A system integrator is a company or specialized team that designs, implements, and maintains solutions that connect multiple hardware and software systems so they function as one coordinated environment. In industrial and regulated manufacturing, system integrators typically work across OT (shop-floor equipment and controls) and IT (business and enterprise systems).
Typical scope in manufacturing environments
In production and regulated operations, a system integrator commonly:
- Connects plant-floor equipment such as PLCs, machines, test stands, and data acquisition systems to higher-level systems
- Implements and configures MES, SCADA, historians, and interface layers to ERP, PLM, QMS, and LIMS
- Designs and deploys data flows for traceability, quality records, electronic travelers, and production reporting
- Builds custom interfaces, middleware, or APIs where standard connectors are not available
- Handles infrastructure elements such as networks, industrial PCs, edge gateways, and security controls in coordination with internal IT/OT teams
- Supports testing, validation, documentation, and handover into ongoing operations
System integrators may be independent firms, specialized divisions within large engineering companies, or internal integration teams inside a manufacturer.
What a system integrator is not
The term generally does not refer to:
- A single product vendor that only supplies software or hardware without taking responsibility for end-to-end integration
- A pure consulting firm that only provides strategy or assessments without technical implementation
- Routine maintenance contractors who service individual machines without managing cross-system design or data flows
Operational role in regulated industries
In regulated sectors such as aerospace, medical device, and defense manufacturing, system integrators often participate in:
- Designing data paths needed for traceability, audit evidence, and electronic records
- Configuring role-based access, segregation of duties, and secure data exchange between systems
- Supporting testing and documentation for system acceptance and change control
Common confusion
- System integrator vs. OEM: An OEM manufactures equipment or software products. A system integrator uses those products, plus others, to build a cohesive solution.
- System integrator vs. value-added reseller (VAR): A VAR primarily resells products with some added services. A system integrator typically assumes responsibility for architecture, integration, and long-term technical support of the combined system.
- System integrator vs. internal IT/OT department: Internal teams define requirements, standards, and ongoing operations. A system integrator often executes complex projects or specialized integrations under those guidelines.