Maintenance vs. Production

Maintenance vs. Production

Let’s talk about the elephant in the room…

If you’re a maintenance professional, I’m sure you’ve felt the tense atmosphere between maintenance and operations.

When I speak to maintenance teams, these are some of the common complaints about their Operations colleagues…

  • They won’t give us access to the equipment. How can we maintain it and ensure reliability if we can’t get access? 
  • They refuse to do very basic frontline maintenance and expect our maintenance technicians to do it for them. They’re wasting our time! 
  • They want everything fixed tomorrow! Why is something so urgent if we have a perfectly good standby machine running?! 
  • Or… they simply don’t look after the equipment. Don’t they see and hear?!

Now, when I speak to the Operations team and hear what they say about us maintenance folks…

I’ll spare you from that!

But look, in this line of work, these squabbles are normal.

But we have to make sure it stays at the level of squabbles and doesn’t become engrained in the organisation and culture.

No matter how much we argue… remember that maintenance and operations are both working towards the same goal…

To make the plant as safe and profitable as it should be.

That’s why it’s important that we work together. We need to realise that we simply approach that common goal from different directions.

Sadly, in a highly reactive maintenance environment, communication becomes a lot harder than it should be.

Here’s what often happens:

Since maintenance is so busy fighting fires, it takes time before they can fix the equipment that the operations team needs.

And operations wants their equipment fixed ASAP.

This is partly because they don’t trust maintenance. Things take too long. And they don’t get answers fast because maintenance is ‘so busy’.

And since the equipment isn’t getting fixed as fast as they want it to be, they scream louder and louder until someone jumps and gets it fixed.

Sure, that’s one way to prioritise…

But the problem is… that often makes the reactive environment worse. It stops maintenance from properly preparing the work and increases waste in the organisation.

In my experience, if you want a space where the two teams can communicate clearly and build a professional working relationship… you first need to create a stable working environment.

One that nurtures teamwork, builds trust, establishes shared priorities, and allows you to demonstrate to operations that the work is getting done.

And you can’t have that when you’re still running around fighting fires and chasing missing parts.

That’s why the first step is improving your productivity through Maintenance Planning & Scheduling.

If you want to learn how to create a more stable working environment in your plant through Maintenance Planning & Scheduling, then you can check out our online course.

Inside the course, you’ll learn how to increase your team’s productivity by up to 35% WIHOUT hiring new people.

Start creating a more stable working environment


P.S. Whenever you're ready, here are 5 ways we can help you on your Road to Reliability: 

1. Want to master Planning & Scheduling in 10 weeks or less? 

Enroll in our Implementing Maintenance Planning and Scheduling Online Training Course. This is the ONLY Planning & Scheduling online training course out there that provides lifetime access. In this course, we will teach you the theory of planning & scheduling... and, unlike other courses, we also show you how to effectively implement it for your organisation so you actually get sustainable results. 

 

2. Want to try our online training course for FREE? 

Check these 4 video lessons taken straight from the course: 

 What is Planning & Scheduling? – Watch here

The Value of Planning & Scheduling – Watch here

Principles of Maintenance Planning – Watch here 

Scheduling as a Continuous Process – Watch here

 

3. Want to know how effective your Planning & Scheduling really is? 

Use our Planning & Scheduling Scorecard to assess your performance and receive a personalised PDF report with recommendations on how to improve. 

 

4. Want to see how much money you're leaving on the table when you neglect your Planning & Scheduling? 

Use our Wrench Time Calculator. to easily calculate how much value your organisation is missing out when you neglect your Planning & Scheduling. 

 

5. Want to start your journey on the Road to Reliability™? 

Download the Road to Reliability™ eBook and discover a simple, proven framework that you can use to achieve a highly reliable plant for your organisation. Unlike other overly complicated models that use 10 to 20 elements, the Road to Reliability framework only uses 4 elements to achieve great results.

Shailesh.Raghunath Gangurde

Dy.Manager,Bright Bar steel at Mukand ltd

2y

Maintenance is thankless job. Nobody cares🙂

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Yassin Alsahbi

Industrial Engineer | Government Procurement | Power BI

2y

Thank you for great article..

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Brian Wilson

MLT 1 Technical Sales Specialist at HASTEC Group air oil and chain lubrication systems

2y

take the vs. out of the equation always good for each dept to work in each others shoes periodically

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Jonathan Holburt

Mobile Heavy Duty Mechanic at Ba blacktop

2y

As a maintenance department you should I believe treat production like a customer keep them happy do your best to help them out because at the end of the day it takes a team to win

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Dominic Sakato

Asset Management | Asset Integrity | Tanks & Vessel Cleaning | Generator Maintenance

2y

Well said Erik. On the other note, one of my observation regarding tussle between production and maintenance falls down on leadership. When the Manager (looking after both Production and Maintenance) is production oriented, less consideration is given to Maintenance. Equally its important to have a Manger who has full or partially Maintenance/Reliability background so that equipment care and reliability will remain priority focus apart from production.

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