Outlook These Five Trends Are Strengthening Manufacturing Simulation

From Visual Components | Translated by AI 2 min Reading Time

Related Vendors

The future of manufacturing is more networked, faster and more digital. Simulation expert Visual Components is convinced that 2026 will play a decisive role in this development, as skilled workers, systems, robots and software will be even more closely coordinated.

Visual Components presents its forecast for production simulation in 2026.(Image: Pixabay)
Visual Components presents its forecast for production simulation in 2026.
(Image: Pixabay)

Visual Components, an expert in manufacturing simulation, shows which trends will take center stage in 2026 and can strengthen manufacturing simulation. The direction is clear: away from visionary promises and towards demonstrable productivity gains. More digitalization, networked data streams and simulation-supported decisions will ensure that production lines can be planned faster, adapted more flexibly and operated more efficiently.

What Trends Are Driving Manufacturing Simulation? 

  • Process chains are digitalized end-to-end
    Thanks to fully digital processes, data from design and simulation to system control can flow together seamlessly and create a complete picture. This eliminates media disruptions and allows companies to minimize errors, identify bottlenecks in advance and implement adjustments directly. As a result, the production line runs more stably, flexibly and efficiently.
  • Job profiles are changing
    Work is shifting more and more from manual activities to digital tasks: Employees are programming robots, monitoring virtual processes and controlling machines using digital tools. Specialist knowledge will always remain central, but new occupational fields are also emerging between the production line, technology and software.
  • More collaboration takes place in the cloud
    Several employees will increasingly work simultaneously on layouts, simulations and processes— across locations and in real time. Knowledge is shared, knowledge silos are dissolved, processes are coordinated more quickly and adjustments are implemented directly without stopping production.
  • AI is becoming a tool suitable for everyday use
    The number of useful applications for AI is growing and helps, for example, to compare variants of layouts or automation concepts or to make data-based decisions. It supplements expert knowledge, identifies bottlenecks at an early stage and ensures that production lines run faster, more reliably and more economically.
  • Virtual commissioning is on the rise
    Before a system is physically running, companies can test the control logic, signals and processes digitally. In this way, errors can be detected at an early stage, commissioning times can be shortened and system downtimes can be avoided
Simulation and digital planning are changing the role of specialists without replacing them.

Matthias Wilhelm, Country Manager DACH, Visual Components

"Simulation and digital planning are changing the role of skilled workers without replacing them," explains Matthias Wilhelm, Country Manager DACH at Visual Components. "Instead, we are seeing a shift in work from the workbench to digital planning. Those who map processes end-to-end, use AI in a targeted manner and check processes virtually in advance reduce errors, shorten commissioning times and create production lines that run faster, more flexibly and are more resilient. This is the future of production."

Subscribe to the newsletter now

Don't Miss out on Our Best Content

By clicking on „Subscribe to Newsletter“ I agree to the processing and use of my data according to the consent form (please expand for details) and accept the Terms of Use. For more information, please see our Privacy Policy. The consent declaration relates, among other things, to the sending of editorial newsletters by email and to data matching for marketing purposes with selected advertising partners (e.g., LinkedIn, Google, Meta)

Unfold for details of your consent