Introduction: Why This Guide Exists
Written for service directors, field operations managers, and leadership teams at machinery manufacturers, OEMs, and distributors who manage field service operations. If your team services the machines your company has sold and relies on spreadsheets, emails, phone calls, or disconnected systems to keep service running, you're not alone. As installed machine fleets grow and customer expectations rise, these processes become increasingly difficult to scale.
Field service management software helps organisations improve technician productivity, increase visibility into machines and service history, reduce response times, and deliver a better customer experience. But with dozens of solutions on the market, knowing what to look for can be challenging.
This guide explains the key capabilities, evaluation criteria, and buying considerations that matter most when selecting field service software for industrial machinery businesses.
Executive Summary: Why After-Sales Service Is the Most Undermonetised Part of Your Business
Most machinery OEMs are leaving revenue on the table. Not because demand is not there. Machines break, customers need service, parts need replacing. The problem is that the processes to capture that revenue do not exist in any structured form. Service requests come in through email. Dispatch runs on a whiteboard or a spreadsheet. Parts get ordered by phone. The service history for a machine sold eight years ago lives in someone's inbox, if it lives anywhere at all.
A machinery manufacturer with 300 machines in the field and no structured service programme typically captures around a third of the revenue those machines could generate through service contracts, parts sales, and planned maintenance. The other two-thirds goes to independent service organisations, or simply does not get spent because requesting service from the OEM is too slow and too opaque for customers to bother.
Turmec, a waste management machinery manufacturer with customers across Australia, the UK, Ireland, and the EU, faced exactly this. Manual after-sales processes were generating costly dispatch errors (sending the wrong parts to Australia carries a real return cost), and the team had no real-time view of what was happening in the field. After implementing structured field service management software, they started generating additional monthly revenue through after-sales they already owned but were not systematically capturing, while cutting parts dispatch errors at the same time.
The shift requires getting three things right: visibility into your installed base, structure around how service requests arrive and get resolved, and tools that make your technicians more effective on site. Purpose-built field service software handles all three. This guide explains what that means, what to look for, and how to choose the right solution for a machinery business.
Who Should Read This Guide
This guide is written for machinery manufacturers, OEMs, machine distributors, and system integrators who manage external field service: they send technicians to customer sites to install, maintain, or repair machines they have sold.
It applies if one or more of the following is true for your business. Your installed base has grown to the point where tracking machines across customer sites in a spreadsheet is no longer working. You dispatch technicians but have no real-time view of who is doing what or where things stand. Your customers receive service but have no visibility into their tickets, and they call your team for updates. Your after-sales revenue is not growing in line with your installed base.
If you manage internal factory maintenance rather than external service operations, the Makula CMMS buying guide covers that use case. The two products are different by design, and Section 4 of this guide explains the distinction directly.
Key Challenges: Six Problems That Slow Down Machinery OEMs in After-Sales
Every machinery OEM and distributor is different, but the same six problems come up consistently. They compound: poor installed base visibility makes dispatch harder, poor dispatch worsens the customer experience, and a poor customer experience reduces the likelihood of contract renewals. Knowing which of these is most acute for your business is the starting point for any software evaluation.
1. You don't know what machines are where
Installed base records are the foundation of after-sales service. Without them, you cannot tell a customer which version of a component their machine uses, you cannot plan preventive maintenance, and you cannot build service contracts because you do not know what you are contracting on. Most machinery OEMs manage this data across some combination of ERP exports, spreadsheets, and the memory of long-serving staff. When someone leaves, the data gap becomes immediately visible.
2. Service is reactive by default
Break-fix service (responding after something fails) is the default model because it requires no planning. It is also the most expensive model to run and the least satisfying for customers. A machine fails at a critical production moment, the customer is frustrated, the technician is dispatched in emergency mode, and everyone's week gets harder. Planned preventive maintenance and service contracts do not require more resource than reactive service. They require better organisation and the data to know when to intervene.
3. Field operations are fragmented
Döinghaus, a German manufacturer of precision ultrasonic cutting equipment, ran their field service on Excel before moving to a structured platform. That dependency confined technicians largely to factory-based operations and made scaling impossible as demand grew. Scheduling on one tool, service reports on paper, customer communication by phone, parts orders by email: nothing talks to anything else, data gets lost in the gaps, and technicians arrive on site unprepared.
