30 Sep 2019
The days of going-it-alone are long gone in business and industry. Companies, including GEA, are embracing what is often referred to as “cooperative competition,” which seeks to create more added value for all parties involved – one of which is often a start-up. Founded by one or more entrepreneurs, start-ups are companies that have an idea for a scalable business model which they develop and validate together and often with the support of more mature companies and venture capitalists. Despite a relatively high failure rate, the number of start-ups has exploded in the last decade given the important role they play in today’s fast-paced digital business environment. Via its own collaborations with start-ups, GEA is launching new technologies and solutions in the market that represent a significant step-change in several industries.
Innovation andoptimizationare daily business at GEA. Given its extreme importance, we have a formal innovation process that is open to all employees, including apprentices and work study students. This process is managed by an internal team whose members have defined roles and responsibilities, each of whom brings with them a particular area of expertise. Collectively, they are responsible for gathering, evaluating, prioritizing, sharpening and where applicable, finding the right external partners to bring selected ideas to market. For ideas to be selected, they must first meet one of two key criteria:
– Lydia Schneider, GEA Innovation Manager
Open innovation, where we engage with customers and suppliers or collaborate with scientific institutions, public authorities or start-ups, allows us to obtain valuable insights and identify potential synergies – hand-in-hand with our partners. Yearly GEA Innovation Forums, for example, bring diverse stakeholders together and provide opportunities for networking, which often leads to the formation of small work groups for incubating, defining and accelerating ideas.
As explained by Wolfgang Deis, GEA’s Strategic Innovation Manager,“Our USP is top-notch products at a premium quality and technological level. Process innovations push down costs and product innovations increase product quality. Offering customers competitive advantages and solutions that promote their purpose and long-term sustainability, depends directly on our ability to foster and leverage our own innovative potential.”
Partnering with start-ups gives GEA the opportunity to tap into new markets and industries as well as find support for developing our own ideas and getting them to market more quickly. These were the key drivers behind our decision in 2016 to become a founding partner of MassChallenge Switzerland, abusiness accelerator programthat invests more than US$2 million per year in emerging start-ups globally. As a major sponsor, GEA is able to network with entrepreneurs and other participating companies to explore disruptive ideas around topics such as nutrition, health and energy.
This single sponsorship has already yielded positive results, starting with a conversation in 2016 with MassChallenge participant and winner, MachIQ, an Industry 4.0 software start-up. MachIQ approached GEA with a vision for a platform strategy for servicing GEA’s diverse customers based on an open, cloud-based platform formaintenance management and digital services, such as remote maintenance, online spare parts distribution and data analysis.
What makes the solution, GEA Advance, disruptive is that the platform issupplier-neutral and independent,bringing customers and all of their partners together onto a single platform to ensureseamless digitalization whiledriving transparency and efficiency. That conversation at MassChallenge led swiftly to GEA validating the idea and approach with diverse customers – who were quick to recognize the value add it would bring to their own manufacturing businesses. Pilots were then established, which delivered quick business and bottom line results.
According to Roy Chikballapur, co-founder and MachIQ CEO, in terms of the process, “GEA is incredibly open and action-oriented; less than a month after incorporating our company, we signed a letter of intent with them. Although GEA is a large company, we moved rapidly together from concept to pilot projects.”
A GEA team gains valuable experience presenting its own idea for a bag filter made of natural materials, MassChallenge Switzerland, 2017 (l to r: Todd Siwik, Sikker Rosendal (GEA Drying), Maddie Drewiske (GEA Dairy)).
– Roy Chikballapur, co-founder and CEO, MachIQ
The key benefits of GEA Advance for customers is that it:
Longtime GEA customer, Rücker Dairy, which has large cheese production facilities in northern Germany, has been using GEA Advance since October 2017. It has helped the 130-year-old dairy company modernize its processes and tools by migrating its maintenance and spare parts inventory management to a single solution, which allows information to flow automatically between team members. This transparency means that Rücker can evaluate its own maintenance performance in real time. And they are continuously connected to GEA personnel and systems for all of their service needs – and to their other suppliers.
Smiling faces at Rücker’s dairy production facility in Wismar, Germany, February 2018, after signing their contract for GEA Advance. (l to r: Jörn Möller, Head of Technical Maintenance, Rücker; Malte Derner, Deputy Plant Operations Manager Rücker; Cobers Mohr, Plant Operations Manager, Rücker; Markus Old, GEA; Roy Chikballapur, MachIQ)
– Cobers Mohr, Plant Operations Manager, Rücker Dairy, Wismar, Germany
Additional GEA customers, including a global brewer and a German grocery chain, have already committed to implementing the platform. They will have access to even more digital services which will be implemented by the end of 2020, including condition monitoring, programmable logic controller (PLC) connections and video support.
This approach, according toChikballapur, is a first step in what is a largerbusiness transformation which will change how machine-builders work with customers – regardless of industry segment: “The machinery business is moving towards “production as a service” – wherein we’ll see more customers subscribing to use machinery versus outright buying it and having to service it. Working together, we’ll be able to help GEA and its customers remain at the front of this transformation and prepare for future business models while enabling them to run their legacy businesses.”
A second collaboration with Swiss start-up Aquantis, specialists in sensors using electromagnetic wave technologies, led to the award-winning CALLIFREEZE®system. The first industrial device of its kind, CALLIFREEZE® provides an absolute value of food product level-of-frozenness (LOF) – and in real-time. The system continually measures the LOF as food exits the spiral freezer, interacting with the freezer and refrigeration control-command system to optimize air temperature, fan speed and freezing time. The key benefits for customers are:
In January 2019,Bergia Frites, amarket-leading frozen french fry manufacturer in theNetherlands, agreed to integrate the CALLIFREEZE® system and test it on diverse cuts of potatoes. The impressive results in energy reduction make an important contribution to the sustainability ofBergia Frites’plant.Edgar Meeuwissen,Bergia FritesCEO, anticipates an 18-month ROI period for his investment inCALLIFREEZE; for larger plants the savings would be even greater and the ROI quicker.
– Edgar Meeuwissen, CEO Bergia Frites, the Netherlands
The R&D pipeline at GEA is always buzzing. In the area of alternative proteins, we continue to support producers and manufacturers in the insect industry, on both the food and the feed side. Likewise, we are engaged in conversations with start-ups to see how we can help them scale up their alternative protein businesses with machine support and process know-how from our diverse test centers. GEA is also involved in initiatives, some EU-funded, to develop processes and technologies for the production of functional proteins and biomass from food processing side streams for use in other products to reduce CO2 and food production waste.
Working with business incubator garage 33, which is connected to the University of Paderborn, we’re finding solutions to challenges faced by our marine customers. Together with UoP students, we’ve formed the corporate start-up, ZentriTec, which focuses on the use of sensor technology to support a more sustainable marine industry. Working in a dedicated garage33 co-creation space, where coaching is also available, made it possible to get the first prototype on board a ship for testing within 10 months of kicking off the project. The close cooperation with all parties, including the shipping customers, has meant these solutions were able to add real value quickly.
We’re also partnering with food tech intelligence start-up, Hungry Ventures who will help us obtain an ongoing and holistic view of food tech trends by developing a heat map from which GEA can plan its own R&D roadmap.“Our goal at GEA,” explains Deis, “is to be fit for changes and disruptions that might have monumental impacts on our business and our customer’s business. The past reveals little about what future needs will be, so we need to move beyond mere extrapolation – beyond our comfort zone. This means not only focusing on solving challenges for existing customers, but also identifying who our future customers might be and how we can support them as well.”