RESEARCH TRIANGLE PARK, N.C. — The International Society of Automation (ISA) recently surveyed 290 people in the automation engineering field to discover their thoughts on industry standards. The survey shows that 63% of respondents believe that standards will be “extremely important” in the future.
Conducted in June 2020, the online survey received 290 responses from automation engineering professionals, primarily from the U.S., Europe, and Canada. Forty-two % of respondents described themselves as engineers, 21% as consultants, 15% as managers, and 8% as executives. The remaining 14% reported as a mix of technicians, operators, salespeople, marketers, or other roles. Survey respondents most commonly worked at system integrators (35%), asset owners (30%), or automation providers (22%).
Most survey respondents (77%) said they are ISA members. Forty-one percent of respondents said they have more than 30 years of experience in their field; 26% said they have 20-30 years of experience, 21% said they have 10-20 years, and 12% said they have zero to 10 years.
Key findings include:
• An overwhelming majority of survey respondents believe that, in the future, standards will be “extremely important” (63%) or “important” (33%).
• Most respondents (87%) believe that industry standards make processes and facilities safer.
• Most respondents (81%) believe that industry standards help companies prove compliance to regulations.
• Most respondents (67%) believe that industry standards make it easier to train and cross-train people in technical jobs.
• Most respondents (63%) believe that industry standards make processes and facilities more cyber-secure.
The findings of the ISA survey confirm that automation engineering professionals rely on industry standards. Survey respondents suggested that standards are essential to maintaining excellence in their work. In general, respondents have a positive outlook about standards, and they believe that standards will continue to be just as critical, if not more so, in the future.
“In creating this survey, ISA wanted to demonstrate the value of standards to the automation community,” said Dr. Maurice J. Wilkins, executive advisor at Yokogawa Marketing HQ, ISA Fellow, former vice president of ISA’s Standards and Practices Department, current co-chair of the ISA101 Human-Machine Interfaces Standard Committee, and member of the ISA Executive Board’s Industry Reach & Awareness work group. “We are grateful to the many automation engineering professionals who took the time to tell us how standards are helping them, their employees, and their organizations.”
ISA’s more than 150 standards reflect the comprehensive knowledge and hard work of more than 4,000 automation industry experts worldwide. These individuals, along with more than 140 committees, sub-committees, work groups, and task forces, collaborate on the development and maintenance of ISA standards. ISA standards cover areas as diverse as the safety of electrical equipment used in hazardous locations to cost-savings measures for interfaces between industrial process control computers and subsystems. For more information, visit www.isa.org.