4. Customers don't know what's happening
After a machine fails and a service request is made, the customer typically has no visibility into what happens next. They do not know if the ticket was received, who is assigned, when to expect a technician, or what the diagnosis was. So they call. Then call again. That inbound load is a real cost: it takes your service team time to answer questions they could avoid entirely by giving customers a direct view of their ticket status, machine history, and documentation.
5. Knowledge leaves with your people
Experienced field technicians carry knowledge that is not written down anywhere. They know which machines have recurring faults, which customer sites have constraints, which configuration variations cause which failure modes. When they retire or move on, that knowledge goes with them. Younger technicians take longer to diagnose problems, make more repeat visits, and cost more per service event until they have accumulated equivalent experience. The gap is predictable and, with the right tools, addressable before it becomes critical.
6. Distributors can't support the customers they've sold to
If you sell through a dealer or distributor network, you face a problem that direct-sales manufacturers do not. Your distributor sold the machine and took the margin, but when that machine needs service, they often lack the documentation, the parts visibility, or the system access to handle it properly. The call comes back to you. You end up supporting customers your distributors were supposed to manage, at your cost, with no credit for the effort.
Field Service Software, CMMS, EAM, and ERP: What Does a Machinery OEM Actually Need?
This question comes up in almost every buying process. The four categories overlap in places, but they are built for different problems and different users. Getting the answer wrong means buying something that requires heavy customisation to approximate what you actually need.
What Each Type of Software Is Built For
ERP systems (SAP, Microsoft Dynamics, Sage) manage the financial and operational backbone of a business: procurement, invoicing, HR, financial reporting. They are not built for field service workflows. SAP has an FSM module and Dynamics 365 has a Field Service product, but both require significant configuration to handle machinery-specific needs like installed base tracking, machine-linked ticketing, and technician dispatch with full asset context. For most mid-market machinery OEMs, the implementation cost and complexity are disproportionate to the outcome.
CMMS software manages internal maintenance operations. If you have a factory floor with equipment you maintain in-house, a CMMS is the right tool. It is inward-facing: technicians use it on the shop floor to manage work orders, log inspections, and track spare parts for internal assets. It does not manage service for the machines you have sold to customers. Makula offers both a CMMS and a field service platform for companies that need to run both, with a clear product boundary between them.
EAM (Enterprise Asset Management) is CMMS at enterprise scale. It is mostly used by large asset-heavy organisations like utilities or infrastructure operators managing thousands of internal assets through their full lifecycle from procurement to decommissioning. Most mid-market machinery OEMs are not in this category.
Purpose-built field service software for machinery OEMs manages your external service operations: everything that happens to machines after they leave your facility and reach a customer site. The machine is the central object. Every ticket, every technician visit, every parts order, every customer interaction links to a specific asset in a specific location with a specific history. This is structurally different from how generic FSM tools work.
Why Generic Field Service Tools Fall Short for Machinery OEMs
Salesforce Field Service, Microsoft Dynamics Field Service, and scheduling-first tools like Fieldpulse and Praxedo are built primarily for service industries where the job is the primary object: HVAC maintenance, plumbing, facilities management, utility repairs. In simple words: they work from a ticket, not from an asset. For a machinery manufacturer, the service context is the machine: its configuration, its history, its documentation, its serial number, its relationship to the customer's production line. A tool that does not have that relationship at its core requires you to build the machine context on top, which is expensive and never fully complete.
Why Purpose Built Field Service Software Matters
Makula Field Service Management software is built exclusively for machinery OEMs and distributors. Unlike generic tools which require heavy customization, every workflow in Makula is already configured for your industry:
- Asset, customer, and machine history relation is set up from the start, so you instantly see which customer owns which machine and its complete service history.
- The customer portal is integrated, giving access through QR codes on machines, allowing service requests and direct spare part ordering without additional IT projects.
- All industry specific workflows such as preventive maintenance scheduling, ticket handling, and spare part management are ready to use from day one.
With generic field service software, companies often need to hire IT teams or consultants just to shape the system into something usable. These projects are costly, time consuming, and must be repeated every time processes change.
What Field Service Software Does: The Seven Solution Areas
Purpose-built field service software for machinery OEMs solves seven interconnected problem areas. Each has its own deep-dive guide linked below. This section gives you a brief overview on how OEMs tackle the key challenges we discussed above.
