Integration where it matters: getting value from the right connections

Engineer working at control room, Manager control system, Technician man monitoring program from a lot of monitor.
Specialist observes analytics dashboard,operator inspects digital interface

Integration is not the problem. Over-integration often is.

Most facilities don’t struggle because systems aren’t connected. They struggle because the wrong things are connected or everything is connected without purpose.

Integration pays off when it saves time, reduces risk or removes repetitive work. If it doesn’t do one of those three things, it’s probably not worth the cost.

When the right systems connect at the right moments, operators make faster decisions, handovers improve and risk drops. That shows up in real outcomes: minutes saved per user, fewer missed steps and clearer audit trails.

A quick reality check from the field

I started my career building plant floor solutions for the auto industry. Later, I worked on implementations for LNG and energy facilities.

Back then, most plants had a familiar setup: ERP or work order systems, document management and historians. But a lot of critical processes still ran on paper. Inspections were done on clipboards. Shift notes lived in logbooks. Handover conversations happened on the walk to the parking lot.

The core problem was simple: keeping everyone on the same page in a 24x7 environment. Using software tools to improve the sharing of information between people and processes should definitely help.

But while technology has improved, and companies have applied significant resources and effort, for most, the core problem hasn’t gone away.

Today’s problem: more systems, more fragmentation

Today’s facilities run dozens of applications:

  • Inspection tools

  • Shift logging systems

  • Procedure management

  • Incident tracking

  • Document storage

  • E-permitting

Most of these are point solutions. They do one job well, but they store data in silos.

Some platforms cover multiple workflows, which helps. But no single system does everything.

So the question is not whether to integrate. It’s where integration actually creates value.

Value depends on the use case

Not all data needs to be shared.

Operations doesn’t need every detail from maintenance. Maintenance doesn’t need every shift log or handover note.

When too much data is pushed between systems, users spend more time searching than acting.

The goal is simple: Connect only what improves a decision or completes a task. Anything else adds noise.

Where integration actually pays off

Integration works when it brings the right context into the moment of action.

For example:

  • Operators see work order status directly in shift handovers

  • Procedure progress is visible alongside daily operations

  • Alarm trends and control performance show up where decisions are made

It also works in the other direction:

These are not “nice to have” connections. They remove delays, reduce blind spots and improve decisions in real time.

When one task spans multiple systems

This is another common use case where thoughtful integration can provide an immediate benefit. An operator spots an issue during an inspection.

To them, it’s one task:

  • Identify the issue

  • Raise a maintenance request

  • Document it for the next shift

But in many facilities, that becomes:

  • Log it in one system

  • Create a work order in another

  • Re-enter details in a third

That’s not three tasks. It’s one task split across systems. When integration allows that work to happen in one flow, from one place, using one interface, efficiency improves immediately and errors drop.

The return goes beyond efficiency

Some benefits are easy to measure:

  • Time saved per user

  • Faster handovers

  • Less manual data entry

Others matter just as much, even if they’re harder to quantify:

Having the right information at the right moment prevents problems before they escalate. That’s where integration creates real value.

Final thought

Integration is not about connecting everything. It’s about connecting what matters.

Focus on the moments where better data changes decisions, removes friction or reduces risk. Start there. Expand intentionally. That’s how integration delivers real value over time.  

Where to start

If your teams are still jumping between systems to complete a single task, that’s your signal.

Start with the workflows that create the most friction. Fix those first.

Everything else follows.

Have questions about where integration makes sense? Get in touch—we’re happy to help.