Defining Automation, Part 2
For those of us working in automation, the financial justification often involves the economics of fewer employees; however, I would venture to say that there is so much more. Is it bad to allow automation to reduce the number of people and the hours they must spend in a dangerous environment? Chemical plants, refineries, and other potentially dangerous processes are trying to protect workers as much as their bottom lines when they choose to automate. Is it a bad thing to automate when facing a shortage of qualified workers? Many “craft” positions are going unclaimed from a shortage of trained personnel. A few examples are welders, pipe fitters, and mechanical operators. Newsflash to parents: It may not be glamorous, but in the 21st century you might make more money as a plumber than as a doctor or an attorney!
Another thought: Is automation really eliminating jobs? Or, is it trading one employee’s skill set for another? For every job lost because of automation, how many are created in the technology sector supporting automation?
Most companies I have worked with that were considering the automation of a manual process really didn’t consider the reduction of heads as significant. What was more interesting to management was the possibility of more consistent or better quality control, the increase in throughput, the reduction of downtime, and the elimination of the need for “tribal” knowledge to keep a plant operating. Perhaps I am Pollyanna, but I don’t believe that companies are as interested in removing humans from their plants as much as they are in removing human error.
Automation does not guarantee a “better” product but it does provide consistency. In many cases this may not be desired—like when you want something personal with character, like art. I don’t know about you, but I don’t want my Ibuprofen, Splenda, or peanut butter to have “character,” I want them to be the same every time I use them!
So I want to thank all those who commented on the proposed definition of automation (especially my fellow CAPs!), your input did modify the definition slightly:
Automation is the creation and application of technology to monitor and control the production of goods and services.
We were looking for a definition that embraced ISA’s traditional (instrument) members and controls people, control systems people, as well as people in professions we do not traditionally associate with instrumentation, systems, and automation—like IT and other professions/technologies we haven’t even thought of yet. The above definition may be “soft,” as the newsletter author suggested, but we were looking for a definition that could be “timeless” and “open.” After all, there is one certainty in life and in ISA—change.
