Rockwell Automation: From Fragmented Systems to Orchestrated Operations

July 1, 2026
How IT/OT Orchestration Enables Autonomous Material Movement
By: Ara Surenian, Production Logistics Business Manager, Rockwell Automation
Manufacturers are under increasing pressure to improve productivity, respond to changing demand, and do more with existing resources. As a result, many are investing in technologies such as autonomous mobile robots (AMRs), manufacturing execution systems (MES), and advanced analytics.
Yet for most manufacturers, adding more technology doesn’t automatically translate into greater efficiency. The next stage of digital transformation is focused on enabling those systems to work together. As manufacturers move toward end-to-end autonomous operations, the ability to coordinate information, materials, and workflows across the enterprise is becoming a critical competitive advantage.
The Coordination Gap in Modern Manufacturing
Manufacturers have invested heavily in automation, but many facilities still operate with disconnected systems. Enterprise platforms manage production schedules and inventory, while operational technologies execute work on the plant floor. These IT and OT systems often function as islands of automation that create delays and struggle to respond to changing production needs.
In fact, while 86% of manufacturers say IT/OT integration is critical, only 23% have progressed beyond basic convergence. At the same time, only 30% of manufacturers can deliver real-time data to frontline workers, limiting visibility and slowing decision-making when conditions change.
Survey respondents have more data than ever but only a fraction becomes usable intelligence…The real competitive divide isn’t data collection; it’s the ability to connect, contextualize, and act on data across systems.
11th annual State of Smart Manufacturing report, page 12
Why the Gap Persists
This challenge of siloed solutions is reinforced by underlying system complexity. Many organizations still rely on legacy OT systems (50%), as well as standardized control approaches or custom middleware integrations that can be costly, complex, and difficult to scale. As a result, even well-funded automation initiatives often remain isolated rather than delivering end-to-end operational impact.
As production environments become more dynamic, facilities are increasingly requiring real-time coordination across systems.
From Automation to Orchestration
As manufacturers connect IT and OT systems, many are discovering that integration alone does not create end-to-end autonomous operations. While automation executes individual tasks and integration enables systems to share data, it is orchestration that coordinates workflows and drives execution across those systems in real time. Orchestrated operations enable manufacturers to:
- Trigger workflows in real-time based on demand
- Coordinate activities across plant and enterprise systems
- Reduce manual intervention in execution
- Improve responsiveness to changing production conditions
Research suggests that manufacturers with connected operations can achieve up to a 20% increase in production output and productivity, while unlocking up to 15% additional capacity.
How FactoryTalk Orchestration Software Fills This Gap
To enable this level of coordination, manufacturers need more than point-to-point integrations. They need a central orchestration layer that connects enterprise systems (such as MES, WMS, ERP) and scheduling platforms with plant-floor technologies like AMRs, fleet managers, PLCs, conveyors, robotics, and simulation tools.
FactoryTalk Orchestration software was designed to fill this role. Acting as the central orchestration layer across IT and OT systems, it:
- Translates information between systems
- Coordinates workflows and execution
- Optimizes performance using real-time operational data

How FactoryTalk Orchestration Software Improved Space Utilization by 70%
At the Rockwell Automation Twinsburg facility, an initial deployment combining integration and AMRs generated approximately $162,000 in annual labor savings. With the addition of FactoryTalk Orchestration software, the facility achieved a 20% increase in operational efficiency, reduced work-in-process inventory by 50%, and improved space utilization by 70%.
As manufacturers continue their digital transformation journeys, integration will remain a critical foundation. The greatest gains will come from organizations that move beyond connecting systems to orchestrating them.
Learn more about how FactoryTalk Orchestration software helped the Twinsburg facility coordinate workflows, connect IT and OT systems, and accelerate the path toward autonomous material movement in this webinar.
For more information on Rockwell Automation solutions HERE


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