Search
Close this search box.

The Digital Divide in UK & Ireland Manufacturing

New Research Report • June 2026

The Digital Divide in UK & Ireland Manufacturing

Most SME manufacturers are running on disconnected legacy systems and the productivity gap is now measurable in government data, not just vendor claims. Our latest report sets out the evidence and a clear path forward.

Download the Full Report
7%
of UK manufacturers have fully adopted advanced digital tech
74%
still rely on legacy software or spreadsheets
€45bn
estimated annual UK productivity cost of legacy systems
€149bn
potential GDP uplift from best-in-class digital adoption by 2035

The problem hiding in plain sight

Manufacturing is the backbone of both the UK and Irish economies. The UK ranks eleventh globally in manufacturing output, valued at $279 billion. Ireland's manufacturing sector recorded output growth of over 33% year-on-year. Yet beneath these headline figures, a structural problem is quietly widening a competitive gap that will become increasingly difficult to close.

The majority of SME manufacturers in both markets are still running operations on disconnected legacy systems that were never designed for today's data-driven environment. The result: fragmented data, manual processes, duplicated effort, and a growing inability to deploy the AI and automation tools that competitors in Germany, the US, and elsewhere are already using at scale.

"Only 7% of manufacturers have fully adopted advanced digital technologies. The window to establish a meaningful competitive advantage through digital infrastructure is not closing. It is wide open."
DSIT Technology Adoption Review, June 2025

Key findings at a glance

1 in 6
UK businesses currently use any form of AI; 80% have no plans to adopt it
DSIT, February 2026
29.2%
Small Irish enterprise ERP adoption, compared to 78.7% for large enterprises
CSO Information Society Statistics, 2025
10%
UK manufacturing productivity below the G7 average; Germany is 16% ahead
The Manufacturer / Barclays, November 2025
4%
of European SMEs achieve very high digital maturity; most are stuck in pilot purgatory
IMR / World Economic Forum, 2025

Why vendor headlines mislead SMEs

One of the most important insights in this report is the gap between vendor survey data and official government research. Some vendor surveys claim 53 to 64% of UK organisations are already using AI. The DSIT AI Adoption Research (February 2026), built on 3,500 structured business interviews across the full UK business population, found just 16% using any form of AI.

These figures are not describing different realities. They are describing different populations. Vendor surveys oversample the large enterprises that are their primary clients. An SME manufacturer reading vendor headlines and concluding it is too late or too expensive to catch up is drawing the wrong conclusion from the wrong data. The majority of direct competitors are at roughly the same stage.

The real cost of disconnected systems

The costs of fragmented systems rarely appear in a single line item. They compound across production scheduling, procurement, quality management, and finance every quarter. Manufacturers lose an average of 45 hours per month to legacy debugging alone. Irish SMEs without ERP face an estimated €47,000 annual cost from inefficiency and missed opportunity.

But the most consequential hidden cost in 2026 is not the time lost to manual processes. It is the inability to use AI. Every predictive maintenance tool, demand forecasting model, and quality analytics platform requires clean, structured, integrated data as its foundation. Legacy systems structurally prevent this. Each quarter a competitor operates on connected infrastructure, they accumulate more training data, more refined models, and more embedded improvements that a disconnected firm cannot replicate overnight.

A practical five-phase roadmap

The most effective transformation programmes are defined by sequencing, not ambition. Target Integration's recommended approach starts with the highest-impact, shortest-payback interventions:

Phase 1: Discovery
Map all systems, data flows, and manual processes. Quantify the cost of current workarounds. Build the business case.
Phase 2: Foundation
Implement or connect ERP across production, stock, purchasing, and finance. Eliminate manual rekeying and automate management reporting.
Phase 3: Shop Floor Integration
Connect MES, IoT sensors, and production monitoring to ERP. Automate OEE and downtime recording. Link quality data to batch records.
Phase 4: Automation
Automate demand planning, purchase order generation, scheduling triggers, and compliance workflows. Measurable reduction in admin hours.
Phase 5: AI & Analytics
Deploy predictive maintenance, demand forecasting, and quality analytics on the clean connected data foundation built in earlier phases.

Most firms begin to see measurable improvements in management visibility and operational efficiency within Phase 1. There is no requirement to reach Phase 5 before realising value.

Read the full report

Download our June 2026 report for the complete evidence base, sector-by-sector breakdown, and a clear view of what connected infrastructure delivers for manufacturers in the UK and Ireland.

Download the Report (PDF) Book a Free Digital Health Check

Share on:

You may also like

en_IN

Subscribe To Our Newsletter