
Apriso Production
Manufacturing execution system (MES) software
- Features
- Ease of use
- Ease of management
- Quality of support
- Affordability
- Market presence
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What is Apriso Production
Apriso Production is a manufacturing execution system (MES) application used to manage and monitor shop-floor operations such as production execution, work instructions, quality checks, and traceability. It is typically used by manufacturers that need standardized processes across multiple plants and integration with ERP and automation systems. The product is commonly deployed as part of the DELMIA Apriso suite, with configurable workflows and role-based interfaces for operators, supervisors, and manufacturing engineers.
Broad MES functional coverage
Apriso Production supports core MES capabilities including dispatching, labor and machine tracking, electronic work instructions, quality data capture, and genealogy/traceability. This breadth can reduce the need to stitch together multiple point solutions for execution and compliance. It is suited to regulated or high-variability manufacturing where consistent enforcement of process steps matters.
Multi-site standardization support
The platform is designed for deploying common processes across plants while allowing controlled local variations. Central teams can define templates and governance for production and quality workflows, then roll them out to additional sites. This is useful for organizations that need comparable KPIs and traceability across a global footprint.
Enterprise integration orientation
Apriso Production is commonly implemented with integrations to ERP, PLM, and shop-floor systems to synchronize orders, BOM/routings, and production confirmations. It supports scenarios where execution must align closely with enterprise master data and change control. This makes it a fit for manufacturers prioritizing end-to-end digital thread and auditability.
Implementation can be complex
Deployments often require significant process design, configuration, and integration work to align the MES model with plant realities. Compared with lighter-weight, low-code shop-floor tools, time-to-value can be longer. Organizations should plan for dedicated internal SMEs and experienced implementation partners.
Licensing and TCO considerations
As an enterprise MES suite, total cost can be higher than smaller, modular alternatives, especially when scaling across many sites and users. Costs may include infrastructure, integration middleware, and ongoing support in addition to licenses. Budgeting typically needs to account for multi-year rollout and sustainment.
UI and configuration learning curve
The product’s configurability and breadth can introduce a steeper learning curve for administrators and process engineers. Building and maintaining workflows, data models, and reports may require specialized skills. This can increase reliance on power users or external consultants for ongoing changes.
Seller details
Dassault Systèmes SE
Vélizy-Villacoublay, France
1981
Public
https://www.3ds.com/
https://x.com/3DS
https://www.linkedin.com/company/dassaultsystemes/