Baden-Württemberg is pouring fresh state money into its effort to digitize the country’s industrial backbone. On Saturday, Economy Minister Nicole Hoffmeister-Kraut officially opened the Digital Hub Region Stuttgart at the Centre for Digitalisation (ZD.BB) in Böblingen, handing over a funding cheque worth €500,000.
The grant adds to a longer commitment: since 2018, the state has pumped about €20 million into comparable digitalisation initiatives. The new hub aims to reach roughly 1,000 companies by 2027, guiding them through the adoption of modern technologies.
Three technological fields take centre stage at the Stuttgart hub: artificial intelligence, cybersecurity and virtual reality. Such centres act as bridges between local small and medium-sized enterprises and specialised expertise—exactly the kind of flexible, tech-forward working model that many Mittelstand firms now need.
Bavaria is also leaning on public support. The state has announced fresh calls under its “Digitalisation” funding line (BayVFP) for 2026, targeting communication networks, electronic systems and data science. A key condition: projects must be collaborative, involving at least two partners.
One concrete example shows how such schemes can deliver results. The company ecsec GmbH used an earlier round of funding to develop eID solutions. Experts, however, advise reaching out early—applications should be submitted before the actual project gets underway.
Beyond state aid, the technical security of existing systems is drawing growing attention. Service providers like HELDELE now offer specialised audits for Microsoft 365 environments, designed to close security gaps, optimise licence costs and bring transparency to hybrid work setups.
Job advertisements reflect the trend. Current listings for IT administrators in Saxony openly advertise home-office options and modern fringe benefits. Data-management platforms such as PRO.FILE are meanwhile being adopted by industrial firms to centralise data handling and boost collaboration.
On 30 June, Berlin will host the “Transferale” festival—a day aimed at connecting universities with companies. Discussions will centre on artificial intelligence applications and partnerships as foundations for tomorrow’s workplace.
At several industry conferences in June, technologies for data forking were presented. These allow parallel testing and safe error correction in regulated environments. The underlying message is unambiguous: without stable, flexible IT infrastructure, digital work simply cannot function.










