
Michael Lippig
is Business Development Manager of IDCON INC.,
Further information is available by contacting info@idcon.com
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A Maintenance Management Article by Michael Lippig
The Conundrum
Conceptually, losing weight is a matter of eating less and exercising
more. However, most attempts usually fail and we often gain weight. Similarly,
healthy maintenance practices are very basic. Yet again, most organizations
fail to apply them successfully. Success or failure with a weight loss
plan has many elements in common with the application of sound maintenance
principles and may help us avoid some common traps and failures. This
maintenance management article will hopefully provide some guidance.
Maintenance Management and Weight Loss
Most of us want to lose weight several times in a lifetime. The usual
pattern is either to reduce caloric intake (eat less) or increase our
overall metabolic level (exercise more) or a combination of both. We further
wow to stick to our plan (discipline). Together these principles represent
the weight loss concept; eat less, exercise more, and be disciplined about
it! Just as simple as the concept for weight loss is the concept of good
maintenance. We must prevent maintenance from occurring (exercise). We
must identify problems early (eat less) and we must plan our work and
work our plan (be disciplined). Yet, so many plants struggle with adhering
to sound, simple maintenance practices.
Why We Fail
The statistics are cruel; 95% of weight loss effort based on dieting alone,
fail within 3-5 years. While I can’t produce statistics for maintenance
management, common sense tells me that they would be fairly similar.
Among the most common causes cited for failure are:
- Reliance on only one measure.
- Making temporary changes but failing to address the long term behavior
that produced the present condition.
- Overcomplicating the plan to change.
- Failure to recognize or correct a resource balance or attitude of
which the current state is the outcome.
- Over reliance on technology or a silver bullet.
- Trying to do it on your own.
Even after scrutinizing this list closely, it would be hard to find an
item that did not apply to both maintenance improvement and weight loss
success. While there are hundreds of ways to go about improvement, there
are several important junctions and turns you should not miss on the road
to sound maintenance and weight loss practices. Let’s look at them
in turn.
Recognize the Need
First and foremost we must recognize collectively as an organization that
we are over weight. It time to acknowledge that our trouser are not shrinking
slightly in every wash. Denial is the first obstacle to overcome. Too
many times have I wondered over the PM actions prompting crafts people
to do on-the-run-inspections of belts and couplings better guarded and
inaccessible than Fort Knox. Yet the same plant’s management and
craftspeople indignantly defend their preventive maintenance program as
“very good” or “better than most others’”.
Such attitudes and misconceptions often run very deep and many of these
plants are hard to persuade to change their ways, even after you tell
them that preventive maintenance has an ROI of 100 - 1000%, or that an
effective planner can be as productive as five craftspeople. In such situations,
I feel like I’m standing on a busy street corner in New York City
trying vigorously to give away perfectly good $100 bills, without success.
Create Vision, Mission, and Goals
This weight problem may be absolutely clear in your mind, but make sure
that you have significant support within management and frontline layers
of the organization before your continue. It is too hard to slug it alone.
Try to be the sparkplug instead of the piston! Many organizations have
success with taking key people in management AND the front line on discovery
visits to other organizations. After the organization has acknowledged
the need and completed a self examination, you are part of the way toward
the second step, quantify your gap and establish a vision, a future state
that you will always want to reach for.
Most of us could not imagine a weight loss program without a scale to
know when have reached our goal. Yet, many plants and plant managers embark
on maintenance improvement without having defined good maintenance. This
goes to the core of the matter. If we do not know how to define good maintenance,
how will we know when we reach it?
Another big challenge with the mission, vision and the goals is making
them all as public as possible; to include and involve many stakeholders.
It is so much easier to quietly renege on your plan to yourself, than
in front of your friends, family, or colleagues. Communicate with and
involve and people around you. Then, if your co-workers see you popping
those chocolate bars and sodas all day, they are much more likely to put
a lock on the fridge and help you succeed. Broad involvement will likely
also provide a reality check for your planning.
Identify Key Success Proxies
At this juncture, you have a mission, a crew that is inspired, aware and
wants to go places. The next thing to do is to identify success proxies.
Proxy means the power or authority to act for another, which is exactly
what success proxies will do. They are the processes, procedures or actions
that drive the result the organization strives for. For people following
the famous Atkins diet, no sugar and staying away from carbohydrate rich
foods like pasta, rice, and bread are success proxies. Maintenance success
proxies are qualified best practices such as precision alignment and dynamic
balancing for all rotating elements, filtering lubricants, conducting
root cause problem elimination, and plan all work before it’s scheduled.
When you identify success proxies for craftspeople, you soon see that
some relate to documentation and management other to execution and follow
up, thus engaging all layers of the organization in meaningful activities
that all directly act for another; the global success measures for the
organization. These measures typically describe output, quality and cost.
Think of proxy drivers as value added activities on steroids.
An excellent way of identifying these success proxies is to have a detailed
best practices audit done in your organization. There are many organizations
providing such services to industry. The outcome of such an assessment
will be a comprehensive mapping of best practices organized by process,
craft skills, organizational area or similar. Sometimes, but not always,
it will also identify associated metrics for each practice. Basing your
improvement plan on a detailed best practice map, yields other benefits
too. First, your plan will be relevant and close to the people who must
make the changes, craftspeople, operators and supervisors. Second, you
are specifying what needs to be done, yet leaving room for the frontline
to use their trade skills to decide how best accomplish it. Third, by
comparing best practices with actual practices, you automatically identify
and correct the long term reason you are where you are. Finally, you are
also making your improvements on a broad base, thus ensuring better resilience
against failure, allowing all people to contribute their strengths while
recognizing the good practices already in place.
