Digital Work Instructions: How to Go Paperless Without Losing Control

Most factories don’t stay paper-based because they love paper.

They stay paper-based because every attempt to digitise work instructions tends to create a new problem: people stop trusting the system.

The usual failure modes look like this:

  • There are multiple versions of the same instruction.
  • Supervisors don’t know which revision is current.
  • Training records and “who acknowledged what” are missing or scattered.
  • Audits turn into a scramble to prove what was in effect on a specific date.

Paperless doesn’t mean uncontrolled

The goal isn’t “no paper”. The goal is controlled work instructions that are easy to access on the floor and hard to misuse.

A practical digital work instruction (OWI) system usually needs:

  • Revision control (with history)
  • Approvals (who can release a new revision)
  • Distribution control (make the current version easy to find)
  • Sign-off / acknowledgement (proof people saw the change)
  • Audit trail + evidence (attachments, photos, records)

What “good” looks like on the shop floor

  • A QR code at the workstation opens the correct instruction for that operation.
  • Operators can view photos and checkpoints, not just text.
  • Supervisors can push an updated revision without printing and chasing paper.
  • Everyone can answer: “Which version was active last Tuesday?”

Common trap: dumping PDFs into SharePoint

SharePoint (or a file share) can store documents, but it doesn’t automatically solve:

  • workflow approvals
  • acknowledgement tracking
  • operator-friendly presentation
  • fast floor access

Where NS-OWI fits

NS-OWI is designed for managing online work instructions with controlled revisions, easy access, and audit-ready history.

If you’re already thinking about training compliance as well, this pairs naturally with NS-TMS (Training Management System) so instruction updates can be tied to competence and retraining.

Quick self-check: are you ready?

  • Do you have multiple versions of work instructions in circulation?
  • Do you rely on “tribal knowledge” to keep processes consistent?
  • Can you prove who was trained or who acknowledged a change?
  • Would you be confident answering an auditor’s question about revision history?

If the answer is “not really”, you don’t need a massive MES to start. You need controlled instructions and a simple rollout process that sticks.

Contact Nick’s Software if you want a quick Phase 1 plan (what to digitise first, how to roll it out, and how to keep it controlled).