What Is an MES? Manufacturing Execution Systems Explained
An MES runs and tracks production on the shop floor. What MES means, what it does, and how it differs from ERP.
An MES (manufacturing execution system) is software that manages and monitors production on the shop floor in real time — scheduling, work orders, output, and visibility — bridging the gap between planning systems and the machines that make the product.
A manufacturing execution system (MES) is software that runs and tracks production on the shop floor — work orders, scheduling, machine and output data, and real-time visibility into what’s actually happening. CitrusWeb sees an MES as the layer that turns a factory floor from a black box into something you can see and steer in real time. If your operation runs on spreadsheets, whiteboards, and end-of-shift updates, an MES is what replaces the guesswork. (CitrusWeb builds an AI-native manufacturing platform around exactly this.)
What does MES stand for, and what does it do?
MES stands for manufacturing execution system. It manages execution on the floor: releasing and tracking work orders, scheduling production, capturing machine and output data, monitoring quality, and giving operators and managers real-time visibility into status and bottlenecks. Where a planning system decides what to make, the MES manages how it actually gets made — and tells you the moment something slips.
MES vs ERP: what’s the difference?
This is the question most manufacturers ask. ERP (enterprise resource planning) runs the business — finance, inventory, purchasing, and order management. MES runs the floor — production, scheduling, and real-time execution. They work together: ERP plans and the MES executes, feeding real production data back up. A simple way to remember it: ERP is the office, MES is the floor. CitrusWeb Works focuses on the floor as an AI-native manufacturing platform and
Why an MES matters
An MES turns reactive firefighting into proactive control. Real-time visibility means you catch schedule slips and downtime while you can still act, instead of discovering them at end of shift. The financial case is strong: AI-driven predictive maintenance — a capability modern, AI-native platforms add on top of MES basics — can cut equipment downtime by up to roughly 50% and maintenance costs 10–40% (McKinsey). For most manufacturers, downtime is the single biggest controllable cost.
Legacy MES vs modern, AI-native platforms
Traditional MES software is often decades old, expensive, and rigid — built for large enterprises and slow to change. Modern, AI-native platforms like CitrusWeb Works bring the same floor control to small and mid-size manufacturers, add AI insight on top, and are built to be customized to your line rather than forcing your line to fit the software. The capability that used to require an enterprise project is now within reach of a mid-size shop.
How to choose an MES
Start with the floor problems you most need to solve — visibility, scheduling, downtime, quality — and look for a system that fits your size and integrates with what you already run. Favor platforms that configure to your processes instead of demanding you rebuild around them, and weigh the total cost and length of implementation, not just the license. For many manufacturers, a modern AI-native platform beats a legacy enterprise MES on both fit and time-to-value.