Excel is often the first step into “digitalisation” on the shopfloor. It’s already installed, everyone knows it, and you can build simple OEE lists, shift logs and quality records surprisingly fast.
But: from a certain level of complexity onwards, Excel quietly turns into a risk – and, overall, more expensive than a professional MES such as SYMESTIC. This article looks at exactly that tipping point: When does the cost–benefit equation flip? And why does a Cloud MES make more sense economically and operationally?
Especially in small and mid-sized manufacturers, Excel is the default tool for:
Perceived advantages:
The catch: these advantages hold mainly in an early maturity stage – with a few lines, a handful of users and limited product/variant complexity.
Excel-based processes in production nearly always depend on:
Manual data entry
Copy & paste
Individually built formulas and macros
Typical risks:
Formula errors (wrong cell reference, incomplete ranges, broken logic)
Version chaos (Report_final_v3_NEW_latest.xlsx scattered on file shares)
Key-person dependency: one person understands the logic (formulas, VBA, structure). If they’re on vacation or leave the company, reporting stops.
No clean audit trail: changes to values or formulas are hard to trace.
A professional MES like SYMESTIC automates data collection from machines (SPS/PLC), orders and processes. KPIs such as OEE, availability, performance, quality or downtimes are calculated consistently and visualised in dashboards – without manual “spreadsheet engineering”.
This reduces human error and key-person risks drastically.
Excel can only show the state at a given point in time: after shift end, after exporting data from other systems, after someone updated the sheet.
Consequences:
Reactive control: issues show up one shift or one day too late.
Lost OEE potential: you see systematic losses, but only in hindsight.
“Reporting for the drawer”: KPIs are produced, but they don’t guide decisions during the shift.
A Cloud MES like SYMESTIC works in real time:
Continuous data capture from machines, sensors and operators
Live OEE, downtimes and process values across lines and sites
Trend analysis and drilldowns for lean/OPEX initiatives
This enables supervisors and teams to react within the shift – not at the next month-end review.
With Excel, data silos are almost guaranteed:
Each line, cell or supervisor maintains their own files
Quality, OEE, maintenance, energy and planning have separate spreadsheets
Consolidation for plant, division or group-level is manual work
This leads to:
Intransparency: no single, trusted source of truth
Contradictions: numbers from OEE lists don’t match quality or ERP reports
Reporting overhead: significant time spent on aggregation and reconciliation before every management review
A professional MES provides a shared data platform:
Centralised, consistent data model for machines, orders, KPIs and events
Role-based views: operator terminals, team boards, plant manager dashboards, management reports
Standardised KPIs across lines, plants and countries
Instead of many Excel islands, you get one system of record for shopfloor data.
The effort per spreadsheet grows non-linearly with complexity:
More products, variants, lines, plants
More users, each adding “just one more column”
More reporting demands (COO, CFO, quality, energy, sustainability)
At some point, your staff spends:
Hours every day on data entry and cleanup
Days per month on building and adjusting reports
Time in meetings explaining which number is correct and why
A Cloud MES like SYMESTIC is built for scalability from day one:
Multi-line, multi-plant, multi-site architecture
Standardised machine connectivity (OPC UA, digital IOs, edge connectors, APIs)
Global KPI definitions and benchmarking across sites
You replace a growing Excel jungle with one scalable platform.
In many industries (automotive, food & beverage, pharma/medtech, aerospace), proof is mandatory:
Which batch ran when, on which machine?
Which inspection plan and parameters were active?
Which limits were met or violated?
Which corrective actions were triggered?
Excel is not designed for that:
No robust audit trail
No guaranteed manipulation protection
No built-in concept for versioned inspection plans and process changes
A professional MES:
Logs process data and parameters automatically
Links them to orders, materials and batches
Provides time-stamped, immutable histories for audits and customer claims
That turns traceability from a stressful manual exercise into a standard system capability.