Installed Base and Asset Lifecycle Management
Every machine you have ever sold, where it is, what version it is, who services it, and what has happened to it: all in one place, linked to every service event. This is the foundation. Without it, service contracts are guesswork, preventive maintenance is not possible, and customer-specific support is always slower than it should be.
Read the full guide to installed base management.
Smart Scheduling, Dispatch and Work Order Management
From the moment a service request arrives to the moment a technician closes the job: creating the work order, assigning the right person, tracking the schedule, and managing the priority queue. For machinery OEMs dispatching across multiple regions or countries, real-time visibility into who is doing what is not optional. It is the difference between a well-run service operation and organised chaos.
Read the full guide to scheduling and dispatch.
Mobile-First Field Execution and Workflow Automation
What happens when the technician arrives on site matters as much as the dispatch decision that sent them there. The right platform gives technicians access to the machine's full history, documentation, and checklists from their phone, including offline, because factory floors do not always have reliable connectivity. Digital service forms replace paper reports and feed accurate data back to the system the same day the job is completed.
Read the full guide to mobile field execution.
AI-Powered Knowledge and Remote Service Resolution
Two problems, one solution area. The knowledge experienced technicians accumulate over years: the AI Maintenance Copilot captures it from documentation and service notes and makes it searchable, so a junior technician on site can find the same answer a senior technician would have given. Separately, customers and distributors can resolve common issues through the customer portal using the same knowledge base, without raising a ticket at all.
Read the full guide to AI-powered service resolution.
Customer Self-Service, Engagement and Support
A customer portal that gives buyers access to their machine documentation, ticket history, service schedules, and spare parts ordering, without calling your team. Customers can reach their portal by scanning a QR code on the machine itself, which makes spare parts ordering and service requests possible directly at the point of need. Behind the portal, a structured help desk processes tickets, assigns them, and tracks them to resolution. Döinghaus now has around 10 major customers logging issues directly through the platform. Their service team sees every open issue in one view, without managing a single email thread.
Read the full guide to customer self-service.
Grow After-Sales Service Revenue
Service contracts, preventive maintenance programmes, and spare parts sales through the customer portal. This is the commercial case for structured field service: turning after-sales from a cost the business absorbs into a revenue line it builds. Turmec now generates additional monthly sales through Makula, coming from the installed base they already owned but were not systematically monetising before.
Read the full guide to after-sales revenue.
Service Performance Analytics and Reporting
First-time fix rate, mean time to respond, SLA compliance, technician utilisation, revenue per service contract: the numbers that show whether your after-sales operation is improving or drifting. A dashboard built for field service managers in machinery businesses, not a generic analytics product that needs configuration before it shows anything useful.
Read the full guide to service analytics.
The Core Value of Makula Field Service Management Software
Makula Field Service Management software was designed specifically for machinery manufacturers and distributors. Its core value lies in connecting customers, machines, and service operations in one place.
- Asset-First Approach: Every service interaction (tickets, work orders, spare parts usage) is tied directly to the right machine in your installed base.
- Customer Transparency: With a built-in customer portal, your clients can view their machines, documentation, and service history, creating trust and reducing support requests.
- Proactive Service: Makula enables preventive maintenance scheduling, so you never miss recurring service opportunities and customers experience less downtime and you can sell more on-site service.
- Efficient Operations: Dispatch technicians with full visibility of schedules and workload. Technicians receive tasks on their mobile app, complete them with checklists, and capture service data instantly.
- Integrated Workflow: Connect Makula to your ERP and CRM so that customer records, machine data, and financial reporting flow seamlessly across your business.
- Revenue Growth: Standardize service contracts, increase spare parts sales, and strengthen long-term customer relationships through better lifecycle management.
What Changes by Role in Purpose-Built FSM Software
Good field service software does different things for different people. Here is what each role gains, and what gets harder to ignore if you delay the decision.
After-Sales Service Director
The service director's job is improving service quality and growing service revenue, usually without adding headcount. The main constraint is visibility: without a clear picture of what is in the field, what is being serviced, and what is being missed, both goals are difficult to pursue. A structured FSM platform gives the service director a real-time view across the whole operation: which customers have outstanding issues, which technicians are over or under capacity, which machines generate the most service cost, and which contracts are coming up for renewal. That data does not replace judgment. It makes judgment faster and better-grounded.
Read the full guide for after-sales service directors.
