International Boat Industry – June-July 2019

(Wang) #1

64 JUNE–JULY 2019 | International Boat Industry ibinews.com


Strategy & Finance


PROFILE | OCEANCO


 Oceanco’s 109m Bravo Eugenia, built in
2019 with exterior design by Nuvolari Lenard

C


hange always means leaving
your comfort zone and Dutch
superyacht maker Oceanco is
good at that. In 2015, it outsourced all
of its internal and external logistics to a
Rotterdam-area transport company. In a
related move, Oceanco is now overseeing
a massive digital transformation that
began in 2017 and may be completed
before 2023.
The Herculean undertaking has
revealed both the pitfalls and benefits
of embracing a more efficient, future-
proof ICT strategy. It is change Oceanco
embraces as standing still often equals
falling behind.
Until 2017, electronic data storage
and retrieval “ran parallel to our business
operations, instead of being integrated
into them,” says Jaap Kouwenhoven,
Oceanco’s Knowledge & Innovation
director. As Oceanco morphed from
a matrix organisation into one in
which each yacht has its own project

supporting integrated applications, makes
it possible to see 3D models of spaces and
objects, learn about their status, degree of
completion, scheduled date of installation
etc. If you see a lamp modeled, you click on
it to see its size, voltage, amount of lumen,
delivery and installation date and from
which warehouse the lamp will come.”
The ship and yacht building sectors
“have one thing in common,” says Geert
Schouten of ICT Strategy. “Millions
are lost in the search for the right
information. About 30% of all work in
new-build, conversion and maintenance
projects consist of unnecessary searching.
Searching and more searching for data.”
He adds that many maritime
companies with vast databases resist
change and remain strangers to the digital
transformation. They use Word, Excel, PDF
and “other non-suitable data processors,”
he says. “Searching for the right data is
then needlessly complex. How can you
know for certain if your Word document is

THE DUTCH BUILDER’S RADICAL NEW DATA-DRIVEN IT SYSTEM ‘YACHTBUILDER’ IS SET
TO TRANSFORM THE WAY IT BUILDS ITS INCREASINGLY LARGE AND COMPLEX BOATS

WORDS: ROBERT WIELAARD

Oceanco makes ‘efficiency step’


into future-proof ICT strategy


organisation, Oceanco made IT a business
enabler and enhancer.
With the help of ICT Strategy – whose
Shipbuilder software handles large data
volumes of maritime companies – it built
and keeps developing its Yachtbuilder
program, a Shipbuilder derivative.
Crucially, Yachtbuilder is a data-driven
IT system, not a document-driven one.
“It means data is entered only once and in
only one place. So, it is always up to date,”
says Kouwenhoven. “In a document-driven
system, duplicate documents can end up in
different places and different versions.”
Oceanco’s emerging data-driven IT
eco-system supports a yacht’s construction


  • from the commercial, design and build
    phases up to fleet support and beyond. It
    prevents multiple inputs and covers the
    entire lifecycle of a yacht, down to the
    smallest details.
    “We are talking about many
    thousands of items,” Kouwenhoven
    says. “Yachtbuilder, together with other


 IT manager Marek Misiewicz has
seen a big rise in Oceanco data users

 Oceanco’s Aquijo (85m)
under constuction

Photo: Tom van Oossanen
Free download pdf