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Stalking the
elusive maintenance quality beast
By Joel Levitt, Author
20 Steps to World Class Maintenance and
Lean Maintenance in a Nutshell
Quality control is hard to define in maintenance. Everyone knows
when its missing but its hard to tell when its there. The usual
definition in production is quality is to consistently produce
parts with low variation. Maintenance quality usually deals with
the consequences of the repair not the repair itself. The
emotional context of the response is also tied up in maintenance
quality (a surly, dirty maintenance technician is low quality
even if their work is superb) .
In some circumstances maintenance quality might = Reduced
downtime
In others: maintenance quality = Reduced scrap
maintenance quality = Faster start-up
maintenance quality = Quicker response
maintenance quality = No repeat repairs
maintenance quality = Keep unit in spec
maintenance quality = No interruptions
maintenance quality = Satisfied user
Every maintenance operation should define quality in a way to be
useful to their operating environment. The late W.E Demming was
considered the quality guru for the last generation of Japanese
quality experts. In fact, the quality award in Japan today is
the Demming award. He had much to say about quality in
manufacturing. The surprise is that Deming's points apply to
maintenance also. We just have to see what quality is in our
plant, site or division.
W.E. Deming's Fourteen Points: First discussed in 1950! See
20 Steps to World Class Maintenance section in first chapter
for additional discussion.
1. Create constancy of purpose toward improvement of product and
services with the aim to stay competitive, stay in business and
provide stable employment. Maintenance deterioration usually
takes a long time. Any effective maintenance strategy must also
have a long horizon. Resources must be allocated for good
maintenance practice and not taken away with every bump in the
quarterly results.
2. Adopt the new philosophy. Awaken to the challenge. Take
responsibility for and leadership in change. Our maintenance
departments often are the last areas of the organization to
realize the need for change. The department is dragged kicking
and screaming into the new corporate culture. Looking toward the
future I see a maintenance department providing leadership for
the rest of the organization. No where else is high quality so
closely related to safety, high self esteem. Quality is
intertwined with the very history and culture of the crafts.
3. Cease dependence on inspection to achieve quality. Build
quality in. Quality comes from skilled and knowledgeable
mechanics given good tools, adequate materials and enough time
to do the job. Quality comes from choosing well designed
equipment that doesn't need much maintenance. What maintenance
the equipment does need is easy to perform and get to. Quality
comes from pride in a job well done. Lead by example with
ceaseless training, coaching and systems analysis. When defects
occur concentrate on the system that delivered the defect rather
then having a preoccupation with finger pointing.
4. End the practice of awarding business on the basis of price
alone. Instead, minimize total cost. Move toward a single source
for each item and on a long term relationship of loyalty and
trust. A revolution in purchasing is at hand. More and more
organizations are looking at the total costs of a part or the
life cycle cost of a machine. Some economies are false and hurt
the overall goals of the organization. A low cost bearing might
be the most expensive bearing you ever buy.
5. Improve constantly and forever the system of production and
service, to improve quality and productivity, and thus
constantly reduce costs. In today's market the way it used to be
done is never going to be good enough for the future. All
improvements and growth flow from dissatisfaction with the
status quo. Build measurement into the maintenance information
system. Continually strive to improve both the visible and the
invisible performance.
6. Institute training on the job. Training should be mandatory
for mechanics the way it is for doctors or teachers. Our
factories and facilities have today's levels of technology and
our maintenance people have yesterday's skill sets. To maintain
effectiveness we must train to bridge to gap. Special effort
should be given to the people on your staff who deliver the on
the job training. These informal trainers need instruction in
how to teach adults. They also need back-up materials to deliver
the best possible training.
7. Institute leadership. The aim of supervision should be to
help people and machines do a better job. The supervisor should
serve their subordinates by removing the impediments from
production. The supervisor should insure that the mechanic, the
tools, the parts and the unit to be serviced converge at the
same time. The supervisor should also be the lightning rod for
disruptions from management and production (unless there is an
emergency the mechanic will not be disturbed because
interruptions reduce quality and worker satisfaction).
8. Drive out fear, so everyone may work effectively for the
company. Fear of the lose of a job interferes with the
mechanic's ability to concentrate. Fear gets in the way of the
pride a mechanic feels in a job well done. A flexible and highly
productive department where people can shift from trade to
trade, maintenance to construction to production is the safest
one.
9. Breakdown the barriers between departments. Everyone's
expertise is needed for constant improvement. With scarce
resources we must include knowledge from other departments and
groups to come up with the best overall solution for the
organization. Maintenance problems can get complex quickly with
financial, marketing, purchasing, quality and engineering
ramifications. The best solution to a problem might not be the
best maintenance solution (like run until destruction to fill an
important order). Information for the best solution might come
from another department and another expertise.
10. Eliminate slogans, exhortations and targets for the work
force asking for zero defects, new levels of production. Such
exhortations create adversary relationships. A bulk of the
problems for quality and production belong to the system not the
people. Stable processes create quality. Create stable processes
producing quality outputs and the people will feel the way the
slogan without cohersion and alienation.
11. Eliminate work standards, quotas, and management by
objectives (MBO). Work standards and quotas are associated with
management styles that treat the maintenance worker as someone
needing to be told exactly what to do and how long to take.
Standards are useful for scheduling and to communicate
management's expectations. It is difficult to not use them as a
production whip. That is a disaster in maintenance situations
because we want the mechanic to take the time needed to fix
everything they see (within reason!), not just the original job.
We must trust the mechanic to look out for our interests
particularly when we are not there. The problem with MBO is that
it focuses on visible, measurable aspects of maintenance. Many
of the real issues of maintenance concern aspects of the
environment that are hard to measure.