Service Operations Manager
The operations manager owns dispatch. Getting the right technician to the right job with the right information at the right time is the problem, simply stated. A scheduling platform with real-time technician visibility, priority-based dispatch, and machine-linked work orders replaces the whiteboard and the morning briefing phone call. Döinghaus noted that service tour planning became noticeably faster after implementation, and their team gained a clear view of customer issues without chasing updates across email.
Read the full guide for service operations managers.
Field Technician
The technician arrives on site with everything on their phone: machine history, open tickets for this customer, relevant documentation, the checklist for this specific job type, parts that should already be on the van. They complete the work, fill in the digital service report on site, collect the customer's signature, and close the work order. The history updates the same day. No paperwork sitting in the van, no data entered from memory three days later.
Read the full guide for field technicians.
Service Sales Manager
Service contracts, renewal management, spare parts revenue: these belong to service sales. The installed base is the starting point: a complete record of every machine in the field, its service history, and whether it is under a contract. Without that data, service sales runs on gut feel and spreadsheets. With it, renewal conversations become specific, upsell opportunities are visible, and spare parts orders come through a structured channel rather than a one-off email.
Read the full guide for service sales managers.
Spare Parts and Inventory Teams
Parts teams in machinery businesses deal with a specific problem: customers order the wrong component because they do not know exactly which machine configuration they have, or which version of a part applies to their serial number. A machine-centric platform connects parts orders directly to the installed base record, so the customer is ordering against their specific machine, not against a generic catalogue. That reduces incorrect orders, cuts the cost of returns, and shortens the time between request and delivery.
Read the full guide for spare parts and inventory teams.
Industries Makula Field Service Serves: Categorised by Equipment Type
Makula's Field Service Managment platform is used by machinery businesses across six main sectors. Each has specific service characteristics: how often maintenance events occur, how complex the installed base is, what role distributors play in service delivery, and what customers expect from self-service access.
Packaging Machinery
Packaging lines are high-utilisation assets where unplanned downtime carries significant cost for customers. Preventive maintenance programmes and fast technician response are standard expectations. Installed base records need to capture machine configuration and line integration detail, not just serial numbers.
Read more on how Makula works for packaging machinery.
Tooling Machinery
Precision tooling equipment typically has long maintenance cycles but demands exact documentation for warranty and compliance purposes. The distributor layer is often complex, with dealers selling into verticals where the OEM has limited direct contact with the end user.
Read more on how Makula works for tooling machinery.
Construction Machinery
Construction machinery distributors service equipment across geographically spread sites, often in locations with limited connectivity. Offline mobile capability is a practical requirement here, not an optional feature.
Read more on how Makula works for construction machinery.
Robotics and Automation
Automation equipment is deeply integrated into production processes, which makes unplanned downtime disproportionately expensive. Remote diagnosis before dispatching a technician is particularly valuable, and AI-assisted knowledge bases become more useful as machine configurations grow in complexity.
Read more on how Makula works for robotics and automation.
System Integrators
System integrators manage installed bases across multiple machine brands and suppliers. The service platform needs to handle different documentation structures, different service intervals, and different customer relationships across those brands. A machine-centric system handles this better than a job-centric one.
Read more on how Makula works for system integrators.
Textile and Printing
Textile and printing equipment runs in production environments where service windows are narrow and resolution speed matters. Service contract management and proactive scheduling are important for maintaining customer relationships in this sector.
Read more on how Makula works for textile and printing.
How Field Service Software Connects With Your Existing Systems
The first question most IT directors ask during evaluation is whether the software integrates with their ERP. The short answer is yes. The longer answer is worth understanding before you go into any vendor conversation.
Think of it this way: your ERP is the financial backbone of the business. A field service platform is the service layer that sits on top of it. The ERP manages money, procurement, and transactions. The field service platform manages the machine relationship, the service workflow, and the customer-facing process. The two systems share specific data (customer records, invoice triggers, parts costs) but they are not competing for the same ground. The integration is a data bridge, not a replacement of either system.
Makula connects with SAP, Microsoft Dynamics 365, Sage and other ERP platforms. The most common integration points cover customer records (syncing from ERP so your service team works from the same account data), parts and inventory data (cost and availability feeding into service workflows), and invoice generation (service events in Makula triggering billing in ERP). The depth of integration depends on your setup, and Makula's implementation team scopes this with your IT contacts before contract.
