In 2025, we shared our perspective on what the year ahead might hold for manufacturing. It was framed by urgency, experimentation, and a sense of cautious optimism. Industrial AI, workforce transformation, sustainability, circularity, and supply chain resilience all sat at the center of that outlook. Now, with the benefit of hindsight, it’s clear that these forces did shape the industry, but in more complex, less linear, and often more revealing ways than anticipated. 

This retrospective is not about judging accuracy. It is about understanding what 2025 truly exposed for manufacturers, where momentum accelerated, where friction emerged, and what the industry learned about navigating continuous disruption, rising complexity, and rapid technological change. 

Industrial AI and What 2025 Truly Delivered  

In our original outlook for 2025, we highlighted Industrial AI as a defining force expected to reshape how manufacturers plan, monitor, and optimize operations. That direction proved broadly accurate, but the reality has been far more fragmented and uneven than we anticipated. 

Some manufacturers genuinely moved the needle in 2025. AI found its way into production scheduling, energy management, and predictive maintenance, driving measurable improvements in efficiency, uptime, and operational control. But market-wide adoption was far from consistent. Many organizations ran pilots, explored use cases, and experimented with different tools, yet very few made the leap into true enterprise-wide deployment. The real shift occurred where investments were made into platforms built for industrial scale.  In those environments, ROI was not just evident, it was delivered. And for those who succeeded, it was clear they had chosen systems built for complex industrial environments, not just impressive demonstrations.  

One of the most notable shifts throughout 2025 was the emergence of agentic AI. Unlike traditional models focused on static insight generation, these new AI agents introduced the concept of semi-autonomous decision-making and orchestration across workflows. While still early in maturity, they signaled a fundamental evolution in how AI could operate within industrial environments, not just as a support tool, but as an active participant in process execution. 

At the same time, nearly every major industrial software provider introduced AI-driven capabilities, reinforcing the sense that AI is no longer optional in the manufacturing landscape. Yet, execution remained inconsistent. Data complexity, integration challenges, governance concerns, and workforce readiness continued to slow broad adoption. 

By the end of 2025, Industrial AI has firmly transitioned from emerging trend to expected capability across the industry. But the journey from experimentation to meaningful, sustained impact is far from complete. What became clear is that progress was not about intent or ambition alone, but about having the right foundations in place to support intelligence as part of everyday operations, not as an isolated initiative.  

The Workforce Experience with Generative AI 

Manufacturing

Our prediction for 2025 positioned generative AI as a growing force in workforce transformation. In practice, adoption in this area proved more positive and pragmatic than initially expected. 

Rather than widespread resistance, many workers embraced generative AI as a tool that made their jobs easier, more efficient, and less administratively burdensome. From simplifying documentation and reporting to supporting knowledge capture and process guidance, generative AI quickly became part of how individuals approached and completed their daily work. Its ease of use lowered adoption barriers and encouraged participation across experience levels. 

One of the most valuable developments was how generative AI supported knowledge preservation. Capturing the expertise of experienced technicians through video instructions, structured prompts, and process documentation became more accessible than ever before. Instead of hesitance or withdrawal, many seasoned professionals saw AI as an enabler, a way to transfer hard-earned knowledge, reduce repetitive effort, and onboard much faster. 

The defining characteristic of generative AI’s role in 2025 was cultural integration. Where organizations fostered transparency, provided guidance, and embedded AI into daily practice, adoption flourished. The workforce transformation underway is not one of displacement, but of augmentation, where people and technology operate side by side, each strengthening the other. 

Sustainability, Measurement, and Circularity in Practice 

Our 2025 outlook positioned sustainability as a key operational and strategic priority, spanning regulatory compliance, environmental measurement, and the rise of circular business models. In reality, progress across these areas was more uneven and less transformational than anticipated. 