12. Remove the barriers that rob the worker, engineer of his/her
right of pride of workmanship. The responsibility of supervisors
must be shifted from numbers to quality and improvement.
Tradespeople must be allowed to feel pride in their jobs that
are well done. Maintenance managers and supervisors must not
allow anything to stand in the way of that pride.
13. Institute a vigorous program of education and self
improvement World class maintenance departments make a
commitment to invest 1-3% of their hours in training for all
maintenance workers. Technologies are changing skills must
change too. A world class auto manufacturer mandates 96 hours of
training per year for everyone. A high tech manufacturer
requires 110 hours.
14. Put everyone in the organization to work to accomplish the
transformation. This transformation is everyone's job. This
transformation requires the talents of all the employees. It
requires all of the talents of each person. When a hotel chain
had the housekeepers meet with the architects (for a new hotel)
the result was concrete suggestions to improve the designs that
reduced maintenance costs and improved the rooms for the
customers.
Deadly diseases and obstacles to success
1. Lack of constancy of purpose to plan product and service that
will have a market and keep a company in business and provide
jobs. Maintenance issues (like the wearing out and failure of a
compressor or boiler) take a long term to develop. Only an
equally long term view will be effective. A moving agenda for
the goals of maintenance work against the department.
2. The supposition that solving problems, automation, gadgets
and new machinery will transform industry. Maintenance problems
are people problems. The systems, attitudes and approaches are
at issue. The paradigm of maintenance as a necessary evil, or of
maintenance workers as grease monkey slobs must be transformed.
The transformation starts in the minds and hearts of the
maintenance department and then flows to the rest of the
organization..
3. Emphasis on short term profit, short term thinking feed by
fear of unfriendly takeover, and by a push from bankers and
owners for dividends. Top management will squeeze maintenance to
reduce costs below the level that is necessary to avoid
deterioration. The cost reduction is temporary, the asset will
deteriorate and long term integrity of the process will be
compromised. Maintenance requires long term planning and
commitment.
4. Evaluation of performance, merit rating, or annual review.
The question about annual reviews, performance rating is what
useful outcome flows from these procedures. In most cases the
production of a mechanic is more related by how much management
gets in their way rather than by their actual qualities. Annual
reviews rarely change behavior.
5. Mobility of managers and job hopping. In one beverage bottler
the average tenure of the maintenance manager was 22 months.
Some lasted as few as 9 months. Every one came with bright ideas
and wanted to prove themselves. The result was a complete lack
of focus on long term goals and plans. As each manager tried to
cut costs the negative results impact fell to the next player.
This job hopping in management without a master plan
dramatically exacerbates the short term view.
6. Management by use of only visible figures, with little or no
consideration of figures that are unknown or unknowable. For
example, when you invest in training for your maintenance crew
where does the increased asset show up? When, after spending
$100's of thousands in a long expensive trial and error
development process a firm finally develops expertise in a new
process. This expertise, this new asset is nowhere on the
balance sheet. It is important to measure and also to realize
that much of what goes on in maintenance is unknowable.
7. Hope for instant pudding. Change of fundamental processes
take time. In the current US culture it is hard to imagine
instituting a change in processes that could take 5 or 6 years.
In actuality if you start with a typical reactive maintenance
department it could take you 5 years or more to create a
proactive TPM type partnership in maintenance and production.
8. Search for examples. We think that if something worked in
another machine shop or foundry it will work in ours. Since
maintenance in factories has no strict rules examples from our
industry may not be useful or even relevant.
9. "Our problems are different." Actually many people's problems
are the same. In the PM area while no two plants will have the
same exact schedule the problems will be the same. In our public
sessions maintenance managers in widely different industries,
sizes, and sophistication marvel at the similarity of the
problems.
10. Poor teaching of statistical methods in industry. Industry
is just waking up to the value of statistical methods of
explaining what happens in the shop. Application of simple
statistics to PM or PCR intervals would improve effectiveness.
Simple relationships such as failures to PM's would show the
effectiveness of the frequency you have chosen. Statistics
replaces seat of pants reasoning, panic logic, historical
prejudices with testable and verifiable conclusions.
11. "Our trouble lies entirely within the work force." Your
production system is a stable system to produce a certain number
of defects. Changes in the work force are irrelevant to the
output. Only changes to the system can have an impact.
12. False starts with inadequate planning, top level support and
lack of follow through kill quality improvement transformation
in most places. Serious thought and planning are needed before
starting. Commitment must start in the highest levels is the
organization. Buy-in at each level must be earned, worked and
appreciated before proceeding to the next level.
13. "We installed quality control." The quality control is a way
of life. It is a daily diet. You don't install it you become it.
14. The unmanned computer is one of the dangers of wholesale
computerization of maintenance. The computer is a great tool
that like any great tool is frequently misapplied. Allow the
people to have their say and make sure the computer answers to
someone (a real person) and they can overrule the machine.
15. The supposition that it is only necessary to meet
specifications. Many of the important aspects of a component are
not included in the specifications. You never know which
attributes are important until you try changing vendors and find
out that your entire process depends on qualities of a
particular vendor's products that are not covered by the
specifications.
16. The fallacy of zero defects. Every system produces defects.
Ultra high quality requires enormous sample universes to
establish the defect rate.
17. Inadequate testing of prototypes. By starting manufacturing
on inadequately tested prototypes we strain the system of
improvements. There will be so much ground to cover before
everything stabilizes that the product will be half baked for a
long time. To leapfrog this phase exhaustive testing should be
built in.
18. "Anyone that comes to try to help us must understand all
about our business." The sad truth is that if the solution to
your problem was commonly known in your industry you would
probably know what to do.
Learn more about
Joel Levitt's training on CD here |
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