By David Hicks, John Alford, Ralph Canale
Before beginning to work on improving plant performance, we frequently have to help clients address equipment reliability issues, which slows down transformation efforts. Baseline stability is required to effectively reduce waste, provide stability to production output, and continuously improve production processes. Machines and equipment must be well-maintained for processes to be capable and in control.
For example, a company might be readying itself for sale, with management limiting anything that seems like discretionary spending to boost earnings. Or, as often happens, a great mechanic was promoted to maintenance manager, but he didn’t receive the training or support to effectively manage the department.
Doing more with less is an unrealistic and ineffective maintenance strategy. No operation is immune to the short-term focus and excessive emphasis on maximising profits that underlie decisions to shortchange maintenance. Benefits of improving your maintenance practices include reduced injury rates, reduced defects, higher first-pass yield, and increased asset utilization, which is only the beginning.
Manufacturing leaders must recognize that the costs of an effective maintenance program, and preventive maintenance specifically, are small when compared to the cost of major breakdowns, material losses, and poor quality.
Eliminating such costs starts with an assessment of a plant’s current maintenance program, which we will explore in detail in a future post. The maintenance assessment guides the development of a thought-out, structured improvement plan to make the transition from reactive to preventative maintenance work and, ultimately, to predictive practices.
Supply Chain Management
Operational Excellence
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