Algorithm
Saves outrank likes (360Brew 2026)
Interest graph — niche authority rewarded
External links in body suppress reach
Post 2–3×/week max
Carousel · 9 slides
Save-worthy reference carousel
Slide-by-slide breakdown — format for Canva, 1080×1350px per slide.
SLIDE 01 — Hook
One missing part can delay a lunar mission by months.
Here's how ispace fixed that.
SLIDE 02 — The Problem
ispace is building lunar landers for Mission 3 (NET 2027).
Their AI&T team faced three compounding problems:
→ No full traceability across hardware workflows
→ US + Luxembourg + Japan on separate systems
→ Legacy ERP built for high-volume, low-mix production
SLIDE 03 — Wrong Tool
The core issue: they were using a tool built for the wrong job.
Traditional ERP assumes high volume, repeatable builds.
Lunar hardware is the opposite — low volume, high mix, constantly evolving. Every unit is essentially unique.
SLIDE 04 — The Fix
Boltline replaced their paper-based travelers with click-by-click digital work plans.
Every action. Every user. Every timestamp. Logged automatically.
SLIDE 05 — Real-Time Shop Floor
Tablets on the shop floor.
Engineers attach photos directly to steps as they complete them. No paper. No transcription lag. No lost records.
SLIDE 06 — Remote Monitoring
Colorado engineers now monitor ISO Class 7 clean room processes in Luxembourg — live — without stepping inside.
That's how you scale global hardware ops without flying people around.
SLIDE 07 — One Platform
US. Luxembourg. Japan.
Same platform. Same data. Same compliance baseline.
Multi-site becomes manageable when everyone's looking at the same screen.
SLIDE 08 — The Result
99.9% inventory accuracy on first count.
A multimillion-dollar flight hardware portfolio. Fully traced. First try.
SLIDE 09 — CTA
Save this for the next conversation about aerospace ERP.
→ Follow Boltline for more on manufacturing ops for complex hardware
→ Full case study: boltline.com/resources/case-studies/ispace-boosts-lunar-mission-success [link in first comment]
Caption: Most aerospace companies don't have full traceability — they just don't know it yet. Here's how ispace fixed that before Mission 3.
#AerospaceManufacturing #Traceability #LunarExploration #NewSpace #Manufacturing
Text Post 01
Most aerospace companies don't know what they have
Most aerospace companies don't have full inventory traceability.
They think they do. But they're relying on spreadsheets, tribal knowledge, and paper travelers that get lost between buildings.
ispace found this out while prepping for Mission 3 — a lunar mission targeting the far side of the Moon.
Here's what actually changed when they switched to Boltline:
1. Every action is logged — who did it, when, what the step was
2. Photos attached to work plans in real time from tablets on the shop floor
3. Three international sites (US/Luxembourg/Japan) on the same platform
4. Remote clean room monitoring without physical entry
5. Inventory count: 99.9% accuracy. First try.
This isn't a small operational improvement. For lunar hardware, traceability is flight safety.
What traceability gaps have you seen go unaddressed because "it's always been done this way"?
---
#AerospaceManufacturing #Manufacturing #Traceability #LunarMission #ispace
Text Post 02
Uncomfortable truth about aerospace ERP
Uncomfortable truth about ERP in aerospace:
Most of it was designed for high-volume, low-mix production.
Aerospace hardware is low-volume, high-mix, constantly iterating. The gap between "what ERP assumes" and "what aerospace teams actually do" is where errors live.
ispace ran into exactly this problem building lunar landers.
They were trying to squeeze complex hardware workflows into a system that couldn't represent them. Boltline gave them a platform built for this — configurable workflows, click-by-click traceability, real-time photo documentation.
The result: 99.9% accuracy on a multimillion-dollar inventory. First count.
If your team's traceability system was built for a different kind of manufacturing, you're not alone. But it's worth being honest about the gap.
---
#AerospaceManufacturing #ERP #OperationsManagement #SpaceIndustry