Proceedix – Digital Work Instructions

To request an opportunity to meet with Proceedix, please email trip@scconnect.us, or use the form found here.

Proceedix is a young and ambitious technology company, headquartered in beautiful Ghent, Belgium.

Since its foundation in 2014, it has developed one of the leading solutions for digital work instructions.

Google Glass Partner

Early on, Proceedix was selected by Google to become one of only about a dozen official “Glass Partners”, developing industrial applications for Google’s new “Enterprise Edition” smart glasses.

In the meantime, the company has grown to about 20 people, raised 2 million Euros in scale-up funding, established an American subsidiary, and developed an impressive list of customers.

The Proceedix administration platform makes it easy to create and manage procedures, work instructions, and checklists centrally, while mobile and wearable devices -such as phones, tablets, and smart glasses- empower shop floor operators and field workers with any information needed during execution.

Using Proceedix, operators, quality inspectors, and maintenance/service technicians always have the right, up-to-date, and easily understandable information at their fingertips when and where they need it. They can easily record input such as numerical values, photos, and videos, and send action items to first-line support functions. As a result, Proceedix’ customers have been able to significantly improve quality, productivity, flexibility, and safety

Internationally Recognized Excellence

Last year, Proceedix was nominated as “Best Enterprise Solution” at the Augmented World Expo 2017. And one of their American customers, AGCO, won the AME Excellence Award, based on their work -and results- with Proceedix-on-Glass.

In addition to its Ghent headquarters, Proceedix has sales offices in San Francisco, and a strategic implementation partner located in Greenville, South Carolina.

Click here to read about the Belgian presentations at the SC Automotive Summit.

To request an opportunity to meet with Proceedix, please email trip@scconnect.us, or use the form found here.

About the Speaker: Peter carries a Master in Engineering Applied Physics, and MBA and a Black Belt, Lean Six Sigma. Prior to founding Proceedix in 2014, Peter has acquired 20 years of business process re-engineering experience at multiple positions in different companies. https://www.linkedin.com/in/peter-verstraeten/

 


Peter Verstraeten – CEO
Email: peter.verstraeten@proceedix.com
Cell: +32.475.48.72.51
Address: Ottergemsesteenweg Zuid 808, bus 338B-9000 Ghent, Belgium
Website: www.proceedix.com

 

 

Stijn Van de Velde –  Implementation Partner
Email: stijn@executionpartners.us
Cell: +1.864.525.5458
Address: 33 Market Point Drive,
Greenville SC 29607
Website: www.executionpartners.us

 

ProSuite – Traceability and Process Control

To request an opportunity to meet with ProSuite, please email trip@scconnect.us, or use the form found here.

ProSuite develops and markets paperless manufacturing software solutions. Based on a predefined workflow, their software controls the full assembly process, registers all the product assembly steps and generates a complete birth certificate.

Complex assembly processes still require operators. But operators are still humans — not robots — which means they can make mistakes. ProSuite works to minimize those mistakes by combining traceability with process control. “Traceability” means listing all registered data. “Process control” means giving an operator step-by-step instructions with the aid of a screen, and enabling and disabling equipment as necessary.

ProSuite has extensive experience in all different types of traceability and process control solutions, ranging from simply tracking tightening results to complete plant control.

ProSuite® is a standard solution, achieved by combining a flexible architecture with custom made plug-ins. Its flexible architecture makes ProSuite® usable for various assembly applications and machines from various suppliers.

ProSuite®  is offered for every industry that uses tightening tools, one station to entire assembly lines.

ProSuite® can cover up to 95% of your needs with standard software modules and our architecture allows us to make custom modules where needed to cover the last 5%.

Click here to read about the Belgian presentations at the SC Automotive Summit.

To request an opportunity to meet with ProSuite, please email trip@scconnect.us, or use the form found here.

About the Speaker: Prior to founding De Jaeger Automation in 2000, the company developing the ProSuite software, Patrick De Jaeger worked as Automation Consultant at Volvo Cars Ghent and Tier-1 companies. Patrick holds a Master’s Degree in Industrial Engineering. https://www.linkedin.com/in/patrickdejaeger/

 

 

Patrick De Jaeger – International Business Dev. Manager
Email: Patrickdj@prosuite.eu
Tel: +32 93 78 49 89 / Cell : +32 495 26 11 60
ProSuite – De Jaeger Automation BVBA
Consciencelaan 79
B-9950 Waarschoot, Belgium
Website: http://www.prosuite.eu

RapidFit – Manufacturing Game Changer

To request an opportunity to meet with RapidFit, please email trip@scconnect.us, or use the form found here.

