5 Tactics to Turnaround a Reactive Maintenance Culture

The notifications keep rolling in and yourplant maintenanceteamisstretched thin to keep production in business.You know you need to get ahead of the madness, but thebreakdowns and ad hoc requestskeep taking precedence and the backlog is ever-growing. If you can relate to this situation, then it’stime to tackle some strategies to turn the situation around.In this article,we’ll cover thecauses of areactive maintenance culture andoutline several effectiveSAPplant maintenance strategies toget started on the path to reliability.

>Index

Challenges of a Reactive Maintenance Culture

Under-planning
Organizational Structure
Skilled Labor Shortage

5 Tactics to Build a Proactive Maintenance Culture

1. Free Up Your Existing Staff
2. Invest in Dedicated Functional Roles
3. Organize and Train for Success
4. Work on Data Quality and Capture
5. Establish Key Metrics

ATurnaround Story

How Sigga Can Help

Challengesof a Reactive Maintenance Culture

Whether you inherited a reactive maintenance culture when you took the job or fell into the reactive pattern due to labor shortages, as a maintenance manager, you are well aware that preventive maintenance can help you avoid breakdowns and will cost you less in the long run. But, as often the case, the urgency of priority break-fix work means all-hands-on-deck to get production lines back up. This comes at the expense of completing inspections and preventive work. Why do companies end up with a reactive maintenance culture?

>Under-planning

The lack of creating robust preventive maintenance plans is a common cause of reactive maintenance cultures. An incomplete set of planned work orders or worse yet, no planned work orders, results in preventive tasks NOT getting accomplished and a much higher propensity of equipment breakdowns.

According to theMarshall Institute, A MeasuredApproach to Uptime, “It is widely accepted in the maintenance industry that a well-planned Work Order is about 3 times less expensive than the same unplanned reactive Work Order, and that Emergency repairs may cost as much as 5 to 7 times more than planned work, which can obviously have a huge impact on the bottom line”.Considerthatthe cost impact is largely wasted timein boththe productionand maintenanceteams.

If preventive work orders are often not completed the first time, the cause could be that they are not sufficiently detailed to support assigning the right technician or with the right parts. Or, that the parts were not available as the inventory of parts was not checked when releasing the work order to be scheduled.

Another reason for preventivework not getting accomplished is the lack ofcoordinationwith productionto shut down the machine for the task.

Incomplete, inaccurate, or insufficientnumber of planned work ordersresults in wasting time andthe organizationlosing trust in theplanned work order criticality. The result is adownward spiral ofequipment deterioration and growth inbreakdowns and correctivemaintenance requirementsovercoming the abilityof the existing staff toaccomplish preventive work.

>Organizational Structure

Planning is often a part-time job of one or a few managers in the plant maintenance department. Given limited resources, even the planning process can take a back seat to the urgent day-to-day maintenance requirements.

For plant maintenance planning and work order management in SAP, the process can be especially tediousleading to offline workarounds to complete the work and as a result, poor quality and incomplete data in SAP.Many companies abandon the use of SAP PM altogether.

The lack of data in SAP, leads to a lack of data to support the planning function. History records providethe information needed to determine how long a maintenance task should take andhow frequently assets breakdown.A good preventive maintenance program requires good data to be effective.

According toDoc Palmer’s Maintenance Planning and Scheduling Handbook, “Implementing proper planning and scheduling can improve the productive maintenance time of a typical organization from 25-35% to 50-55% – almost doubling the ability to get work completed.”Given staffing shortages, optimizing the use of your current staff iscritical.

>Skilled Labor Shortage

Theskilled labor shortagehas been an issue for years and is only getting worse. It is becoming a critical issue for production and maintenance operations.ADeloitte studyfound that the “top business impact of pervasive job openings [is the] inability to maintain or increase production levels to satisfy growing customer demands. Sixty percent of respondents ranked the skills shortage as having a high or very high impact on productivity over the next three years.”

It is also a key driver of companies becoming more reactive in the maintenance function as the limited resources are spread thin to cover the workload. Even contract resources are challenging to hire and retain.

The overall cost impact of a higher proportion of reactive work can be significant to an SAP plant maintenance organization.From our whitepaper,Unleash the Power of SAP and Save, you can see how just a 30% shift of reactive maintenance to planned maintenance can save a company over 10% in direct maintenance costs, nonetheless the long-term impacts of greater equipment uptime and improved staff availability.

