Autor: Jürgen Fritz

Building the Future Workforce Today

Building the Future Workforce Today

Trendiation as a strategic framework for employee qualification and training
Jürgen Fritz, Sebastian Busse, Ingo Dieckmann, Torsten Laub
As Industry 4.0 and artificial intelligence reshape organizational capabilities, traditional training systems struggle to keep pace with evolving skill requirements. This paper introduces Trendiation—a structured methodology for translating emerging trends into actionable strategies—as a systematic approach to this challenge. Through a workshop-based application examining Edutainment, Human-Centered Design, and Workforce Transformation, we demonstrate how organizations can move from abstract trend identification to concrete qualification requirements and prioritized training initiatives. The method produces a traceable artifact chain spanning trend framing, capability-gap assessment, and implementation roadmaps. Participant evaluations indicate high perceived clarity and practical utility. By bridging foresight analysis with participatory design, Trendiation enables organizations to proactively cultivate adaptive capabilities and build learning cultures aligned with future work ...
Industry 4.0 Science | Volume 42 | 2026 | Edition 2 | Pages 22-29 | DOI 10.30844/I4SE.26.2.22
A Methodology for Creating Simulation-based Characteristic Diagrams

A Methodology for Creating Simulation-based Characteristic Diagrams

Jürgen Fritz, Matthias Grauer
A widely established tool for modeling, analysing, evaluating and optimizing in manufacturing planning is the discrete-event material flow simulation. Considerable benefits of using simulation show the necessity of increasingly applying simulation in the planning process. However, applying material flow simulation is also very costly. Results generated from simulation studies can be used for creating simulation-based characteristic diagrams. These diagrams allow the reduction of expenditures required for modeling and experimentation. Simulation-based characteristic diagrams can be used for efficiently solving frequent simulation problems. This paper introduces a methodology for reducing the expenditures required for creating simulation-based characteristic diagrams. The application of this methodology is demonstrated in an example.
Industrie Management | Volume 23 | 2007 | Edition 4 | Pages 21-24
Planning of Globally Distributed Manufacturing Networks

Planning of Globally Distributed Manufacturing Networks

Ein Abgleich zwischen Produktdesign, Prozessgestaltung und Standortwahl
Matthias Grauer, Ingo Nowitzky, Jürgen Fritz
For manufacturers worldwide, globalization provides the opportunity of creating globally distributed manufacturing networks. In order to plan production in a manufacturing network, production sites have to be assessed accordingly. Interdependencies between product design, process design and the manufacturing site have to be taken into consideration. This article introduces a method that allows for planning globally distributed manufacturing networks focussing on these interdependencies.
Industrie Management | Volume 23 | 2007 | Edition 1 | Pages 56-59