Manufacturing Execution System (MES) Integration
Firms implementing and integrating MES platforms connecting plant floor automation to enterprise systems.
Market snapshot
These figures describe Industrial Automation Integration Services (5.9.4), the segment that Manufacturing Execution System (MES) Integration sits within — not Manufacturing Execution System (MES) Integration on its own.
Automation systems integration spans engineering and technical-services classifications (e.g., NAICS 541330/541512) and is not separately disclosed by the Census Bureau, so the segment is not separately sized here.
Business model & economics
Revenue model
Engineered automation projects plus service and support
Key economics
- Recurring revenue
- Moderate
- EBITDA margin
- Engineering- and project-services economics
- Capex intensity
- Low
recurring service, support, and upgrades
Characteristics
- Translates automation hardware into working systems.
- Labor shortages, reshoring, and Industry 4.0 drive demand.
- Among the fastest-growing industrial-service areas.
Geographic concentration
Industrial automation and integration services cluster around the federal and defense-technology corridor — Virginia, Maryland, Washington, D.C., and Colorado.
U.S. Census Bureau — 2022 County Business Patterns (establishments by state), NAICS 541330/541512. Concentration shown by location quotient.
M&A deal context
Who’s acquiring
- Automation OEMs & platforms
- PE-backed integration consolidators
- Industrial-technology strategics
What’s driving deals
- Roll-up of regional/specialty integrators.
- Reshoring and automation demand.
- Industry 4.0 and robotics adoption.
Find Manufacturing Execution System (MES) Integration acquisition targets
Search Acquisera’s index for companies classified under Manufacturing Execution System (MES) Integration (5.9.4.3) and build a targeted deal pipeline.
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