A blog by Oleg Shilovitsky
Information & Comments about Engineering and Manufacturing Software

BOM and Product Data in Excel – What’s for Breakfast?

BOM and Product Data in Excel – What’s for Breakfast?
Oleg
Oleg
31 January, 2025 | 3 min for reading

Peter Druker said, “Culture eats strategy for breakfast and then stays hungry all day”. In many manufacturing companies, people store product data in Excel, folders, and zip files. It’s quick and easy, like fast food. But just like eating McDonald’s every day, it seems fine at first but causes big problems later for manufacturing processes, ordering of raw materials and broad range of production and supply chain issues.

The Fast Food Approach to Product Data

Engineers and manufacturers work hard and do what’s easiest. They put product data in spreadsheets and shared folders because it’s simple and familiar. The problem? No one is thinking about the big picture. Over time, this habit creates a mess of disconnected spreadsheets, lost files, and outdated information. Mechanical and electronic engineers send two Excels to procurement person and she needs to figure out why number of components is different (ah… mechanical parts and electronics are not identical.. )

This “fast food” approach may work for a while, but it leads to big problems. Procurement teams can’t find the latest part lists, supply chain teams chase missing data, and production teams get incorrect instructions, causing costly mistakes.

Why Short-Term Fixes Hurt Long-Term Strategy

The saying “Culture eats strategy for breakfast” means that daily habits and company culture can override even the best business plans. In product data management, short-term solutions—like using Excel instead of a real system—end up blocking long-term success.

Small daily choices, like saving BOMs in Excel or emailing zip files, pile up into a big, messy system. If companies don’t change these habits, their data becomes a nightmare to manage.

The Result? A Big Mess

Over time, companies end up with what I call “product data spaghetti”—a tangled, confusing mess that no one can sort out. As a colleague reminded me recently, “Don’t break spaghetti!” In other words, keep things structured and organized. When data is messy, operations, procurement, and supply chains all suffer.

Even if engineers create amazing designs, bad data management can stop those designs from ever reaching customers. Manufacturing companies need a clear, organized approach to product data because everything—from production to sales—depends on it.

What is my conclusion?

Stop the Fast Food Habit. Companies must rethink how they handle product data. Excel and zip files may seem easy, but they cause problems in the long run. A solid data strategy helps keep everything running smoothly.

Without a clear plan, even the best designs won’t turn into successful products. So stop feeding your company fast food data management. Invest in a system that keeps things organized, accurate, and ready for success.

Just my thoughts…

Happy Friday!

Best, Oleg

Disclaimer: I’m the co-founder and CEO of OpenBOM, a digital-thread platform providing cloud-native collaborative services including PDM, PLM, and ERP capabilities. With extensive experience in federated CAD-PDM and PLM architecture, I’m advocates for agile, open product models and cloud technologies in manufacturing. My opinion can be unintentionally biased

Recent Posts

Also on BeyondPLM

4 6
20 June, 2012

Well… It happened. Microsoft officially became “hardware company”. Keyboards, mice, even XBOX and Kinect… All these devices are in a...

4 May, 2025

Back in 1992, Bill Clinton’s campaign faced a tough political climate. His team needed a simple, focused message to cut...

25 January, 2019

It is not a secret that PLM has strong roots in engineering. PLM was born as an extension of CAD...

19 February, 2024

In the quest for operational efficiency and innovation, the concept of simplification has emerged as a strong trend across industries....

23 December, 2015

Excel is the world’s number 1 tool for PLM and BoM management. Excel is beloved by engineers for its simplicity, flexibility...

5 March, 2009

The development of game technologies is taking huge step forwards and is sometimes outperforming product development tools such as CAD,...

29 August, 2016

SAP is acquiring big data startup Altiscale for about $125M. Altiscale is developing technology to bring “Hadoop as a Service”....

23 March, 2018

Collaboration becomes increasingly important for manufacturing companies. Earlier this week, the news about Airbus deal with Google G-suite created some...

26 January, 2013

Data. Conversion. Interoperability. Translation. The discussion about these topics is endless in CAD/PLM world. Customers are looking for interoperability between...

Blogroll

To the top