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human capital management

The Human Factor in Field Productivity

Many businesses are investing in optimization software to improve the efficiency of their people. So why do they put all potential returns at risk by ignoring the human element and adopting a technology-is-all approach when implementing such solutions, asks Stewart Hill?

Skilled Workforce in the 21st Century

The purpose of this study is to explore the upcoming changes that are viewed by many as the ‘Skilled Workforce Crisis.' The importance of the "Skilled Workforce in the 21st Century" research and study project is that it has been developed independently and without funding from any particular interest. Its authors felt that it was important to the Reliability & Maintenance industry to fully understand what we saw as the real issues related to the present evolution of business and R&M.

The Modern Maintenance Manager: How to Get the Most out of Your Work Team!

What skills should a maintenance manager have? This question gets asked time and time again throughout the world. Normally the answers are something like, understanding of operational resource planning, understanding of basic reliability principles (RCM a bonus), understanding of CMMS management techniques, blah, blah, blah... Do we really need to be told this much?

Changing Your Organization for the Better-Part 1: The Elements of the Change Process

"There is nothing more difficult to take in hand, more perilous to conduct, or more uncertain in its success than to take the lead in the introduction of a new order of things, because the innovator has for enemies, all of those who have done well under the old conditions, and luke-warm defenders in those who will do well under the new."

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Creating a Safe Work Environment

Why can't we create and sustain superior safety performance in most industries? The answer in my opinion is quite simple. We as leaders treat safety as a special event or an additional responsibility for our employees. We as leaders have not made safety a part of our Work Culture by communicating a clear vision and clarifying our safety expectations. We as leaders have failed to define specific roles and responsibilities related to safety performance for all levels of the organization. We have not created and communicated a system of accountability. We have failed to make and keep our commitment to safety or in other words, we fail to ensure human reliability and take action when there is a deviation to our safety performance expectations.

IAM Endorses Asset Management Training Providers

As part of its commitment to the professional development of personnel involved with physical asset management, the Institute of Asset Management is pleased to announce its first group of training providers to be awarded Endorsed Trainer Status. This follows independent evaluation of submissions from training companies and academic establishments worldwide, with applications received from the UK, USA, Holland, South Africa, Indonesia and Australia.

Transferring Knowledge as Our Skilled Workforce Retires

It is said that in business, people are the greatest asset. It's not just the people, but the knowledge they possess. If this is true, why aren't businesses acting accordingly? Operations are automating and expectations are that the business can produce more with fewer and fewer people. Acquisitions and mergers persist in our competitive, global economy. With this consolidation, people are often the first to be cut in the interest of cost reductions and improving the bottom line for shareholders. Training and other investments in people are viewed as discretionary expenses, often rationalized away. This reality is complicated by a developing demographic trend - the work force is aging and retiring.

16 Question Survey

The Manufacturing Game has developed a short 16-question survey based on Joseph Campbell's concept of a Hero's Journey.The survey is designed to facilitate the story writing process, and it guides the writer through the writing process. They provide this survey to maintenance and reliability professionals for their own use. Clients may opt to use the written story internally or share their success with others by approving it for publication in external publications such as the our quarterly TMG newsletter or a monthly magazine like Uptime Magazine.

See the list below for the 16 questions in the survey, as it relates to writing about Action Team successes.

Rewards and Recognition

From a leadership perspective we, at Ledet Enterprises, think it is important to provide proper rewards and recognition to succeed at improving organizational performance. However, we think different rewards are important in the different domains. Strangely enough, it appears that the Reactive domain has the rewards built into the work itself. When equipment breaks or won't do the job, there is a lot of satisfaction derived from the act of restoring the functionality of the equipment. There is overtime for the hourly employees who are needed to take the equipment down, restore the functionality, and get it running again. These are the typical "overtime heroes" who wrestle with the equipment and get "pats on the back" from everyone because they were able to repair the equipment and get it running again. There is innate value in restoring equipment to serve the purpose it was intended to serve. The problem with this mode of behavior is that it has many hazards associated with it. The most obvious ones being the risk of hurting people and the environment because of the chaotic way things happen in the reactive mode. While this chaos is stimulating and creates some excitement in life, it can easily become overwhelming for employees. This basic mode of operation is a fight between the equipment and people to see who will win or lose with the equipment taking the initiative.

Experience Is The Best Teacher: The Art of Storytelling

The Manufacturing Game has been using the art of storytelling for many years now. Our philosophy is that story telling is a powerful way to transfer learning, increase motivation, encourage teamwork, and teach communication skills in order to lead change.

