What is operational technology (OT)?
OT, short for operational technology, is defined by the ISA95 standard as the devices, assets, and systems used in the physical process (level 0), sensing and manipulation (level 1), supervisory control (level 2), and manufacturing operations management (level 3). OT includes equipment and devices used in the physical process—pipes, belts, machines, robots, sensors, controllers, etc., and the systems used to control equipment—HMI, SCADA, MES, etc.
What’s the difference between IT and OT?
OT is focused on manufacturing and industrial operations, whereas IT is focused on the physical and digital assets and processes used to create, process, store, and secure electronic data.
OT departments are primarily concerned with availability, uptime, and data quality and reliability of systems.
IT is typically more concerned with the security, standardization, and scalability of systems.
The types of IT/OT convergence
Process convergence
Software and data convergence
Physical convergence
Challenges of IT/OT convergence
Navigating IT/OT convergence is challenging due to shifts in mindset, philosophies, teams, systems, and processes. Here are key hurdles for manufacturers.
Cybersecurity risks
System integration
Secure IoT implementation
Process convergence
Cybersecurity risks
OT systems were originally designed to be isolated, intended to be 'air-gapped' from IT systems and external networks.
System integration
The diverse nature of OT systems complicates their integration with IT in a repeatable and scalable way.
Secure IoT implementation
IoT projects often lack a single owner, causing poor communication. OT lacks security knowledge and IT is unaware of OT projects, risking security.
Process convergence
Organizations may find it challenging to restructure traditionally separate IT and OT departments to effectively manage newly integrated technology.
IT/OT convergence best practices
Communicate goals: Understand the business objective, set measurable and realistic goals, and then communicate clearly across teams.
Provide training: Cross-training OT and IT teams on the responsibilities and priorities of each team can help improve understanding and collaboration.
Show overlap: Identify and communicate the areas of shared responsibility, especially in terms of systems and security.
Use the right tools: Determine and deploy the right toolset to enable discovery, configuration, management, and security.
Define roles and responsibilities: Clearly communicate the roles and responsibilities for each team, and the opportunities and areas for collaboration.
Unlocking the potential of IT/OT convergence with PTC
Kepware industrial connectivity accesses data from OT assets and devices—regardless of age or manufacturer—and makes the data available to IT and OT systems.
ThingWorx industrial IoT visualizes and analyzes IT and OT data from disparate sources. Combining pre-built manufacturing apps with the best-in-class industrial IoT platform, ThingWorx enables data-driven decisions.