The RapidFit system changes the way fixtures are designed and manufactured. As a modular system, RapidFit offers a high degree of customization and accuracy, while also allowing for the re-use of standardized elements. Advanced functionality can be integrated into fixtures, such as snap-fits and clips. These in turn enable increased repeatability and a better representation of the part environment. RapidFit is a game-changer in automotive tooling, shortening the time-to-market for products.

RapidFit is a daughter company of Materialise – a worldwide leading company in 3D printing and listed on the NASDAQ as MTLS. Materialise focuses on tooling applications where 3D printing can make a disruptive improvement.

RapidFit is fully dedicated to tooling and has a specialized team of tooling engineers as well as a top-notch production facility. Being part of the Materialise Group enables RapidFit to have the best possible access to all 3D printing skills, including software developments for design and production automation.

About Materialise

Materialise’s open and flexible platforms enable players in industries such as healthcare, automotive, aerospace, art and design, and consumer goods, to build innovative 3D printing applications that make the world a better and healthier place.

Headquartered in Belgium, with branches worldwide, the company has brought together the largest group of software developers in the industry and one of the largest 3D printing facilities in the world.

The RapidFit system changes the way fixtures are designed and manufactured. As a modular system, RapidFit offers a high degree of customization and accuracy, while also allowing for the re-use of standardized elements. Advanced functionality can be integrated into fixtures, such as snap-fits and clips. These in turn enable increased repeatability and a better representation of the part environment. RapidFit is a game-changer in automotive tooling, shortening the time-to-market for your product.

Click here to read about the Belgian presentations at the SC Automotive Summit.

To request an opportunity to meet with RapidFit, please email trip@scconnect.us, or use the form found here.

About the Speaker: Stef Thulie joined Materialise in 1994, and has had different roles in the company throughout the years: project management, account management, sales management. Stef carries a Master’s Degree in Industrial Engineering
https://www.linkedin.com/in/stef-thulie-08036a4/

Stef Thulie – Sales Manager
E-mail: stef.thulie@materialise.be
Tel: +32 16 396 636 / Cell: +32 485 268010
RapidFit NV
Technologielaan 15
B-3001 Haasrode, Belgium
Website: http://rapidfit.materialise.be

Samsung Partners with SC Universities for New Plant

Samsung will partner with Clemson University and the University of South Carolina for a five-year effort to make better home appliances, the company announced.

“Samsung’s ambition is for South Carolina to become our U.S. hub for every stage in the home appliance lifecycle,” said Dochul Choi, Samsung’s Electronic America senior vice president of research and development.

Choi said that includes “from concept and R&D to manufacturing, quality assurance, distribution and customer care.”

The venture is detailed in a report by The Greenville News.

$380 Million Manufacturing Investment

 

The partnership comes as Samsung prepares to start producing washers next year at its plant in Newberry, SC.  The company says that the facility – a $380 million investment – should have 1,000 employees by 2020.

Selling South Carolina Abroad

Ever wonder how the State of South Carolina sells itself overseas?

SC Connect took a look at the state Department of Agriculture’s efforts at the ANUGA trade show in Cologne recently. Jack Shuler and Clint Leach of the agriculture department spent hours meeting with companies and extolling the virtues of the state. They were in the midst of nearly 100,000  businessmen during the five-day event.

How’s SC Doing?

How’d they do? You can decide for yourself. Take a look at our article, “Growing SC Agribusiness is a Worldwide Endeavor,” in the Winter edition of SCBiz Magazine. Here’s a taste;

South Carolina agriculture representatives contended with more than 100,000 other businessmen to press the case for SC agribusiness this month in Cologne at one of the world’s largest food and beverage trade shows.

“We’re just trying to get people to know South Carolina, get them to know what we have to offer,” said Jack Shuler, director of agribusiness development at the South Carolina Department of Agriculture. Perched on a stool beside him at one of the 7,200 different display booths sat Clint Leach, assistant state agriculture commissioner. South Carolina’s not generally a high-profile state, Shuler said, “but this time they know us.”

To read the entire article, go to page 36 here, in the Winter 2017 issue of SCBiz magazine.

Belgium Launches “Impact Bond” to Private Investors for Developing Countries

Belgium promoted this week a new Humanitarian Impact Bond that the nation has been developing in cooperation with the International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC).