One point worth raising for businesses on Microsoft stacks: many machinery OEMs already use Dynamics 365 for ERP and get asked by their Microsoft account manager whether Dynamics 365 Field Service covers the service use case. It handles scheduling and work order management at a basic level, but it is not machine-centric. Installed base management, a customer-facing machine portal, and AI-assisted service resolution are not built in. Adding them requires custom development, and that work often costs more than a purpose-built tool.
The same pattern applies to SAP. SAP Field Service Management exists, but at a price point and implementation timeline that puts it out of reach for most mid-market machinery OEMs. The relevant question in any evaluation is not just whether the software can connect with your ERP. It is what that connection costs and who maintains it.
Integrating Makula Field Service Into Your IT Landscape
Makula Field Service Management software connects seamlessly with your existing systems and does not require you to rip out what you already have in place. Instead, it acts as a smart service layer that sits on top of your ERP system. This ensures your teams can manage service operations without duplicating work or creating new silos.
How Integration Works:
- Asset Data: Transfer key asset details such as serial numbers, machine names, and custom fields (e.g., location or configuration) directly from your ERP into Makula. This ensures that your installed base is always accurate and up to date.
- Customer Data: Sync customer records seamlessly, including names, addresses, contact details, and custom fields such as region or SLA level. Your teams always have the right customer context at hand without re-entering information.
- Documentation: Migrate technical manuals, compliance documents, and drawings from systems like SharePoint into Makula. By centralizing documents, you give customers and technicians direct access to the right resources at the right time.
- Work Orders & Tickets
Completed service tickets and work orders flow automatically from Makula back into your ERP system. This enables streamlined invoicing, accurate reporting, and end-to-end traceability.
Flexible Setup Options: You can connect Makula Field Service and ERP through modern APIs or simple CSV imports, depending on your IT maturity.
See Makula's full integration overview.
The Benefits of Cloud-Based Software with Zero IT Overhead
Makula is fully cloud-based and hosted in GDPR-compliant data centres in Germany, which matters for European machinery businesses managing customer and machine data under EU data regulations. There is no on-premise installation, no server management, and no IT overhead to maintain. Updates roll out automatically. Most customers go from contract to live in a matter of days, not months, because the platform is pre-configured for machinery OEM workflows and does not require a system integrator to set up.
Building the Business Case for Field Service Software
Software investments need justification. For field service software, the case typically comes from three directions: revenue that is not currently being captured, costs being absorbed unnecessarily, and customer retention that is quietly at risk.
On revenue: the starting point is your installed base. If you have 200 machines in the field and none of them are under a formal service contract, you have 200 opportunities to build recurring income. The mechanics of capturing it (identifying the right machines, approaching the right customers, managing contracts once they are signed) all require the kind of structure that a field service platform provides.
On cost: the clearest savings come from reducing repeat service visits and parts dispatch errors. A technician who arrives without the right information makes a second trip. A parts team that dispatches based on an incorrect description ships the wrong item, absorbs the return, and schedules another visit. Turmec pointed to meaningful savings from error reduction alone. At their scale, with customers across four continents, a wrong dispatch to Australia is not a trivial line item.
On retention: machinery customers cite after-sales service quality as a factor in repeat purchase decisions. The service experience you deliver today has a direct effect on whether the next machine order goes to you or a competitor. Improving response times, giving customers visibility into their tickets, and shifting to proactive maintenance is an investment in your sales pipeline, not only your service department.
What the Numbers Look Like in Practice
Based on Makula's data across machinery OEM customers, the impact of a structured field service platform typically shows up in four areas.
Technician productivity increases by approximately 10% when technicians receive clear work orders on their mobile app, have full machine history available on site, and capture service data digitally rather than on paper. More jobs get completed per technician per day, which reduces the labour cost per service event and frees capacity for additional billable work.
Help desk and backoffice productivity increases by up to 15% when customer portal self-service reduces inbound call volume and a structured ticketing system replaces email-based request management. The same team handles more at a higher quality without growing headcount.
Spare parts revenue grows by approximately 10% when customers can self-order parts through their machine-specific portal view. Ordering against the correct installed configuration reduces incorrect orders, and the ordering process itself becomes faster and less dependent on your support team to handle.
A fourth opportunity is less often quantified but real: some Makula customers have introduced a subscription model for digital machine access, charging customers for portal access, extended documentation, and advanced service features. Figures vary, but the model is live with customers at around €1,000 per machine per year.
"Since implementing Makula in June 2023, we have seen a dramatic reduction in errors and a significant boost to our after-sales efficiency. This has not only improved customer satisfaction but has also generated additional revenue through monthly sales."
