SMC works the way your shop works. Operators run jobs. Supervisors manage the floor. Nobody fills out a log.
What a transfer looks like
File
Selected
Encrypted
Delivered
Logged
Complete
For the operator
Before SMC, getting a program to the machine meant hunting down a USB drive, hoping it had the right revision, and plugging it in.
With SMC, the program is already there.
The operator selects the job from the SMC interface at the machine. SMC delivers the file. The machine runs.
No USB drive. No call to engineering. No manual log entry. No extra steps.
Find the right USB drive
Hope it has the correct revision
Plug it in
Run the job
Nobody logged anything
Select the job on screen
Run the job
SMC logged everything automatically
For the supervisor
The SMC dashboard gives supervisors a real-time view of the shop floor — which machines are active, which programs have been transferred, and a complete record of every file movement. Everything is logged automatically. Nothing requires manual entry.
See every machine, every active job, and transfer history at a glance.
Every file movement is recorded — file name, timestamp, operator, and destination machine. Automatically.
When your assessor asks for evidence, pull the report. It's already built.
"Your operators don't change how they work. Your supervisor doesn't add new administrative burden. The compliance record builds itself."
The point
Most compliance tools add work. They create new processes, new logins, new forms, new habits that people have to remember under production pressure.
SMC is built around the opposite principle.
The people on your floor don't know they're generating a CMMC audit trail. They're just running jobs.
Making parts
Meeting deadlines
Running quality jobs
File authentication
Transfer logging
Audit trail generation
Compliance evidence
A 30-minute demo walks through the operator interface, supervisor dashboard, and how SMC fits your specific controller mix.