01
Product documentation scattered across systems
Technical documentation, test certificates, material declarations, and change records exist in separate systems — PLM tools, ERP, SharePoint folders, and email. There is no single, complete view of any product's lifecycle documentation.
Skyjed's Asset Register brings all product documentation into a single, structured registry — complete, current, and accessible to every stakeholder who needs it.
02
Digital Product Passport readiness
Industrial and machinery products are entering the scope of the EU's Digital Product Passport. Manufacturers will be required to maintain structured, machine-readable lifecycle data — materials, emissions, repairability, and end-of-life documentation — for every in-scope product.
Skyjed's lifecycle documentation capabilities map directly to DPP requirements — manufacturers building this infrastructure now will be significantly ahead when enforcement arrives.
03
REACH and hazardous substances documentation
REACH requires that hazardous substance information is documented, communicated through the supply chain, and updated when product compositions change. Managing this at scale, across complex product portfolios, without structured tooling creates both compliance risk and operational burden.
Material composition and hazardous substance data structured within the product lifecycle — version-controlled, updated automatically when products change.
04
Engineering change management accountability
Product modifications, specification changes, and component substitutions require documented approval chains — for quality, safety, and regulatory reasons. In complex manufacturing environments, the accountability trail for engineering changes is often incomplete.
Every engineering change, specification update, and approval logged with full attribution and context — immutable and permanently retrievable.
05
Supply chain due diligence obligations
The EU Corporate Sustainability Due Diligence Directive (CSDDD) and sector-specific requirements are placing new obligations on manufacturers to document and evidence the sustainability and governance of their supply chains at the product and component level.
Supply chain and component-level documentation structured within the product record — building the traceability layer due diligence obligations require.
06
End-of-life documentation gaps
ESPR and the DPP specifically require manufacturers to document how products should be disassembled, repaired, and recycled at end-of-life. This information must be maintained throughout the product's commercial life — not added as an afterthought at discontinuation.
End-of-life documentation structured into the product lifecycle from the design stage — always current, always accessible to downstream users.
Product types Skyjed manages
Industrial machinery
Automotive components
Aerospace components
Electronic components
Chemical products
Mechanical components
Electrical assemblies
Hydraulic systems
Pneumatic products
Safety equipment
Sensors and IoT devices
Capital equipment