How to achieve adaptative, infrastructure-level automation in the lab

Contract Research Organizations (CROs) are faced with a multitude of challenges in today's fast-paced, ever-evolving industry. These challenges include meeting fluctuating client demands, integrating diverse workflows, and maintaining operational efficiency. As the industry scales up through mergers, acquisitions, and technological advancements, CROs are under pressure to standardize practices, optimize resources, and enhance data management to remain competitive.

Automation

Image Credit: Automata

automation, lab

To overcome these challenges, the need for infrastructure-level lab automation is key, as it offers flexibility, connectivity, and scalability. Such automation allows CROs to unify fragmented workflows across multiple sites and streamline processes, ultimately improving productivity and data accuracy. In this article, you will discover the LINQ platform, which provides a vendor-agnostic, end-to-end automated system able to integrate with existing lab infrastructure, thereby reducing manual interventions, increasing throughput, and ensuring the quality of results.

This article will also explore the benefits of adopting a flexible automation solution like LINQ, which supports a wide range of experimental needs and can scale with the demands of the CRO. By leveraging such technology, CROs can future-proof their operations, allowing them to adapt quickly to industry changes, reduce operational costs, and enhance the speed and accuracy of research and development processes. This approach not only boosts efficiency but also positions CROs to deliver better outcomes for their clients and the wider healthcare industry.

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About Automata

Born from a world-leading research lab, Automata is making total workflow automation accessible to labs frustrated by the limitations of their own environment.

Accelerating the innovation evolution

When two architects from Zaha Hadid’s research lab first approached robotics, their idea was to explore applications specific to architectural engineering.

But they soon discovered that modern automation wasn’t just unnecessarily complex – it was actively restricting innovation. And not just within their industry – within many others too. It was clear that robotic automation was a field where their combined experience in computational research and design could make a real difference. Assembling a team of industry experts, Automata was founded, with a clear aim: to enable new opportunities for innovation with automation.

A clearer path to progress

Automata’s focus narrowed on an industry where they felt their expertise could have the most impact – life sciences, and particularly within biolab environments.

Since then, the team has been working closely with leading pathology labs to pioneer protocols that enable labs to scale with precision

Automata Labs is the product of that philosophy – simplifying lab environments and empowering the people working tirelessly in the pursuit of progress.


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Last updated: Sep 5, 2024 at 9:40 AM

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