Regulatory pressure certainly intensified, with frameworks such as Digital Product Passports (DPP), CSRD delays, and Extended Producer Responsibility shaping long-term agendas. The postponement of CSRD timelines, introduced as part of the EU’s simplification efforts, added uncertainty for many manufacturers and slowed momentum in some sustainability initiatives. As a result, sustainability remained one of several competing priorities rather than the primary driver of technology investment. While compliance planning continued, progress was uneven and often lagged the ambition set at the start of the year.  

In terms of measurement and optimization, AI was recognized as a powerful enabler, but adoption within sustainability-specific use cases was comparatively restrained. While some organizations used AI to optimize energy consumption, track emissions, and improve resource efficiency, this capability has not yet been leveraged as fully as it could be. In many cases, manufacturers focused AI investment on productivity, cost control, and operational efficiency projects where ROI felt more immediate and tangible. 

Circularity, in particular, proved complex to operationalize at scale. While the principles gained visibility, implementation challenges remained stubborn, from infrastructure readiness and data consistency to economic viability and organizaional participation. Progress often manifested in isolated initiatives rather than enterprise-wide transformation. 

Overall, sustainability and circularity made steady but cautious progress in 2025. Momentum continues to build, but AI-led optimization in this area has yet to reach its full potential. For many manufacturers, sustainability remains an evolving priority, one that is likely to accelerate further as regulatory expectations crystalize and competitive advantages become clearer. 

Localization, Tariffs, and the Reality of Resilience 

Our original prediction for 2025 anticipated a shift toward more localized production and resilient supply chains, driven by a growing desire to reduce risk, cut emissions, and improve responsiveness. In direction, that prediction proved accurate. In cause, however, the reality unfolded very differently to what we had expected. 

When our outlook was published in December 2024, the introduction of sweeping tariffs had not yet entered the conversation. We framed localization primarily as a strategic response to long-term vulnerability and sustainability concerns. What actually shaped 2025 was far more abrupt. The rapid implementation of tariffs, particularly across key trade routes, forced manufacturers into immediate recalculation rather than considered transition. What was expected to be a gradual rebalancing became a reactive shift driven by cost shock and urgency. 

This sudden change exposed a critical truth, localization is not a simple solution. Building new facilities, relocating production, and training local workforces cannot happen overnight. Labor shortages, infrastructure constraints, and financial feasibility slowed many reshoring or nearshoring ambitions. Instead of a wholesale move to local production, manufacturers pivoted towards flexibility as the primary enabler of resilience. 

Rather than geography alone solving resilience challenges, productivity, adaptability, and scalability became the true differentiators. Manufacturers began investing in smarter planning, improved visibility, and greater operational flexibility to allow existing facilities to absorb volatility, adjust output, and respond dynamically to shifting conditions. 

In hindsight, our prediction was directionally right, but contextually incomplete. Supply chains did become more resilient, not through location alone, but through a combination of better planning, diversified sourcing, and adaptive operating models. The lesson from 2025 was clear, resilience is not defined by proximity, but by the ability to flex, absorb disruption, and continue operating under pressure. 

What 2025 Ultimately Revealed 

2025 was not simply disruptive, it was formative. It exposed where ambition exceeded readiness and where adaptability emerged as the most valuable capability of all.  

Manufacturers learned that progress is rarely linear. Success required balancing experimentation with governance, speed with structure, and innovation with practical execution. The companies that moved forward were those willing to test, fail, learn, and iterate without waiting for perfect conditions.  

Most significantly, the year underscored that transformation is not driven by technology alone. Real impact occurs when people, processes, data, and systems align across organizational boundaries. AI success is not about isolated use cases, it is about integrated, end-to-end capability.  

As the industry now turns toward 2026, the lessons from 2025 become a critical reference point. The technologies are now proven. What remains is the mindset to act, the structure to scale, and the leadership to move forward deliberately.  

This reflection also set the stage for what comes next. In the coming weeks, we will share our outlook on the trends and transformations expected to shape manufacturing in 2026, exploring how emerging capabilities, evolving operating models, and shifting global pressures will define the year ahead.  

The journey continues. And the pace is only increasing.