Robotikbüro May 2026

"Before the bots, I spent four hours a week on printer jams, broken coffee machines, and hunting for adapters," says Markus Lenz, a product manager at a Stuttgart-based auto supplier. "Now, I spend those four hours sketching new ideas. The robots are boring. They do the boring stuff perfectly."

By [Author Name]

The morning coffee is brewed not by the intern, but by a silent, articulated arm. The printer paper is restocked by a rolling cube that navigates hallways via LIDAR. The monthly report? Compiled by an AI agent that cross-references sales data before a human has finished their first sip of espresso. robotikbüro

"The German Mittelstand [SMEs] has always viewed automation as a tool, not a threat," says Dr. Elena Voss, a workplace sociologist at RWTH Aachen. "There is a cultural concept of Ordnung (order) and Effizienz (efficiency). The Robotikbüro is simply the next logical step from the filing cabinet and the time clock." "Before the bots, I spent four hours a