12th September 2025

Global opportunities, local constraints


For many machine builders and OEMs, keeping manufacturing and assembly in-house feels like the safest route. But beneath the surface of familiarity lies a growing burden – one that quietly limits capacity, slows innovation, and drains critical resources.

In this new campaign series, The Hidden Cost of In-House, we uncover the operational pain points that often go unspoken but have a lasting impact on business performance. From skills shortages and missed delivery windows to bottlenecks in engineering and rising quality issues, each article reveals a hidden cost and shows how strategic outsourcing can eliminate it.

This 12-part quickfire blog series challenges conventional thinking. It invites OEM leaders to step back and re-evaluate what “in-house” is really costing them – not just in terms of money, but in missed opportunity, agility, and growth.

Because outsourcing has nothing to do with losing control. It’s about regaining focus. It’s about building smarter, scaling faster, and staying competitive, no matter what challenge is chucked in for good measure.

Global opportunities, local constraints » PP HCoIH Logo » PP Control & Automation
Global opportunities, local constraints » PP HCoIH Solo illustrations8 » PP Control & Automation

Scaling internationally isn’t just about winning orders abroad; it’s about delivering them consistently, reliably, and competitively. For OEMs relying solely on in-house production, that promise is harder to keep. Physical space, labour availability, compliance requirements, and logistics quickly become barriers. Suddenly, global ambition collides with local reality.

Capacity is often the first constraint to surface. A facility running at near-full utilisation can’t easily absorb the additional demand that international growth brings. Increasing headcount sounds like a solution, but recruiting skilled labour at pace, especially across multiple disciplines, has become one of the biggest challenges in manufacturing. Even when teams are expanded, onboarding and training eat into timelines, delaying the ability to deliver at scale.

Compliance adds another layer of complexity. Exporting machines into new markets often means meeting additional standards, such as UL or CSA certification for North America. For OEMs without that capability in-house, meeting these requirements can slow down projects and add unexpected costs. In fast-moving markets, these delays can make the difference between securing a customer and losing them to a competitor.

This is where strategic outsourcing becomes a growth enabler rather than a fallback option. By partnering with a manufacturing specialist, OEMs gain immediate access to the capacity, skills, and compliance expertise required to operate on a global stage. Outsourcing partners can manage UL-certified builds, provide scalable production bandwidth, and ensure consistent quality across every unit – without the need for OEMs to invest heavily in facilities or headcount.

Perhaps most importantly, outsourcing allows internal teams to focus on the bigger picture. Instead of battling production bottlenecks, engineering, operations, and sales teams can concentrate on developing products, building relationships, and growing market share. The business shifts from reactive mode to proactive strategy, equipped to compete internationally without overstretching itself at home.

Global opportunities demand a mix of ambition and capability. And for OEMs trying to meet international demand with limited in-house capacity, the risks are real: missed deadlines, compromised quality, and damaged reputation. By leveraging trusted partners, manufacturers can turn local constraints into competitive advantage and take on new markets with confidence.

12-part series

If you enjoyed this quickfire blog, there’s 11 more in the Hidden Cost of In-House series, and compiled into a downloadable illustrated e-book.

Download the e-book using the button below or add it to your resource basket and browse more informative guides and collected stories in the Resource Centre.

Global opportunities, local constraints » PP HCoIH Guide mockup » PP Control & Automation

For many machine builders and OEMs, keeping manufacturing and assembly in-house feels like the safest route. But beneath the surface of familiarity lies a growing burden… All stories from the Hidden Cost of In-House series compiled with illustrations.

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Focus where it matters most

Hidden Cost of In-House 12/12: In machine building, success depends on where you direct your time, energy, and expertise. Yet for many OEMs, the focus has shifted away from where it creates the most value.

The true cost of doing it all

Hidden Cost of In-House 11/12: For many machine builders and OEMs, keeping production in-house feels like the most cost-effective way to operate. But when you dig deeper, the numbers often tell a different story.

Designed for manufacture… eventually

Hidden Cost of In-House 10/12: For many machine builders and OEMs, innovation starts strong. But then comes the challenge: moving from concept to production.

One more supplier = one more headache

Hidden Cost of In-House 9/12: In modern machine building, supply chains have become increasingly fragmented. And for many OEMs, managing these relationships has turned into an operational burden.

Global opportunities, local constraints

Hidden Cost of In-House 8/12: For many machine builders and OEMs, the opportunities have never been greater. Yet whilst the possibilities grow, many manufacturers are constrained by what’s happening much closer to home.

Product complexity outpacing capability

Hidden Cost of In-House 7/12: Machine builders are under constant pressure to innovate. Customers want smarter, faster, more integrated systems. But as products evolve, production demands do too.

Backlog blues

Hidden Cost of In-House 6/12: For many machine builders and OEMs, a growing order book should be a cause for celebration. But too often, it brings the opposite feeling – pressure, panic, and the looming risk of letting customers down.

Quality or damage control?

Hidden Cost of In-House 5/12: Every machine builder knows that quality is a reputation-maker or breaker. But as production complexity grows and internal pressures rise, many OEMs find themselves slipping into a reactive mode. Quality control becomes damage control.

The skills gap that kills growth

Hidden Cost of In-House 4/12: Technical skill is the lifeblood of any machine builder. But across the sector, that capability is under threat.

From firefighting to forward planning

Hidden Cost of In-House 3/12: For many OEMs, firefighting has become business as usual. But it’s also a major reason why forward planning never quite gets off the ground.

#changingdemand #HCoIH #improveleadtimes #maximisingoutput #reducecosts #riskmitigation #strategicoutsourcing #timetomarket

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