Maintain maintenance operations while changing the culture

5TacticstoBuild a ProactiveMaintenance Culture

Now, we know how wegot into a reactive state, how do we dig ourselves outwhilecovering the day-to-day maintenance requests?

1. Free Up Your Existing Staff

Withlimited resources, everyone’s time is valuable.Time wastes need to be eliminatedto free up resources to accomplish more work such as preventive tasks to reduce the backlog.One of the first things to do is awrench time evaluation.In order tounderstandwhere technicians are spending their time,the nature of delays,and time wastes.Then start to address the big drivers of inefficiency.

Providing technicians with a mobile device cuts out significant travel time and physical steps during the day. The technician can receive work orders at the job site and send notifications while staying at the site. A mobile work order app can also significantly reduce administrative tasks for the technicians and data entry staff as compared to using paper-based work orders. For example, cutting-out getting in line at a computer terminal to make entries.

Many administrative, repetitive tasks can be replaced with automation to free up resources for more valuable work.From planning to scheduling and completing maintenance tasks, today’s digital technologies are designed to create efficienciesso that the whole staffcanbe utilized in more effective ways.

According to McKinsey,“The average wrench time in the market is between 15 and 25%…we have seen companies increase wrench time 2.5x due to the digitization of maintenance processes.”

2. Invest in Dedicated Functional Roles

Good maintenance planning is key to making the shift.According toDoc Palmer, the author of Maintenance Planning and Scheduling Handbook, the benefit of good planning and scheduling can result in a 57% improvement in wrench time and up to 90% schedule compliance.

  • The planner. Take one of your most experienced technicians with a penchant for analytics to own the planning role. This person needs to be dedicated to planning and not be pulled off to deal with downtime events. The planner’s responsibilities include the analysis of failures and reviewing equipment manuals to create robust preventive maintenance plans and inspection procedures. They need to turn the plan into a robust set of work orders with the right details to drive first-time fix rates.
  • Reliability engineer. Consider hiring a reliability engineer especially if you have highly complex equipment. A reliability engineer can do a deeper evaluation of machinery, identify its weaknesses, and develop a robust preventive maintenance plan. In addition, they can possibly make engineering modifications or identify operating procedures to improve the equipment’s reliability. Often a good reliability engineer can generate savings of 6 to 8 times his salary in the first year.
  • Staff roles. Also, look to establish specific job roles or technical levels as applicable to ensure each technician can be successful with each work order assigned to them. The information on staff skill levels allows the planner to schedule the right technician for each work order to get the work done right the first time and in a shorter amount of time.

3. Organizeand Trainfor Success

Along with creatinga fewdedicated roles, it isimportant that all staff members have clear roles and responsibilities and see how they play a part in driving a preventivemaintenance culture.

Consider creatingseparate teams dedicated to different maintenance activities such as inspections, preventive work, and breakdown/corrective work teams. This not only sets you up for success in getting preventive work accomplished, but it also provides additional specialization in job roles. Rather than everyone being a “jack-of-all-trades”, specialization helps technicians become more proficient in their craft, and better understand how they contribute and are measured. And as we have already noted, specialization gets the work done right the first time and in a shorter amount of time.

If deep into reactive mode, your current staff is probably behind in training and skills up-leveling. Take the time to evaluate staff skills and provide time for training. Especially with the ever-growing sophistication of equipment, sensors, artificial intelligence, and more, technology holds the promise of greater productivity, if the staff knows how to use it. Mobile devices can support the ongoing training by providing immediate, easy access to manuals, checklists, videos and more. An Aruba study found that “89% want training anytime/anywhere they need to do their job.”

4. Work on Data Quality and Capture

It will be impossible for your dedicated planner to develop a robust maintenance plan without good data.And if you’ve been reactive for a long time, it is likely yourwork order system, like SAPPMdata is of poor quality.Data integrity is key to successful SAP plant maintenance, here’s a few steps to address data gaps:

