The Manufacturing sector, traditionally defined by stable processes and infrastructure, is now facing a pivotal shift. Rapid technological advancements and shifting global market dynamics have rendered incremental improvements inadequate for long-term competitiveness and growth. To thrive, manufacturers must fundamentally reimagine their entire value chain.
By embracing intelligent systems, enhancing agility, and proactively shaping future-ready operations, organisations can navigate today’s industrial complexities and position themselves for sustained success.

Here are recent examples of Manufacturing transformation in the Asia Pacific.
Click here to download “Future Forward: Reimagining Manufacturing” as a PDF.
Intelligent Automation & Efficiency
Komatsu Australia, a global industrial equipment manufacturer, tackled growing inefficiencies in its small parts department, where teams manually processed hundreds of PDF invoices daily from more than 250 suppliers.
To streamline this, the company deployed intelligent automation – AI now extracts and validates data from invoices against purchase orders and inputs it directly into the legacy mainframe.
The impact has been sharp: over 300 hours saved annually for one supplier, 1,100 invoices processed in three weeks, and a dramatic drop in manual errors. Employees have shifted to higher-value tasks, and a citizen developer program is enabling staff to build custom automation tools. With a scalable framework in place, Komatsu has not only transformed invoice processing but also set the stage for broader automation across the enterprise.
Data-Driven Insights & Agility
Berger Paints India Ltd., a leader in paints and coatings, needed to scale fast amid rising database loads and complex on-prem systems.
In response, Berger Paints migrated its mission-critical databases and core business applications – covering finance, manufacturing, sales, and asset management – to a high-performance cloud platform.
This shift boosted operational efficiency by 25%, doubled reporting and system response times, and enhanced scalability and disaster recovery with geographically distributed cloud regions. The move simplified access to data, driving faster, insight-driven decision-making. With streamlined infrastructure management and optimised costs, Berger Paints is now poised to leverage advanced technologies like AI/ML, setting the stage for continued innovation and growth.
Connected Operations & Customer Centricity
JSW Steel, one of India’s leading steel producers, set out to shift from a plant-centric model to a customer-first approach. The challenge: integrating complex systems like ERP, CRM, and manufacturing to streamline operations and improve order fulfillment.
With a robust integration platform, JSW Steel connected over 32 systems using 120+ APIs – automating processes and enabling real-time data flow across orders, inventory, pricing, and production.
The results speak for themselves: faster order fulfillment, reduced cost-to-serve, and real-time visibility that optimises scheduling. Scalable, composable APIs now support growth, while a 99.7% success rate across 7.2 million API calls ensures reliability. JSW Steel has transformed how it operates – running faster, serving smarter, and delivering better customer experiences across the entire order-to-cash journey.
Modernising Core Systems & Foundational Transformation
Fujitsu General, a global leader in air conditioning systems, was constrained by a 30-year-old COBOL-based mainframe and fragmented processes. The legacy system posed a Y2K-like risk and limited operational agility.
The company implemented a modern, unified ERP platform to eliminate risk, streamline operations, and boost agility.
By integrating functions across sales, production, procurement, accounting, and HR and addressing unique business needs with low-code development, the company created a clean, adaptable core system. Robust integration connected disparate data sources, while a central repository eliminated silos. The transformation delivered seamless end-to-end operations, standardised workflows, improved agility, and real-time insights – setting Fujitsu General up for continued innovation and long-term resilience.
Powering Growth with a Modern Network
As a critical supplier to India’s infrastructure boom, Hindalco needed to modernise its network across 55 sites – improving app performance, enabling real-time insights, and building a future-ready, sustainable foundation.
Hindalco replaced its ageing hub-and-spoke model with a modern mesh architecture using SD-WAN.
The new architecture prioritised key app traffic, simplified cloud access, and enabled segmentation. Centralised orchestration and SSE integration brought automation and robust security. The impact: 30% lower costs, 50% faster apps, real-time visibility, rapid deployment, and smarter bandwidth. Hindalco now runs on a lean, secure digital backbone – built for agility, performance, and scale.

The tech industry is experiencing a strategic convergence of AI, data management, and cybersecurity, driving a surge in major M&A activity. As enterprises tackle digital transformation, these three pillars are at the forefront, accelerating the race to acquire and integrate critical technologies.
Here are this year’s key consolidation moves, showcasing how leading tech companies are positioning themselves to capitalise on the rising demand for AI-driven solutions, robust data infrastructure, and enhanced cybersecurity.
AI Convergence: Architecting the Intelligent Enterprise
From customer service to supply chain management, AI is being deployed across the entire enterprise value chain. This widespread demand for AI solutions is creating a dynamic M&A market, with tech companies acquiring specialised AI capabilities.
IBM’s AI Power Play
IBM’s acquisitions of HashiCorp and DataStax mark a decisive step in its push to lead enterprise AI and hybrid cloud. The USD 6.4B HashiCorp deal that got finalised this year, brings Terraform, a top-tier infrastructure-as-code tool that streamlines multi-cloud deployments – key to integrating IBM’s Red Hat OpenShift and Watsonx AI. Embedding Terraform enhances automation, making hybrid cloud infrastructure more efficient and AI-ready.
The DataStax acquisition strengthens IBM’s AI data strategy. With AstraDB and Apache Cassandra, IBM gains scalable NoSQL solutions for AI workloads, while Langflow simplifies AI app development. Together, these moves position IBM as an end-to-end AI and cloud powerhouse, offering enterprises seamless automation, data management, and AI deployment at scale.
