Automation should make life easier.
But for many print and manufacturing businesses, it’s done the opposite.
➤ Disconnected systems.
➤ Rigid workflows.
➤ Data that looks impressive on paper but tells you nothing useful when it matters.
That’s exactly the kind of operational chaos Daryl Davis, CTO and VP of Operations at Innovaic, spends his time untangling.
Automation built around people - not platforms
Daryl works at the intersection of technology, production reality, and human behaviour. His focus isn’t on forcing businesses to adapt to software – it’s on designing automation that fits how teams already work, while removing the friction that slows them down.
From print production workflows to complex manufacturing environments, Daryl helps businesses move away from brittle systems and toward flexible, scalable operations that can actually grow.
If your current setup relies on workarounds, manual checks, or “that one person who knows how it all fits together,” you’re not alone – and you’re not broken. You’re just overdue for a better architecture.
Cutting through rigid systems and messy handoffs
Many of the conversations Daryl has start the same way:
“Our MIS doesn’t reflect reality.”
“We’re automated… but still rekeying everything.”
“The data’s there, but we can’t trust it.”
“Every change feels risky.”
Daryl’s approach is grounded and practical. He looks at where information enters your business, how it moves, where it breaks, and what actually needs to be automated – versus what’s just adding noise.
The result isn’t more complexity. It’s clarity.
➤ Clearer handoffs.
➤ Cleaner data.
➤ Workflows that support production instead of fighting it.
Let’s talk at Dscoop Edge Rockies
If you’re attending Dscoop Edge Rockies and wrestling with rigid systems, misaligned workflows, or automation that never quite delivered on its promise, Daryl will be there and ready to talk.
➤ No sales pitch.
➤ No buzzwords.
➤ Just real conversations about what’s working, what isn’t, and what could be done differently.
📍 Find the Innovaic team at Booth 515
Sometimes the biggest breakthrough isn’t a new tool – it’s a better way of thinking about how everything connects.