- Robert Thornton, Sales Director, Turmec
Read the full case study.
The figures above come from Makula's customer data. Your specific numbers depend on your installed base size, current service volumes, how much of your installed base has active contracts, and where your parts dispatch process breaks down most often. Estimate the impact for your business using our customized ROI calculator.
Knowing the potential return is useful. Knowing which metrics to track from day one of implementation is what tells you whether you are actually getting there. See the field service KPIs that matter for machinery OEMs.
How to Evaluate Field Service Software as a Machinery OEM
Most machinery OEMs approach software evaluation by sending a requirements document to three or four vendors and comparing responses. This rarely produces a good outcome because vendors write proposals to match the document, not to demonstrate how their tool actually performs for your specific use case.
A better approach: before talking to any vendor, get clear on which of the six problems in the Key Challenges section of this buying guide is most acute for your business right now. If you have no installed base visibility, that is the starting point. Not analytics or scheduling. If your biggest pain is customer service volume and your team is overwhelmed with inbound calls, the customer portal and ticketing system are the priority features to evaluate. Knowing which problem you are solving first changes what you look for in a demo and how you judge whether a vendor can actually help.
In vendor conversations, ask for a demonstration using your own data or a realistic equivalent, not a polished walkthrough of a perfect scenario. Ask how long implementation takes and what it requires from your team. Ask what the ERP integration looks like and whether that is included in the contract or scoped separately. Ask for references from companies similar to yours in size, sector, and geography.
Makula works with machinery manufacturers and distributors across Europe, including Turmec, Döinghaus, Swiss Can AG, and the Glave Group. Implementations typically go live within days to a few weeks, and the platform requires no dedicated IT project to configure for standard machinery OEM workflows.
Read more on what our customers have to say about their experience using Makula.
The three most common reasons machinery OEMs delay this decision are readiness, adoption risk, and implementation complexity.
On readiness: if your after-sales is running on spreadsheets and email, you are not less ready than the companies that have already made this change. You are further behind them.
On adoption: the platforms that survive in machinery businesses are the ones that make the technician's day easier, not harder.
On implementation: a vendor that needs six months to get you live is not the right fit for your business size.
Here’s what our customers say about us

Since implementing Makula in June 2023, we've seen a dramatic reduction in errors and a significant boost to our after-sales efficiency. Makula has streamlined our processes, allowing us to provide faster and more accurate service to our customers. This has not only improved customer satisfaction but has also generated additional revenue through monthly sales.


The efficiency and clarity that Makula brought to our after-sales operation is unparalleled. Our team is more aligned, our customers are happier, and our revenue is on the rise. Highly recommended!
.avif)
The overview of all the latest offers, spare part orders, invoices, and service reports, helps the customer enormously. The software has really developed very well and Makula is doing a great job. The service is great, if I need something, there is always an answer from Karina very quickly.

We have had a great experience with the Makula team from the sales process to onboarding and then helping with day to day support if needed. The team are always quick to come back to us and provide solutions to requests. The platform is easy to access and navigate and Makula have already incorporated most of the functionality we need. This enables us to support our customers with the tools and resources they need to order spares, access machine information or book service visits.


The software is very user-friendly and intuitive to use. The team assists very intensively with the transformation process and onboarding. We have managed to integrate the tool into our daily processes, thereby promoting our internal coordination and ultimately our spare parts sales.

.avif)
Thanks to the implementation of Makula, we have achieved full traceability of all customer requests. We consolidated all after-sales interactions into a single platform, which has significantly improved our response times and operational efficiency

.avif)
Since we started using Makula, we've gained a broader perspective on the evolving world of digital after-sales. The software has seamlessly blended with our processes, enhancing operations and providing fresh insights. It's a gentle reminder of the portential avenues open for SME machine suppliers in this digital era.


Makula's platform has been a game-changer for us. Onboarding was incredibly smooth, and the system's ease of use has significantly improved our after-sales service efficiency. Our technicians now save several hours each day by reducing the time spent on phone calls and searching through scattered documents.

.avif)
Being a user of 30+ machine brands, I can firmly state that Makula's after-sales platform is transformative. It doesn't just enhance and streamline communication with OEMs—it revolutionises it, driving unparalleled customer satisfaction in an increasingly complex and dynamic production

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