Tuesday, March 8, 2016

Taking Care of Business


An ounce of prevention is worth a pound of cure.  Benjamin Franklin

We all want the equipment and systems we purchase to last for a long time.  It’s only fair right?  We spend months and sometimes years planning, coordinating and executing the purchase of material handling systems to make our business more efficient, increase our throughput while making our labor resources maximized.  But there are economic and procedural forces out there working against the long term health of your systems.

Economically, the pressure to deliver on profit and revenue growth expectations is great.  Shareholders expect you to hit your revenue and profit targets.  Operation Managers want to be successful and keep costs down.  However, the repercussions of our ambition to deliver good results oftentimes is the decision to eliminate or postpone investment in spare parts or planned maintenance. 

Spare parts are essential to keep your system running consistently.  We must identify the essential parts required to keep our systems running.  Specific parts should be on hand because they are a high wear item and others should be on hand because the lead time to get it replaced would be operationally prohibitive.   Nothing can be built to last forever so it makes sense to develop the inventory of parts to replace when necessary.  Use your system provider for help in determining what parts should be on hand. 

Procedurally, most companies have established planned maintenance checks and services for the various equipment in their facilities.  However, sometimes these checks and services are ignored or not completed properly.   Every piece of equipment in your facility should have its own set of operator and maintenance manuals.  Often they are kept centrally in the maintenance office for reference, providing maintenance tasks and frequency requirements.  The checks and services in these manuals should be incorporated into the master maintenance plan and schedule.    The development and implementation of a proactive maintenance plan will catch issues when they are small, keeping catastrophic equipment failures from happening. 

There are some cases where a company transitions from a very manual, labor intensive process to a more automated approach to their operation.  Of course there are operational cultural changes that present their own challenges.  Training, developing standard operating procedures, and keeping the equipment running can be tough when there is no established maintenance team.  In this case, use your system provider to help you transition.  They have the experience to help you select the right spare parts, the proper operation and maintenance manuals and examination and troubleshooting skills.   Contact for maintenance assistance until you develop a team of your own. 

As Ben Franklin says, “An ounce of prevention” (spare parts and maintenance) “is worth a pound of cure”

For more information from Greg, view his page at www.trifactor.com/greg