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The
future of Maintenance Management
Projected by Joel Levitt, President
Springfield Resources
Competence and
ignorance go hand in hand. Think about it. Skilled young workers
are highly competent in some aspects of the job and ignorant of
other aspects. This “out with the old and in with the new” is
not a new transition. How many automobile body shop workers can
use a hammer and anvil to make a new fender? How many
millwrights make their own tools anymore (wasn’t that how all
the old timers got started?).
This trend
accelerated mightily in the 90’s and into the 2000s. It changed
the maintenance skill landscape like the meteor that supposedly
made the dinosaurs extinct. A whole bunch of skill requirements
changed in a short decade. I think rate of change has slowed
down and in the next 20 years we may have the opportunity to
have a breather (well not actually a breather – the rate of
change has slowed from warp speed to sub-light speed).
Skill sets are
being lost. This is a lot like the way species are becoming
extinct. In some ways this is natural and has been happening
since the beginning of time. Some crafts are already extinct.
Others are on their way. The real issue is not to weep for what
is lost but rather look very closely at what is really needed to
run your plant now and in the future. Successful organizations
will be ruthless about training personnel in skill sets deemed
essential for the success of the enterprise.
There is a new
ingredient to the soup of change. The pressure to cut costs is
intense and will get worse (until everyone in China is middle
class, which might take a while). When the crunch comes to your
industry, if it hasn’t already, you rudely awaken and realize
that the lowest cost producer wins the game and you’re not it!
The losers will be acquired and brutally stripped to the bone or
just plain shuttered.
The problem for us
is that cutting out a good maintenance program does save money
in the short term. The punch line of the chain saw Al Dunlap
joke is that at some point the lack of a good program sets the
organization up for a rude fall. The fall is that they can’t
support their primary mission due to downtime and quality
variability. That mixed with the dwindling critical skill sets
means that only the most nimble, smart and light footed will
avoid the massacre.
Our mission,
should we decide to accept it, is to educate our top management
before the brink so that they start to appreciate and support
the nuances of a great maintenance program and how it will serve
them when the village is global. Our mission is to stop whining
about the good old days, get out of our offices and download the
mission critical skills from the maintenance masters still
around. Finally our mission is to nurture the next generation to
become men and women we can be proud of because they will be
masters of a world we can’t even imagine and won’t even see.
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