
Critical Manufacturing MES
Quality management systems (QMS)
Industrial IoT software
Manufacturing execution system (MES) software
Manufacturing intelligence software
Connected worker platforms
Environmental, quality and safety management software
- Features
- Ease of use
- Ease of management
- Quality of support
- Affordability
- Market presence
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What is Critical Manufacturing MES
Critical Manufacturing MES is a manufacturing execution system used to manage and track production operations on the shop floor, with a focus on complex discrete manufacturing. It supports execution workflows such as dispatching, work instructions, WIP tracking, genealogy/traceability, nonconformance handling, and electronic records for regulated environments. The product is commonly used by manufacturers that need high levels of process control, integration with automation/enterprise systems, and near-real-time visibility into production performance.
Strong traceability and genealogy
The platform supports detailed WIP tracking, product genealogy, and electronic history records across production steps. This helps manufacturers investigate deviations, perform root-cause analysis, and meet customer or regulatory traceability requirements. It is well-suited to environments where lot/serial tracking and step-by-step enforcement are operational necessities.
Designed for complex discrete
The system models multi-step routings, rework/repair loops, and exception handling that are common in high-mix, high-complexity production. It supports enforcing process rules and capturing production data at the point of execution. This aligns with use cases where spreadsheets or lighter shop-floor apps do not provide sufficient control or auditability.
Integration and data capture focus
Critical Manufacturing MES is built to integrate with enterprise systems (e.g., ERP/PLM) and shop-floor equipment/automation for data collection and execution feedback. This supports closed-loop execution where production status and quality events flow to upstream/downstream systems. It also enables manufacturing intelligence use cases by standardizing and contextualizing production data.
Requires strong integration governance
Value depends on reliable interfaces to ERP, automation, and quality systems, which introduces dependency on integration design and ongoing monitoring. Changes to upstream systems, equipment, or data standards can create maintenance overhead. Without disciplined data governance, reporting and genealogy accuracy can degrade.
Implementation can be resource-heavy
MES deployments typically require significant process mapping, master data preparation, and integration work, and this product is commonly used in complex environments where that effort increases. Organizations should plan for cross-functional involvement from manufacturing, quality, IT/OT, and validation teams. Time-to-value may be longer than lighter connected-worker or point-solution approaches.
Not a full EHS suite
While it can support quality events and electronic records tied to production, dedicated environmental, health, and safety management capabilities (e.g., incident management, industrial hygiene, regulatory reporting) may require additional software. Companies seeking an all-in-one EQS platform may need integrations or complementary tools. Fit is strongest when the primary requirement is execution and production-quality control rather than enterprise-wide EHS.
Seller details
Critical Manufacturing
Porto, Portugal
2009
Private
https://www.criticalmanufacturing.com/
https://x.com/CriticalMfg
https://www.linkedin.com/company/critical-manufacturing