As reported by Euractiv.com,  private investors will invest in three new physical rehabilitation centers to be built in Africa over five years. The private investments are intended to encourage efficiency and good management, so that projects will be sustainable over time. If the developments meet all their management targets, investors could receive a 7% return on their capital. If they do not reach the targets, investors will receive 70% back, including a 10% penalty paid by the ICRC.

“This is the first time in the humanitarian world that we have built a system where we say we want to pay for the results that we get,” said Alexander De Croo, Belgium’s Minister for Development Cooperation.

Croo said that “important not to create an environment in which profits go to private companies, and losses are borne by the public sector,” reported Euractiv.com.

For the full report, click here.

$15 Billion Order for SC-Made Boeing 787-10s

Emirates Airlines announced recently that it will buy 40 new Boeing 787-10 airplanes. Built exclusively at Boeing’s plant in Charleston, SC, the planes are valued at more than $15 billion.

The order, reported at AviationDaily online  and the Post and Courier newspaper in Charleston, comes four years after Emirates cancelled an order for 70 Airbus A350s and began a new decision process.

“The Emirates deal brings the total order book for the 787-10 to 217 airplanes,” the Post and Courier reports. “Emirates also is the world’s largest Boeing 777 operator, with 165 in service.”

Photo provided by Boeing

 

Record Business at Port of Charleston

South Carolina’s Port of Charleston continues record-setting growth in 2017, according to a story this week in the Post and Courier newspaper of Charleston.

Ports Authority CEO Jim Newsome predicts continued growth into the new year, driven in part by Samsung, Volvo and Mercedes-Benz. All have plants coming online next year.

Charleston’s closest competitor, the Port of Savannah in Georgia, is also growing. Officials there credit the recent widening of the Panama Canal for their continued success.

Upstate SC and Belgium’s Agoria: Driven to Grow

The Upstate SC Alliance wanted

to encourage new international investors.

 

 

Belgium’s Transport and Mobility Group wanted

to bring value to its members.

 

 

 

SC Connect brought the two together.

 

As 2016 drew to a close, the Upstate SC Alliance was reflecting on its growth, and considering how to build upon it in 2017.

For the past decade, the economic development group representing 10 counties and about 1.5 million people had averaged more than $1 billion in new foreign direct investment each year. Home to BMW’s largest manufacturing facility and the North American headquarters of Michelin, the Alliance and its leaders sought to attract new international companies.

Jacob Hickman, Business Development Manager, Upstate SC Alliance

“The idea was to focus on certain geographies where we haven’t spent a lot of time and energy in the past. We really wanted to invest in new markets and build new strong long-term relationships,” said Jacob Hickman, the Alliance’s director of business development.

For help, the Upstate SC Alliance turned to SC Connect.

“SC Connect is able to align the Upstate SC Alliance with potential new investment opportunities, through direct interaction with companies and industry associations,” Hickman said. “They truly understand the dynamics of the Belgium market and where the best synergies reside.”

In preparation for a summer trip by Alliance representatives, SC Connect focused on matching growing Belgian companies with the Upstate’s target sectors – advanced materials, aerospace, automotive, bioscience and energy.

At about the same time, AGORIA – Belgium’s largest employer and trade association – had created a new focus group on transport and mobility. Determined to be more than a network, the new group developed a strong mission-focused vision to increase business, particularly in the United States.

SC Connect met with the group’s leader, who was cautious at first. But over time, the group warmed to the idea and hosted a meeting between members of the group and the Upstate Alliance during the Belgian visit in June.

Building A Business Partnership

Gathering at the transport group’s modern offices in downtown Brussels, Hickman and Upstate representatives outlined the scope and depth of South Carolina’s automotive industry, and the opportunities for Belgian ingenuity.

Both groups left feeling that partnerships were possible.

Through the summer of 2017, the Upstate SC Alliance, AGORIA’s Transport and Mobility Club and SC Connect worked to connect the Belgian group to the South Carolina automotive sector.

As a result, Belgian industry representatives will travel to the SC Automotive Council’s annual conference in 2018 and present to state  leaders on agile manufacturing, one of the group’s specialties.

“The success of that trip was first, getting a good understanding of the genetic makeup of Belgium,” says Hickman. “And, second, we’re going to have a delegation from the Belgian mobility sector coming in February, so Belgian companies will be interacting with South Carolina companies.”

“You’re not always going to get projects out of trips like that,” he said. “But now that there are boots on the ground in the form of SC Connect, there’s a connectivity that hasn’t been there before.”