The Weakest Link

What is the weakest, most unreliable, least dependable part of any system or process? If you said the human that is operating it or maintaining it, you would be correct. Human Factors is a buzz word in industry these days, but it has been around in the airline world for a long while now. We have special classes on Human Factors - how to recognize them, and how to defend against them. It is something that we take quite seriously, and perhaps you should also.

Confidence –The Magical Element of Cross Functional Teams

In the thirteen years we have offered The Manufacturing Game to over 32,000 participants, I have always marveled at the accomplishments of small cross functional teams and wondered what determines the great results they achieve. I have often sat with teams as they attempted to come up with a plan to eliminate a defect they identified as their target. From the rational point of view of an engineer, it appears that they will never arrive at a solution. Then someone comes up with an insight that immediately resolves the problem; the plan to eliminate that defect is then completed via some simple action or actions. Where did that come from? This is the phenomenon that we recognize as the magic in cross functional teams. But how does it come about?

Measure Behavior – Measure Success!

Many times, maintenance professionals have been involved in changes to processes or systems where they have relied on seat of the pants knowledge to determine whether or not they were successful. More often than not, the initiative flounders once their attention has been turned to other endeavors.

You “Gotta” Have Friends…

Someone once told me to avoid problems in life you had to have a friend who was a lawyer, a friend who was an accountant, and a friend who was a doctor. This would help keep you out of jail, out of debt, and out of the grave. As I moved into a maintenance manager's position these same basic principles applied. To have a successful maintenance program, you need to cultivate friendships with a human relations (HR) manager, an accountant, and a maintenance engineer.

Introduction to the Process Of Change

Excerpted from Successfully Managing Change in Organizations: A User's Guide by Stephen J. Thomas (Courtesy of Industrial Press) 

Several years ago, I was part of a program to introduce the concept of "quality" into our plant. For a very large fee, we hired a consultant to work with us and make our "quality process" a success. Site management imposed ground rules on the project team, most of which (in retrospect) set us up for failure. The program had a kick-off date less than three months from the time it was introduced to management. With such a tight timeframe, there was inadequate time to prepare for the meetings that were an integral part of the process. To make matters worse, the meetings were to be mandatory for everyone. The official message was, "meetings are mandatory, participation is voluntary."

Next Up Careers Launch’s New Career Portal

Unique Reliability Engineering & Predictive Maintenance Site Offers Free Trial.

Solutions 2.0 Video: Gulliver’s Travels to Reliability

Solutions 2.0 Video: Gulliver’s Travels to Reliability

A 30 minute video featuring Winston Ledet, The Manufacturing Game
Originally presented at the Solutions 2.0 conference

Leaving my comfortable Operations home I ventured into the unknown land of Maintenance and Reliability. Upon entering this new land I discovered a completely new language that included terms like preventive maintenance and predictive maintenance. Early on even the differences between planning and scheduling were not obvious to me. People that I met along the way acted as a guide to me as I also became exposed to the strange culture of Japanese Total Productive Maintenance and MIT's computer modeling that uses System Dynamics. During this deep dive into learning, a new language was discovered in the stable domains of reactive, planned, precision, and world class and in addition defect elimination was discovered as the means to move up the domains. As new tools were created to achieve the precision domain we became aware that people already had more tools than they could use. I learned from a foreman that what was needed was a way of integrating initiatives into one program that people at the factory floor could implement easily. This challenge led to the development of a board game that could give everyone participating in it the same experiences that I had in my quest for understanding and implementing all of the best practices we found in the worldwide benchmark at DuPont. I reached the land of the precision domain at the Lima refinery where they recognized that reliability requires more than maintenance. Their invention of "Don't just fix it, Improve it" enabled them to reach the precision domain in an achievable way for western cultures. My travels continue.....

The Association For Manufacturing Technology Looks to Obama Administration

The Association For Manufacturing Technology recognized the Obama Administration’s Manufacturing Framework for Revitalizing American Manufacturing released yesterday as an important step in strengthening our country’s beleaguered manufacturing sector.

Reshaping Sugar

Reshaping Sugar

The Transformation of U.S. Sugar

by Darrin Wikoff, CMRP

A 12% increase in production capacity over three years with virtually no increase in operating costs makes United States Sugar Corporation the leading producer of retail and industrial bulk sugar in the United States.

Dan Pink on the surprising science of motivation

Dan Pink on the surprising science of motivation

Career analyst Dan Pink examines the puzzle of motivation, starting with a fact that social scientists know but most managers don't: Traditional rewards aren't always as effective as we think. Listen for illuminating stories -- and maybe, a way forward.

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