Some people ague that you can map your processes internally instead of
hiring and external consultant. They are right, you can! A couple of words
of caution though! It takes a lot of persistence and time to identify,
define and benchmark best practices. If you benchmark your maintenance
function alone or as a small group, arm yourself with lots of time, initiative
and pray that your superiors have the vision and patience to see you through.
Ask yourself, if you were trying to lose weight, would you start by re-writing
the nutritional or exercise guide? Of course I’m biased toward using
an outside professional. What you need is a comprehensive audit providing
a richly detailed, honest comparison of where you are and where you could
be. Time and time again, we have seen internal audits scoring themselves
twice as high as the independent outsider would. Fig 1 demonstrates a
partial such document for part of the process of planning and scheduling.
The right hand side shows where you are, the left where you could be.
Please contact me if you need a more detailed sample and description of
this document
Best Practices Actual Plant Practices
III. BacklogBacklog Documentation12. Documented definitions and backlog
work process flow are available and well disseminated. III. Backlog Score
50Backlog Documentation12 Backlog management processes are not documented
well. Nor are they widely available or understood by maintenance craftspeople
or managers.
Backlog Execution13. Work order backlog is reviewed jointly by operations
and maintenance throughout the plant. 14. Backlog is categorized by area,
skills, hold codes, daily/weekly and shutdown/ outage. 15. Backlog is
reviewed weekly by Operations and Maintenance:o By skills/crafts or as
appropriate to the organizationo By age16. Work orders statuses (in backlogs)
are updated automatically when parts arrive for “awaiting parts”
status work orders. Backlog Execution13 The plant does review the backlog
jointly in all areas.14 The CMMS system have many sorting capabilities,
but few areas use the management tools available in CMMS to sort the backlog.15
The backlog is reviewed weekly by operations and maintenance. The backlog
is not always sorted by age and the correct priority but the plant does
a good job of reviewing work orders. Many work orders in the backlog are
unplanned, which prevents thorough review.16 Though the CMMS does have
this capability, it is not used.
| Best Practices |
Actual Plant Practices |
III. Backlog
Backlog Documentation
12. Documented definitions and backlog work process
flow are available and well disseminated. |
III. Backlog Score
50
Backlog Documentation
12 Backlog management processes are not documented
well. Nor are they widely available or understood by maintenance
craftspeople or managers.
|
Backlog Execution
13. Work order backlog is reviewed jointly
by operations and maintenance throughout the plant.
14. Backlog is categorized by area, skills,
hold codes, daily/weekly and shutdown/ outage.
15. Backlog is reviewed weekly by Operations
and Maintenance:
o By skills/crafts or as appropriate
to the organization
o By age
16. Work orders statuses (in backlogs)
are updated automatically when parts arrive for “awaiting
parts” status work orders. |
Backlog Execution
13 The plant does review the backlog
jointly in all areas.
14 The CMMS system have many sorting
capabilities, but few areas use the management tools available in
CMMS to sort the backlog.
15 The backlog is reviewed weekly by
operations and maintenance. The backlog is not always sorted by
age and the correct priority but the plant does a good job of reviewing
work orders. Many work orders in the backlog are unplanned, which
prevents thorough review.
16 Though the CMMS does have this capability,
it is not used. |
Figure 1. Extract from
best practices document showing, planning and scheduling, backlog documentation
and execution. The left hand shows best practice, the right, actual plant
practice.
Measure Success Proxies Metrics
By definition, if you focus on doing the right things, weight loss and
the good maintenance results will follow, else, they were not the right
things. It then follows logically, that you use metrics based on the success
proxies to track performance. The percent completion of established pm
rounds, percent of rotating equipment aligned and balanced to specs feel
more relevant and close to a journeyman, than does the Overall Equipment
Efficiency (OEE). Likewise, the net amount of carbs and calories you have
consumed and burnt, feel like a more relevant day to day measure to the
dieter, than does the ultimate and distant goal of X pounds of weight
loss. For the Atkins dieter, the performance measure is to have a maximum
of 20 quality carbs per day. In the plant, your challenge is to build
a hierarchy of relevant indicators reflecting the work that drives your
organization toward success.
The discipline of sales management has long used the concepts of success
proxies and their associated metrics to create sales forecasts and measure
progress. The breakdown can look as follows: Say on average it takes 10
cold calls to make a sale worth $8,000 on average 8 weeks after the call.
Therefore, to sell $100,000 in a month, we need to make 130 canvass calls
8 week before we can close 13 sales of $8,000 each.
Below is a simple example of a model focusing the organization on the
right processes instead of the end result. It contains all the essential
elements of maintenance and illustrates how they interact. The focus must
be on the success proxies, things you can affect hour by hour of your
day. When you do these things right, the record productions will be there,
over and over again.

Figure 2, Productivity
improvement circle showing the essential elements of maintenance and their
interaction with each other. This process represents a success proxy.
Conclusion
After putting the appropriate success proxies and select associated metrics
in your plan, do schedule several reviews to be able to fine tune your
plan and re-distribute resources as needed. Also, make sure that you plan
for the long term. Our weight gain and the current status of our plant
developed over a long time, so the solution must also be one for the long
term. If you think of this as a “project”, you set yourself
up for failure, for by definition, a project has a defined end. What you
need above everything is long term sustainable change, a process, a new
way of living. I hope the advice and information shared in this article
will to some small measure help you, whether you are seeking to improve
you maintenance, or reduce your weight.
Please feel free to contact me regarding this article,
I do enjoy the feedback whether you agree or disagree.
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