  • Collect data by prioritizing the entry of complete data into the work order system. There needs to be one central repository on which the organization relies for the one-version-of-the-truth.
  • Keep data digital and keep it updated in the work order system in real-time. This means no more paper-based work orders or pulling data into excel spreadsheets on someone’s desktop hard drive. Utilize digital and mobile systems that integrate data entries in real-time into the work order system.
  • Structure data capture with software systems and apps that provide features to select from a list of choices such asdrop-downmenusforerror codes.Open text notescan result in 1000 reasons for a problem when theissue is something as simple as “part is not available”.
  • Analyze data by starting withyour most critical equipmentfirst. Pull data to build preventive plans,identifypartsrequired,andcreatebackup plans in case of an emergency.Evaluating data at the equipment level canalsosupport decisions to upgrade or replace “bad actors”that are requiring too many resources to maintain.
  • Collect more data by investing in predictive technologies likesensors.Theuse ofsmart plant maintenancetechnologieswill replacepreventivemaintenance tasks with predictive notifications of a change in conditions. Thiswillreduce the annual number of preventive interventionsto free up staffand increase asset reliability.

5. Establish Key Metrics

In order to prove to management and production that the shift is working, you need to establish and keep measuring the impact of the changes in structure and technology investments.

  • Wrench time. As we’ve already mentioned, a good place to start is to do a wrench time studyto understand your staff utilization and discover time wastestobereduced.
  • Downtime. Look at downtime to analyze equipmentfailures tolook for root causes of the failures and feed this into the preventive maintenance plans. This also becomes a key measure to keep production motivated to support the cause.Encourage the production team totreat the equipment in a way thatthetarget condition of being ready to run, clean,and well maintained is achieved.
  • Mean Time Between Failures (MTBF). Reporting on thelengtheningoftime intervals between downtime eventson key assets will furtherprove to production that your focus on preventive efforts is paying off.
  • Mean Time to Repair (MTTR). Like wrench time, MTTR helps to identify the efficiency of your maintenance staff as well as pinpoint problematic assets.
  • Overall Equipment Efficiency (OEE). With the production team,eventuallycollaborate to measurethis key metric ofequipment availability,performance,andquality.
  • Maintenance Effectiveness. In the beginning establish a baseline of your ratio ofwork accomplished by planned, corrective and breakdown tasks.If the starting ratio is20% planned and 80% corrective and breakdown, set milestones to progress towards an industry best-practice goal of 80% planned.Celebrate milestones with your staff to keep them motivated.

Shifting from a reactive maintenance culture to a proactive culture will take time and continued, steady efforts.The resulting impact will be well worth the effortfrom reducing downtime,increasingprofitability, andimproving staffutilizationand motivation.

To illustrate the impact of these5 successfultactics, here’s astory ofa turnaroundofaheavily ingrainedreactive maintenance culture.

Successful turnaround at Ingredion

>ATurnaroundStory

Rafael Padilha, The Director for Reliability and Continuous Improvement atIngredionhas been in the center of reorganizing maintenance organizations for success at several large production operations includingAmbev(a subsidiary of Anheuser-Busch), and Unilever. He found that change starts with establishing and gaining alignment across the organization to a few clear goals. The next step is to start the process with the help of technology to structure the work, improve communications, measure,and show results against the aligned metrics. Then take it to the next level.See more in our video summaries from the Webinarwith Rafael.

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>How Sigga Can Help

There’s no need to go it alone. Get help to turn around your reactive maintenance culture with a partner who has20 years of experience inestablishing proactivemaintenance processes withenterprise organizations. We have helpedcountlessmaintenance managersand reliabilityengineerstake control of their operations, digitize,and streamline maintenance processestoachievemeasurable productivity results.

We specialize inmobile apps and automation software for SAPPMand have deployed these solutions across manyindustry sectors, including Oil &amp Gas, Mining, and Manufacturing.

Sigga Mobile EAMis a proven mobile solution designed to digitize the activities of the maintenance and repair worker. The solution replaces tedious, manual paper-based processes with a direct interface to SAP for immediate access to manuals and repair instructions plus the ability to quickly create a notification and coordinate tasks.Sigga Warehouse and Inventoryextends the mobile benefits for further cross-organization collaboration benefits.

Sigga Planning &amp Schedulingenables the planner to replace tedious spreadsheet work with a solution to create a baseline schedule for maintenance and repair activities.The solution allows you to maintain data not housed in SAP such as levels of technician skills, detailedasset availability calendars, and willautomatically check inventory of parts and materials before recommending a schedule.

Talk tous abouthow we can helpyou turn arounda reactive maintenance culture. Success is quitepossible with the right solutions, processes, and support.

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>Learn more about Sigga and our digital and mobile solutions for SAP EAM.