On the surface, Excel looks “free” because licences already exist. But the total cost of ownership (TCO) includes:
Labour costs
Manual data entry, copy & paste, cleanup, consolidation
Error costs
Wrong decisions based on incorrect KPIs
Scrap, rework, missed delivery dates
Opportunity costs
OEE and throughput potential that remain unused
IT and organisational overhead
File server management, backups, access management, troubleshooting broken files
A Cloud MES has a transparent SaaS price model. For example, SYMESTIC typically starts in a range where a single prevented error or a small OEE improvement can pay back the subscription.
A simplified comparison:
| Aspect | Excel in production | Cloud MES (e.g. SYMESTIC) |
|---|---|---|
| Licence costs | marginal | monthly SaaS subscription |
| Implementation | ad-hoc, DIY by production | structured onboarding; days instead of months |
| Data capture | manual, error-prone | automated from PLCs, sensors, ERP |
| Real-time capability | none (only snapshots) | real-time dashboards and alerts |
| Reporting effort | high, lots of manual work | automated reports and drilldowns |
| Scalability | decreases with complexity | designed for multi-line, multi-plant scenarios |
| Compliance & traceability | fragile, limited | built-in audit trail and batch/lot traceability |
| Business impact (OEE, output) | indirect, hard to quantify | measurable improvements in OEE, throughput, scrap etc. |
Once you add up hidden manual work, error risk and missed optimisation, Excel is often more expensive – even though the licence itself is cheap.
From typical MES rollouts (including SYMESTIC-type solutions), you regularly see:
+20–30% higher productive output through better OEE transparency and loss analysis
Less unplanned downtime by systematically analysing alarms and interruption patterns
Lower scrap and rework as process drifts are detected earlier
Shorter lead times through better sequencing, fewer surprises and more stable processes
Fewer painful audits because data and histories are consistently available
These effects are extremely hard to achieve with Excel alone because:
Data is not real-time
Root-cause analysis is manual
KPIs are not standardised across the plant
There is no single magic threshold where “Excel breaks”. Instead, look for these patterns:
More than a handful of lines or plants
You regularly merge data from different spreadsheets for a consolidated view.
Several stakeholder groups with different views
Management, production, quality, maintenance, energy management – all require specific KPIs.
High reporting frequency
Daily shopfloor meetings, weekly and monthly reviews where a lot of time goes into preparing data.
Frequent spreadsheet firefighting
Broken formulas, corrupted files, locked workbooks, inconsistent numbers vs. ERP.
Growing audit and customer requirements
Documentation and traceability must be delivered quickly and reliably.
Strategic digitalisation goals (Industry 4.0, OPEX, CO₂ reporting)
You’re expected to provide integrated metrics, not spreadsheet islands.
If several of these apply, your Excel setup is likely already more expensive and risky than it looks.
Tick what applies:
We still track OEE, downtimes and scrap primarily in Excel.If you tick around 3–4 items or more, it’s time to seriously quantify the business case for MES.
A common objection against MES is: “We tried a big MES project once – it was complex, expensive and never really finished.” Cloud-native systems like SYMESTIC are designed to avoid exactly that.
Typical characteristics:
Fast start
Standardised connectors to machines and PLCs
First productive dashboards in days, not months
Preconfigured shopfloor clients & dashboards
OEE, downtimes, scrap, process values ready out-of-the-box
No endless specification rounds before you see value
SaaS operation included
Cloud infrastructure, backups, updates and security are part of the subscription
No separate server investment or upgrade projects
Customer success focus
Onboarding, best practices and guidance focused on tangible OEE and throughput improvements
Predictable cost model
Transparent monthly fees instead of high upfront CAPEX
The result: moving away from Excel is no longer a “big bang” IT project, but a controlled upgrade with visible quick wins.
Excel will not disappear from manufacturing – and it doesn’t have to. For ad-hoc analysis, small one-off calculations and quick data exports it remains useful.
But for the core of your production control – OEE, downtimes, quality, energy, traceability – Excel becomes:
A professional, cloud-based MES like SYMESTIC delivers:
If you already ask internally: “Do we have a page that explains in detail why our Excel setup is actually more costly and risky than a proper MES?” – then you’re exactly at the stage where the switch starts to pay off.