ENGINEERING-TO-ORDER MANAGEMENT PLATFORM

SaaS for mechanical engineering

One current status of parts, assemblies, and the project for engineering, procurement, and manufacturing.

Changes are visible to everyone immediately
Planning is visible to all departments immediately
Execution across departments runs on one shared data base
Problem

ETO projects lose control when engineering, procurement, and manufacturing work on different versions of status

Changes in parts, assemblies, and releases appear in one part of the project earlier than they become visible to the rest. As a result, decisions are made on incomplete or outdated information.

What happens in most ETO environments

Engineering, procurement, and manufacturing often do not work on the same status of parts, assemblies, and the project. Changes in specifications, releases, and assembly readiness do not propagate immediately.

The issue is not team speed. The issue is the absence of one current project state that all functions can rely on at the same time.

  • Engineering changes parts, assemblies, or releases, but downstream teams see it too late
  • Procurement plans deliveries on a different status base than engineering
  • Manufacturing continues to work on data that has already changed

What this causes at execution level

When departments work on different versions of status, the issue is not limited to delay. A structural gap appears between planning and execution.

  • additional cycles of manual reconciliation appear between engineering, procurement, and manufacturing
  • transitions between project stages become less predictable
  • the real status of parts and assemblies has to be clarified manually
  • the probability of rework, schedule shifts, and work starting on the wrong basis increases

The core problem is not communication in itself, but the absence of one current status of parts, assemblies, and the project.

Platform logic

One current status of parts and assemblies for engineering, procurement, and manufacturing

Gleisen consolidates status information from engineering, procurement, and manufacturing in one workspace. This means all functions work on the same current state of parts, assemblies, and the project.

Engineering

Updates technical status

Changes in design, specifications, releases, and assemblies are recorded immediately in the shared system. They do not remain trapped in local files, lists, or email threads.

Procurement

Plans on current status

Procurement sees the same changes in parts and assemblies as engineering, and can assess timelines, dependencies, and supply risks on a current basis.

Manufacturing

Executes on the current project state

Manufacturing receives the current status of engineering, materials, and assemblies in time and does not rely on assumptions or delayed clarification.

Solution

A platform that connects planning and execution through a shared project status

Gleisen connects planning and execution in Engineering-to-Order through a single status base. Teams operate on the same state of parts, assemblies and the project.

1. Planning on a unified status

Planning is based on a single state of parts, assemblies and stages that updates continuously during execution.

  • Engineering, procurement and production work on the same product structure and current status
  • Dependencies between parts, assemblies and stages are directly visible
  • Plans are recalculated based on actual state, not assumptions
  • Risks surface at status changes before turning into delays

2. Change management during execution

Changes in product structure and status are reflected immediately and available to all involved teams.

  • Updates to parts and assemblies are visible across departments without sync cycles
  • Decisions are based on current state, not manually consolidated data
  • Deviations are detected at the moment they occur
  • Procurement and production start rely on up-to-date statuses
Management impact

Less manual reconciliation. More control over the real project state.

The value of Gleisen is not abstract transparency, but the fact that all departments work on one current status of parts, assemblies, and the project.

Less manual alignment

Engineering, procurement, and manufacturing spend less time reconciling the current status with each other.

More stable planning

Transitions between project stages are planned on the current status of parts and assemblies.

Changes become visible earlier

Changes in parts, assemblies, and releases become visible before they turn into execution failures.

Fewer decisions on outdated data

Procurement, release, and manufacturing rely on the current project state rather than delayed clarification.

Positioning

Not fragmented spreadsheets and not separate status by department — but one project status for all

Without Gleisen

  • Engineering, procurement, and manufacturing work on different versions of status
  • Part and assembly status has to be clarified manually
  • Dependencies are distributed across files, emails, and local lists
  • Planning and execution diverge easily
  • Changes become visible too late
VS

With Gleisen

  • All departments work on one current project status
  • Part and assembly status is visible in a shared system instead of being collected manually
  • Engineering changes become visible immediately to procurement and manufacturing
  • Planning and execution rely on the same project state
  • Decisions are made earlier and on a more reliable basis

ERP manages transactions

ERP records inventory, operations, and postings. But it does not automatically provide one current status of parts, assemblies, and the project for engineering, procurement, and manufacturing.

Standalone planning tools manage fragments

Traditional planning tools work well for individual dates or functions. Gleisen connects departments through one and the same current status of the project and its components.

Next step

See how Gleisen synchronizes part status across engineering, procurement, and manufacturing

If in your ETO projects the status of parts, assemblies, and the project has to be reconciled manually all the time, Gleisen provides a shared system for planning and execution on one current basis.

Relevant for

  • Special machinery
  • Mechanical engineering and plant engineering
  • Custom industrial equipment
  • ETO environments with multiple parallel projects

Focus: companies where engineering, procurement, and manufacturing depend on the same status of parts, assemblies, and the project.