<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8"?><rss version="2.0"><channel><title>Jelena Milisavljevic-Syed, Abdulrahman Alqoud, Jiahong Li, Mohammed Khan</title><link>https://shop.theiet.org:443/author/jelena-milisavljevic-syed-abdulrahman-alqoud-jiahong-li-mohammed-khan</link><description>Jelena Milisavljevic-Syed, Abdulrahman Alqoud, Jiahong Li, Mohammed Khan</description><item><title>Adaptive Manufacturing for SMEs</title><link>https://shop.theiet.org:443/adaptive-manufacturing-for-smes</link><description>&lt;p xmlns="http://ns.editeur.org/onix/3.0/reference"&gt;Small and medium sized enterprises (SMEs) face growing pressure to modernise in response to volatile market demand, increasing product complexity, and rapid technological change. At the same time, they are expected to improve sustainability performance, strengthen data transparency, and respond more quickly to operational disruption. Although Industry 4.0 has introduced significant opportunities through cyber-physical integration, connectivity, and data-driven decision-making, many SMEs continue to struggle with implementation. Financial constraints, legacy equipment, limited internal capabilities, and the risks associated with poorly sequenced adoption often prevent transformation from progressing beyond isolated initiatives. Flexible and responsive manufacturing systems (FRMS) represent the performance objective of this transition, but for SMEs the central challenge is not simply adopting advanced technologies; it is doing so through a structured and feasible pathway. This book positions that pathway as an incremental and decision-supported transformation process tailored to the operational realities of SMEs.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p xmlns="http://ns.editeur.org/onix/3.0/reference"&gt;To address this challenge, the book proposes a unified and practical transformation framework built around three interconnected strategies. The first is digital retrofitting, which enables SMEs to incrementally upgrade legacy systems through Industry 4.0 technologies without requiring full-scale replacement. The second is maintenance strategy selection, which applies structured multi-criteria decision-making methods to improve operational reliability, responsiveness, and asset resilience within dynamic manufacturing environments. The third is digital servitisation, which supports the transition from product-based offerings to service-oriented business models capable of generating new value from digitally enabled operations. Taken together, these strategies form a coherent transformation logic in which retrofitting generates data, maintenance strategy converts that data into resilience, and servitisation leverages that resilience for strategic growth. The book also addresses broader themes associated with industry 5.0, including sustainability, organisational readiness, cybersecurity, and human-centred industrial transformation.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p xmlns="http://ns.editeur.org/onix/3.0/reference"&gt;The book will be key reading for graduate students, educators, and academic researchers in industrial engineering, manufacturing systems and digital transformation.&lt;/p&gt;</description><pubDate>Wed, 08 Jul 2026 10:15:48 GMT</pubDate><guid isPermaLink="true">https://shop.theiet.org:443/adaptive-manufacturing-for-smes</guid></item></channel></rss>