Cora Systems Publishes Gartner-Based Analysis of Three Threats Stalling Manufacturing Progress in 2026
Cora Systems, a provider of Project Portfolio Management (PPM) and Strategic Portfolio Management software, has published a series of four editorial articles examining the findings of a February 2026 Gartner® report, 2026 Top Trends for Manufacturing CIOs: Challenges. The series is now available on the Cora Systems blog and provides a detailed analysis of the three headwinds that Gartner identifies as posing the greatest risk to manufacturing competitiveness over the next three years.
What the Gartner series covers
The four articles address distinct yet related threats, each with direct implications for how manufacturing organizations fund, prioritize, and execute their technology portfolios.
Manufacturing industry news: the 2026 Gartner trends reshaping the sector
Cora’s 2026 Gartner manufacturing industry trends analysis provides a sector-level summary of the Gartner report’s core findings. CIO priorities are shifting toward AI-enabled autonomy, with agentic AI, digital twins, and software-defined products driving operational decision-making. At the same time, rising IT costs, governance complexity, and geopolitical pressure are forcing manufacturers to balance rapid AI adoption against cost discipline, vendor risk management, and operational resilience. The article sets the strategic context for the deeper analysis that follows.
How compounded technical debt is stalling AI progress in manufacturing
Cora’s analysis of how compounded technical debt is stalling AI adoption in manufacturing focuses on what Gartner describes as a wall that manufacturers built themselves. Years of accumulated technical debt across IT, operational technology, and engineering technology systems have created infrastructure that was never designed to support machine learning, predictive analytics, or automated decision-making at scale.
Key findings covered in the article include:
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Only 7% of manufacturing organizations treat technical debt reduction as a top-three driver of modernization, even as 54% of manufacturing I&O leaders identify rapid debt accumulation as their top challenge.
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AI projects continue to underdeliver not because of flawed algorithms but because the underlying data pipelines are broken.
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Deferring modernization compounds costs over time. Organizations that skip integration, data standardization, and platform modernization cannot bolt AI onto a fragile foundation.
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Gartner recommends categorizing debt across five dimensions: maintainability, compatibility, portability, security, and performance efficiency, and embedding debt reduction into annual OKRs tied to measurable business outcomes.
For PMO leaders, the article identifies a specific pain point: project data, financial data, resource allocation, and risk registers living in separate disconnected systems. The hours spent manually assembling portfolio-level views are not a process problem. They are a technical debt problem.
How geopolitical disruption is reshaping manufacturing supply chains
Cora’s breakdown of geopolitical disruption and manufacturing supply chain fragmentation examines how tariffs, export controls, regional conflicts, and protectionist trade policies have made global supply chains more fragile and expensive. Manufacturers that relied on just-in-time operating models are under pressure to shift toward regional supply chains, larger inventories, and multi-sourcing strategies. These changes require higher investment, longer planning cycles, and more complex operational management.
The article covers how export restrictions on advanced technologies and semiconductors are creating new barriers for digital transformation and AI adoption, making geopolitical volatility a direct constraint on technology strategy. AI-enabled scenario planning is now a competitive requirement for manufacturing CIOs who need to model the impact of policy changes on materials sourcing, production costs, and portfolio priorities.
Gartner: ransomware attacks on manufacturing are now targeted, and the stakes have doubled
Cora’s article on ransomware attacks targeting manufacturing operations addresses the most operationally immediate threat. Manufacturing is the most targeted industry for ransomware globally, with a 56% to 61% year-over-year surge in attacks recorded between 2024 and 2025.
The threat model has shifted. Attackers are no longer running opportunistic spray-and-pray campaigns. They are running targeted extortion operations that encrypt production lines and exfiltrate sensitive intellectual property simultaneously, forcing manufacturers to pay even when backups exist. The article examines why Industry 4.0 connectivity has expanded the attack surface, how supplier relationships become vectors for plant floor intrusions, and what concrete steps organizations should take, including OT asset discovery, network segmentation between IT and plant systems, immutable backups, and regular incident response drills with operations teams.
Why Cora Systems published this analysis
Manufacturing PMO leaders and transformation executives are being asked to make high-stakes portfolio decisions in conditions of increasing volatility. Technical debt, cyber risk, and supply chain fragmentation are not separate problems. They interact. An organization with fragmented legacy systems is more vulnerable to ransomware. One operating on disconnected platforms cannot use AI to model supply chain disruption scenarios. The Gartner series on the Cora Systems blog connects these threads and offers structured frameworks for prioritization.
The full Gartner® 2026 Manufacturing Trends Report is available to download from Cora Systems at corasystems.com/gartner-2026-manufacturing-challenges.
About Cora Systems
Cora Systems provides Project Portfolio Management and Strategic Portfolio Management software to PMOs, transformation leaders, and capital project teams in manufacturing, aerospace and defense, government contracting, engineering and construction, and other complex industries. Cora helps organizations align project execution with strategic objectives, improve portfolio visibility, and manage risk at scale.
GARTNER is a trademark of Gartner, Inc. and/or its affiliates. Gartner does not endorse any vendor, product, or service depicted in its research publications and does not advise technology users to select only those vendors with the highest ratings or other designation. Gartner research publications consist of the opinions of Gartner’s Business and Technology organization and should not be construed as statements of fact. Gartner disclaims all warranties, expressed or implied, with respect to this research, including any warranties of merchantability or fitness for a particular purpose.
Gartner, 2026 Top Trends for Manufacturing CIOs: Challenges, By Brady Barnes, Simon Jacobson, Katell Thielemann, Chris Campbell, Bettina Tratz-Ryan, Sudip Pattanayak, Scot Kim, Jonathan Davenport, Kentaro Shikanai, Alexander Hoeppe, 18 February 2026.
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