efficiency. How you organize your operations and financial infrastructure does.
That is where shared services enter the picture.
As digital manufacturing technologies eliminate proximity and logistical constraints, mid-size and large manufacturers are finding they can centralize transactional processes – such as inventory control, accounting, compliance, and reporting – with remote teams while preserving decision-making at the point of production.
The result is leaner operations, lower costs, better data and faster growth.
Key Takeaways
Digital transformation in manufacturing refers to the adoption of technologies in all stages of manufacturing: smart factories, automation and robotics, IoT-connected equipment, cloud ERP for manufacturing software, predictive analytics for manufacturing, and AI-powered decision support systems.
The talk is most often about the shop floor, downtime reduction, yield improvement, and robotics in assembly. That matters. But there’s another change afoot.
The business support and office functions of manufacturing companies are being digitized just as rapidly.
Traditionally low-end, local, and labor-intensive functions – inventory valuation, cost of goods, supply chain compliance, and financial reconciliations – are now digital, uniform, and transportable.
That mobility is enabling shared services for the first time for manufacturing companies. If a shared services team can access the same real-time data feeds from the enterprise resource planning (ERP) system, track the same Internet of Things (IoT) feeds of inventory, and process the same transactions as an on-site team, distance becomes irrelevant.
Traditionally, shared service teams have been the preserve of global conglomerates – companies with the resources to establish separate offshore facilities, and the infrastructure to manage cross-border complexities.
That calculus has fundamentally changed.
Manufacturer cloud systems have removed the need for duplicate on-premises infrastructure. A US, German, or Australian manufacturer no longer needs to construct a separate IT infrastructure for offshore shared services. They provide access to the same cloud.
This means:
This is beneficial for a mid-size manufacturer with three to eight plants. Whereas previously it took millions to set up infrastructure, today it takes a fraction of that, in software licensing and change management costs.
The cloud has somewhat leveled the playing field for the shared services model, making it accessible to manufacturers who could not previously afford the investment.
The ultimate sign of digital transformation in manufacturing is when a team of experts, based in another country, can manage inventory stock, cost of goods, and deliver financial reports – all from a remote location.
Here is how this is done.
IoT-enabled manufacturing systems have moved well beyond production line monitoring. Sensors, RFID tags, and automated barcode scanning are now used in today’s warehouses and facilities to offer real-time visibility of:
Shared service teams linked to these IoT data streams reconcile inventory, conduct cycle counts, and make valuation adjustments based on real-time data, not spreadsheets from the shop floor.
Cloud enterprise resource planning (ERP) systems are the brain of manufacturing. When deployed on the cloud, they allow shared service teams anywhere in the world to:
Cost accounting has always been one of the most inaccurate areas in manufacturing. Machine learning in Production processes helps:
A past concern with manufacturing shared services was latency – the potential for a remote team to be out of touch with the plant. Current cyber-physical systems and collaboration tools have solved this problem:
The use of shared services (made possible by digital adoption in manufacturing) offers more than cost reduction.

Transactional manufacturing support activities are costly when delivered by on-site teams in high-cost locations. Shared service approaches enable manufacturers to:
An often-overlooked benefit of technology-centered manufacturing operating models is access to highly specialized expertise that is hard to find. Manufacturing accounting requires knowledge of:
Shared service centers develop clusters of this expertise. The web means that a manufacturer anywhere can tap into that talent pool regardless of local labor markets.
Manufacturing demand rarely grows in a linear fashion. A new contract, acquisition, or seasonal increase in demand can double the number of transactions. Existing on-site production models take time to hire and train staff.
Instead, manufacturing scalability with technology and shared services looks like this:
When manufacturing operational functions are consistent, performed by shared services teams, and performed using the same digital platform, data accuracy goes up:
This translates to more accurate production costing for manufacturing leaders, more accurate margin reporting by product and location, and more information for pricing and investment decisions.
Manufacturing companies mired in day-to-day transactional work face the same internal problem: the people who should spearhead transformation programs are tied up in transactional work. Shared services absorb that volume.
By standardizing and outsourcing transactional work to shared services, manufacturers can create the space to:
These are the platforms that enable digital shared services in manufacturing.
| Tool | Function in Manufacturing Shared Services |
| SAP S/4HANA Cloud | Cloud ERP for production planning, inventory, and cost accounting |
| Oracle NetSuite | Cloud ERP for inventory, orders, and finance for high-growth manufacturers |
| Microsoft Dynamics 365 | Provides a cloud-based integrated manufacturing system for finance, operations, and supply chain |
| BlackLine | Automates reconciliations and financial close for multiple manufacturing entities |
| HighRadius | Accounts receivable automation with AI eliminates cash application time |
| Anaplan | Integrates manufacturing, supply chain, financial planning, and modeling |
| Stampli | AI-driven AP automation with full purchase order and goods receipt matching |
| Skyvia | Integrates ERP, CRM, and operational systems for reporting |
| FlowForma | Electronic approvals and compliance for virtual manufacturing support |
The digital transformation story in manufacturing is frequently told in terms of technology – the sensors, the algorithms, the cloud, the software.
But the manufacturers getting ahead are not getting there simply through technology. They are winning because they are creating more efficient operating models around those technologies.
Shared services – powered by cloud, IoT data streams, and AI platforms – are one of the most important structural changes manufacturers can make right now. They allow firms to:
The drop in the cost of cloud computing has made this a new possibility, particularly for mid-size manufacturers. No longer the exclusive domain of multinationals, it can be applied by any manufacturer willing to change the way work is organized.
The future of manufacturing is not just smart factories. It is data-driven manufacturing strategies built on smarter, more scalable operations – operations that can expand as the business expands.
Companies that make the technology and structure investments will be the Industry 4.0 leaders of the next decade.