Five Insights from all about automation Hamburg

Sometimes the best communication ideas don’t emerge at a desk, but among machines, sensors, robots and real conversations.

All the better when these are practically right around the corner. From our office to Hamburg Messe und Congress, it’s about a six-minute walk.

And so, early this morning, our colleague Christoph Lapczyna set off for all about automation in Hamburg to once again get a hands-on feel for the industry. For us as a PR agency, that’s exactly what matters: anyone who wants to make technology understandable has to see what the industry is really talking about.

Our five key insights from the trade fair:

  1. AI is moving from the desk to the workbench. It’s less about grand promises for the future, administration or communication, and increasingly about practical applications: visual inspection, robotics, efficiency gains, quality assurance.
  2. Robotics is becoming more accessible. Modular systems, flexible applications and more affordable solutions are making automation more tangible for mid-sized companies, too. The communications takeaway: don’t frame robotics as a high-end topic, but as a solution to concrete bottlenecks.
  3. OT security is becoming a trust factor. Connected production needs security. Topics like the Cyber Resilience Act, the Machinery Regulation and IEC 62443 show that compliance alone isn’t enough — trust is built through transparent, traceable implementation.
  4. Digitalisation often begins with existing systems. Retrofitting, IO-Link, Single Pair Ethernet, digital twins and IIoT show that the path to smart production doesn’t always require a complete fresh start. The interesting angle for communications: don’t tell the story of the big revolution, but of the achievable next step.
  5. Efficiency and sustainability are growing together. Automation is increasingly being discussed through the lens of energy efficiency, resource conservation, less downtime and better predictability. The conclusion: sustainability in industrial communication is especially credible when it’s tied to economic benefit.

Our takeaway: Good technology communication doesn’t need to get louder. It needs to get more precise. Because in technical markets in particular, the winner is the one who explains complex solutions in a way that makes their value immediately clear.