
Tape Industry Observer #7
Many assume standardization is only for large factories.
That assumption is outdated.
Standardization becomes necessary the moment a factory wants:
• Predictable quality
• Stable delivery
• Repeatable performance
It has nothing to do with how big the factory is.
What standardization really does is reduce decision-making on the shop floor. When processes are fixed, outcomes become predictable.
Factories that resist standardization often say:
“We are flexible.”
What they usually mean is:
“We rely on people to fix problems in real time.”
That approach works — until growth exposes its limits.
Automation supports standardization, but the mindset must come first.
In tape manufacturing, survival favors factories that reduce uncertainty before they chase volume.
