Do You Have Maintenance Activities or Maintenance Solutions?
Sept. 18, 2018
When it comes to maintenance, you don’t want to confuse being busy with being effective. If you seem too busy, that could be a sign that you need to be more effective.
Let’s take a look at a few examples to illustrate this point.
Activity No. 1: Getting equipment running when it fails. Doing the oldest PMs between times.
- Effectiveness: Prioritizing work to prevent downtime in the first place. Fixing noncritical equipment is a lower priority than preventing critical equipment downtime.
Activity No. 2: Expanding the scope and detail of PM procedures to leave no stone unturned.
- Effectiveness: Adjusting the scope and detail of PM procedures based on a risk analysis to best answer the question of how to allocate resources.
Activity No. 3: Sending people to training because training is important.
- Effectiveness: Sending people to training that is targeted to the needs of their job.
Activity No. 4: Showing true dedication by chasing down missing drawings, manuals, or spare parts.
- Effectiveness: Ensuring all drawings and manuals are current and available, if they apply to anything that needs to operate. Assess spare parts inventory to remove spares that are no longer needed. Ensure spares kept in inventory are in usable condition.
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