MongoDB’s RAG Focus
MongoDB’s USD 220M acquisition of Voyage AI signals a strategic push toward enhancing AI reliability. At the core of this move is retrieval-augmented generation (RAG), a technology that curbs AI hallucinations by grounding responses in accurate, relevant data.
By integrating Voyage AI into its Atlas cloud database, MongoDB is making AI applications more trustworthy and reducing the complexity of RAG implementations. Enterprises can now build AI-driven solutions directly within their database, streamlining development while improving accuracy. This move consolidates MongoDB’s role as a key player in enterprise AI, offering both scalable data management and built-in AI reliability.
Google’s 1B Bet on Anthropic
Google’s continued investment in Anthropic reinforces its commitment to foundation model innovation and the evolving GenAI landscape. More than a financial move, this signals Google’s intent to shape the future of AI by backing one of the field’s most promising players.
This investment aligns with a growing trend among cloud giants securing stakes in foundation model developers to drive AI advancements. By deepening ties with Anthropic, Google not only gains access to cutting-edge AI research but also strengthens its position in developing safe, scalable, and enterprise-ready AI. This solidifies Google’s long-term AI strategy, ensuring its leadership in GenAI while seamlessly integrating these capabilities into its cloud ecosystem.
ServiceNow’s AI Automation Expansion
ServiceNow’s USD 2.9B acquisition of Moveworks completed this year, marking a decisive push into AI-driven service desk automation. This goes beyond feature expansion – it redefines enterprise support operations by embedding intelligent automation into workflows, reducing resolution times, and enhancing employee productivity.
The acquisition reflects a growing shift: AI-powered service management is no longer optional but essential. Moveworks’ AI-driven capabilities – natural language understanding, machine learning, and automated issue resolution – will enable ServiceNow to deliver a smarter, more proactive support experience. Additionally, gaining Moveworks’ customer base strengthens ServiceNow’s market reach.
Data Acquisition Surge: Fuelling Digital Transformation
Data has transcended its role as a byproduct of operations, becoming the lifeblood that fuels digital transformation. This fundamental shift has triggered a surge in strategic acquisitions focused on enhancing data management and storage capabilities.
Lenovo Scaling Enterprise Storage
Lenovo’s USD 2B acquisition of Infinidat strengthens its position in enterprise storage as data demands surge. Infinidat’s AI-driven InfiniBox delivers high-performance, low-latency storage for AI, analytics, and HPC, while InfiniGuard ensures advanced data protection.
By integrating these technologies, Lenovo expands its hybrid cloud offerings, challenging Dell and NetApp while reinforcing its vision as a full-stack data infrastructure provider.
Databricks Streamlining Data Warehouse Migrations
Databricks’ USD 15B acquisition of BladeBridge accelerates data warehouse migrations with AI-driven automation, reducing manual effort and errors in migrating legacy platforms like Snowflake and Teradata. BladeBridge’s technology enhances Databricks’ SQL platform, simplifying the transition to modern data ecosystems.
This strengthens Databricks’ Data Intelligence Platform, boosting its appeal by enabling faster, more efficient enterprise data consolidation and supporting rapid adoption of data-driven initiatives.
Cybersecurity Consolidation: Fortifying the Digital Fortress
The escalating sophistication of cyber threats has transformed cybersecurity from a reactive measure to a strategic imperative. This has fuelled a surge in M&A aimed at building comprehensive and integrated security solutions.
Turn/River Capital’s Security Acquisition
Turn/River Capital’s USD 4.4 billion acquisition of SolarWinds underscores the enduring demand for robust IT service management and security software. This acquisition is a testament to the essential role SolarWinds plays in enterprise IT infrastructure, even in the face of past security breaches.
This is a bold investment, in the face of prior vulnerability and highlights a fundamental truth: the need for reliable security solutions outweighs even the most public of past failings. Investors are willing to make long term bets on companies that provide core security services.
Sophos Expanding Managed Detection & Response Capabilities
Sophos completed the acquisition of Secureworks for USD 859M significantly strengthens its managed detection and response (MDR) capabilities, positioning Sophos as a major player in the MDR market. This consolidation reflects the growing demand for comprehensive cybersecurity solutions that offer proactive threat detection and rapid incident response.
By integrating Secureworks’ XDR products, Sophos enhances its ability to provide end-to-end protection for its customers, addressing the evolving threat landscape with advanced security technologies.
Cisco’s Security Portfolio Expansion
Cisco completed the USD 28B acquisition of SnapAttack further expanding its security business, building upon its previous acquisition of Splunk. This move signifies Cisco’s commitment to creating a comprehensive security portfolio that can address the diverse needs of its enterprise customers.
By integrating SnapAttack’s threat detection capabilities, Cisco strengthens its ability to provide proactive threat intelligence and incident response, solidifying its position as a leading provider of security solutions.
Google’s Cloud Security Reinforcement
Google’s strategic acquisition of Wiz, a leading cloud security company, for USD 32B demonstrates its commitment to securing cloud-native environments. Wiz’s expertise in proactive threat detection and remediation will significantly enhance Google Cloud’s security offerings. This move is particularly crucial as organisations increasingly migrate their workloads to the cloud.
By integrating Wiz’s capabilities, Google aims to provide its customers with a robust security framework that can protect their cloud-based assets from sophisticated cyber threats. This acquisition positions Google as a stronger competitor in the cloud security market, reinforcing its commitment to enterprise-grade cybersecurity.
The Way Ahead
The M&A trends of 2025 underscore the critical role of AI, data, and security in shaping the technology landscape. Companies that prioritise these core areas will be best positioned for long-term success. Strategic acquisitions, when executed with foresight and agility, will serve as essential catalysts for navigating the complexities of the evolving digital world.
