In the current economic climate, only the strongest businesses are likely to survive. That means companies who perform reliably with a healthy cost level and, therefore, are able to build a competitive advantage over weaker performers. This also allows them to maintain a positive margin even in a depressed market, while others fall into red figures.
Reliability is affected by people, company culture and excellence in operations, so multiple, fragmented approaches to reliability in manufacturing will not work. Often, companies struggle to identify the right initiatives and fail to make a serious impact on the bottom line. What is needed is a single, cohesive strategy with an integrated approach.
There are, in principle, four value levers that ensure reliability and add business value, as shown in Figure 1.
Figure 1: Value tree to achieve operational excellence
Value Identification
If opportunities are correctly identified, for example via the rapid value assessment method, it is possible to obtain a fingerprint of a company’s current plant performance and culture, then quantify the value opportunities and risks. The waterfall diagram in Figure 2 sets out value opportunities for a mining company in South Africa in various areas of maintenance reliability on the left, giving a potential year over year value savings for each. On the right, the process safety management (PSM) risk of a serious incident occurring is quantified by effect likelihood. As the operational risk of a serious incident negatively affects value, this is displayed as a negative in the waterfall diagram.
Figure 2: Waterfall diagram for a large mining site in South Africa
People Drive Value
Decades of experience in manufacturing indicates that the reduction of operational risk and value generation is closely related through the culture on the work floor. Companies that succeed in creating a proactive risk culture can use their strength to focus on value generation, for example, in reliability or lean cultures.
Figure 3: DuPont Bradley and growth curves
The cultural maturity of a company can be categorized in four stages. In the first two stages, the culture is driven top-down by leadership. People follow example behavior and comply with rules in the dependent stage. However, what happens when management is not present? In the independent stage, people begin to realize that they themselves can benefit. They begin to internalize safe and more efficient behavior. In the interdependent stage, people network as an organization and correct each other’s unsafe or value destroying behavior. Only at this stage is maximum value creation and operational risk reduction accomplished.
An Integrated Value Approach for Operational Excellence
The key to tackling value creation and reducing operational risk lies in strengthening a company’s culture so employees are independent and empowered enough to generate value for the company.
Once a rapid value assessment has provided insight into a company’s performance, it is time to close the gaps using an integrated approach that moves the organization toward operational excellence. As shown in Figure 4, DuPont successfully implemented operational excellence at its own plants using a four-dimensional operational excellence model.
Figure 4: Four-dimensional operational excellence model
The three pillars of the model seek to improve technical skills through the creation of a maintenance reliability road map, with capabilities through a targeted, unified training program, as well as mind-sets and behaviors to achieve a cultural transformation. The management process linking the three pillars ensures successful delivery of the business value. These four dimensions are inseparable if a serious effort for attaining reliable operational excellence is to be made. Many examples exist of companies that focus on one or two pillars, but then fail to reach or sustain the desired operational performance level for long. An integrated approach and a clear leadership focus are required to achieve a real business transformation and sustainable operational excellence.
Reliability Road Map
The key to achieving this long-term change, as well as maintenance reliability excellence, is the improvement road map. This should prioritize improvement actions required to achieve the desired level of excellence in a realistic time frame. Implementation of the road map requires commitment from senior management, strong project leadership and experienced transformation leaders. The right balance between the four dimensions of the operational excellence model is essential for keeping everyone in a company working at the same pace toward the same goal and changing the reliability culture from top management to plant floor.
Achieving Results
DuPont launched its own global operational excellence program in 2006. The transformation of over 200 sites was completed in just five years and has generated unsurpassed business results: $6 billion in value generation through capacity release and variable and fixed cost reduction, and $3 billion in working capital reduction.
Figure 5: Results of DuPont’s operational excellence program
These figures go to show that an integrated, cohesive approach to value generation can result in a steady performance even through times of economic uncertainty. Reliability is achievable. It just has to be tackled the right way.