Glossary

indicator

An indicator is a calculated or context-enriched value that interprets raw data to describe the state or performance of an industrial process or system.

An indicator is a calculated or context-enriched value that interprets raw data to describe the state or performance of a process, resource, or system. In industrial and manufacturing environments, indicators are typically derived from one or more measurements (raw data) and are used to monitor conditions, detect trends, and support operational decisions.

Key characteristics

In manufacturing and operations, an indicator commonly:

  • Is derived from raw data using a defined calculation, aggregation, or classification rule
  • Has clear units, context, and scope (for example, per line, per shift, per batch)
  • Describes a specific aspect of performance, quality, utilization, or compliance
  • Is used for monitoring and analysis, and may feed into higher-level KPIs

Examples include:

  • Average cycle time per work center over a shift
  • First-pass yield for a product family in a day
  • Machine availability percentage for a line in the last hour
  • Number of deviations opened in a week, grouped by type

Indicators vs raw data and KPIs

In models such as ISO 22400 for manufacturing operations management:

  • Raw data are basic measurements or events (for example, sensor readings, start/stop timestamps, counts) without additional processing.
  • Indicators are context-enriched or calculated values derived from raw data (for example, utilization rate, mean time between failures, scrap ratio).
  • Key Performance Indicators (KPIs) are a subset of indicators selected as especially important for tracking business or operational objectives and are often used for formal reporting.

In practice, whether a metric is treated as a general indicator or as a KPI depends on local governance, management focus, and how it is used in decision-making, not just on the formula.

Operational usage in manufacturing systems

Indicators appear across OT and IT systems such as MES, historians, SCADA, and analytics platforms. They may be:

  • Calculated in real time for dashboards and shop floor visibility
  • Stored for historical analysis, trend evaluation, and investigations
  • Used as inputs to composite metrics like Overall Equipment Effectiveness (OEE)
  • Aligned to data models or standards (for example, ISA-95 role- or level-based views)

Clear definition and governance of indicators are important for consistent use across sites, systems, and reports, especially in regulated environments where traceability of calculations and versions may be required.

Common confusion

  • Indicator vs KPI: All KPIs are indicators, but not all indicators are KPIs. Indicators become KPIs when they are explicitly selected and governed for critical performance tracking.
  • Indicator vs raw measurement: A single sensor reading (for example, temperature at a timestamp) is raw data. An indicator applies logic or context (for example, average temperature during a batch, or percentage of time within a specified range).
  • Indicator vs alarm: An alarm is a notification based on a condition or threshold. The underlying monitored value is often an indicator, while the alarm is the event triggered when that indicator crosses defined limits.

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