
The point of view of the LEAS–Guttroff collaboration.
The pace of industrial innovation has never been faster. New materials, new technologies and new market needs are drastically reducing the time that separates an idea from its industrial realization. In this scenario, time to market is no longer just an operational metric, but a strategic lever that directly affects the competitiveness of manufacturing companies.
Reducing time to market means being more reactive, intercepting opportunities earlier and better responding to the needs of different sectors, often with very specific requirements. But speeding up doesn't simply mean "doing it first." It means doing better from the start, avoiding slowdowns, rework, and late decisions that emerge when complexity is not governed.
It is precisely from this awareness that the collaboration between LEAS and Guttroff was born: the idea that, in a context of increasingly rapid innovation, no single skill is enough, while a coordinated ecosystem can make the difference in terms of speed, quality and solidity of solutions.
The traditional model based on single suppliers is now showing its limits. Each actor can excel in his or her field, but when skills are not orchestrated by a shared process vision, the time is longer. Interfaces increase, responsibilities fragment and the project loses momentum precisely in the most critical phases.

Industrial ecosystems are created to meet this challenge. Bringing together complementary skills and solutions within a coordinated structure allows production processes to be designed in an integrated way from the earliest stages. Automation, software, data, artificial intelligence, and process engineering work in parallel, not sequentially.
This approach significantly reduces the time of:
- concept and feasibility
- Design and engineering
- industrialization and production
In an increasingly cross-sectoral industrial world, in which similar solutions are declined in different application contexts, the ability to adapt quickly becomes a distinctive element. Ecosystems make it possible to capitalize on existing skills, combine them and transfer them quickly between sectors, maintaining consistency and quality.
The LEAS-Guttroff collaboration fits exactly into this logic: not to expand a product catalog, but to reduce customers' time to market, pooling complementary skills and a shared vision of the production process. The goal is to enable manufacturers to be the first to respond to the market, without compromising reliability, sustainability and a long-term vision. Ultimately, the competitive advantage does not belong to those who run faster in isolation, but to those who know how to orchestrate different skills to transform innovation into concrete industrial results, in the right time.








