Introduction
Maintenance is a high leverage contributor to business profitability, through its impact on equipment capacity, product quality, safety, health, and the environment, and the cost of production.
The results and benefits from implementing a world-class maintenance operation should yield a significant improvement in plant profit, as well as many intangible benefits such as enhanced customer satisfaction, employee pride, and vendor relations.
Maintenance planning is fundamental to the success of operations. If it is your aim to have a world-class enterprise, the maintenance organization and strategy have a critical role to play in this mission. Driven from business goals, such a strategy cannot be seen as separate from other functions, but rather as an intrinsic part of a complete approach to high-performance operation.
The business goals will place organizational, as well as technical demands on the enterprise. The strategy, therefore, has to integrate and guide the implementation of technical and managerial strategies at all organizational and process levels.
The strategy/philosophy must represent the very best technology, procedures, and practices available, relevant to the business goals of the organization. The strategy must define the processes/procedures/practices required to achieve the highest possible degree of maintenance management and maintenance effectiveness, whilst minimizing total life-cycle costs of new assets and current operating costs of existing assets.
Course Objectives of Advanced Maintenance Planning
- Gain an understanding of the critical contribution to be made by maintenance to the achievement of business objectives
- Learn how to establish a strategic framework effective maintenance management
- Understand the roles, processes, and procedures to ensure organizational effectiveness
- Learn to establish parameters for the measurement of management and technical performance on all organizational levels
- Improve overall equipment performance, while ensuring long term asset health
Course Methodology of Advanced Maintenance Planning
Facilitated by an experienced maintenance specialist, our program will be conducted as a highly interactive work session (as opposed to lectures), encouraging participants to share their own experiences and apply the program material to real-life situations. Program size will be limited to 30 delegates in order to stimulate discussion and efficiency of subject coverage. Each delegate will receive an extensive reference manual, as well as case studies and throughout the program, delegates will be encouraged to identify what they can do to enhance Maintenance Management in their organizations.
Course Summary of Advanced Maintenance Planning
The program provides the delegate with study material on the various aspects to consider for maintenance planning, as well as techniques and case studies to provide the motivation and skills to establish and sustain best practice asset maintenance management.
Course Outlines of Advanced Maintenance Planning
DAY 1 - Maintenance objectives and strategy
- Changes of relevance to Maintenance
- Role of Maintenance in Modern Business
- Reducing Costs and Improving Performance
- What is the true Downtime Cost?
- Maintenance Cost and Value
- Bottom-line Benefits
- Maintenance evolution - history and modern thinking
- Brief Historical Overview of Maintenance
- Maintenance Types
- Maintenance Plan
- World-Class Reliability and Maintenance
DAY 2 - World-class standards - comparing your plant with the best
- Benchmarking and Maintenance Performance Assessment
- Maintenance Self-Assessment
- Managing and Measuring progress to Excellence
- Overall Equipment Effectiveness
DAY 3 - Implementing new management approaches
- Failure Management Programme (RCM)
- Total Productive Maintenance (TPM)
- Life-Cycle Costing
- Getting the best from your CMMS
- Computerized Maintenance Management
- Why CMMS Implementation Fail
DAY 4 - Optimising maintenance organization
- Operations Excellence
- Operations + Maintenance = Production
- Can Operations Manage Maintenance?
- A Driving Lesson for Operations and Maintenance
- 70/30 Phenomenon
- Contract Maintenance or not?
- Maintenance Management Legends
DAY 5
- A Framework for Achieving Best Practice in Maintenance
- Case Studies
Things to do and places to visit in London
With so many attractions in London, anyone can find something to delight them. Art lovers will enjoy the world-renowned museums and galleries, most of which are free. Sports fans are spoilt for choice by the city's array of football clubs. Theatre and music fans have a vast list of venues to visit, whilst shopaholics have Harrods, Oxford Street, Camden and much more to look forward to after arranging flights to London.
Some unmissable London attractions include:
- Seeing priceless masterpieces in the Tate Britain or the National Gallery.
- Watching the changing of the guard at Buckingham Palace.
- Visiting Trafalgar Square's famous monument.
- Marveling at the Crown Jewels in the Tower of London.
- Getting a bird's eye view of the city from the London Eye.
- Tasting one of Brick Lane's famous curries.
- Browsing the exclusive shops of Knightsbridge.
- Visiting a market – Spitalfields for antiques, Camden for clothes or Borough Market for street food.
- Admiring design from around the world in the Victoria and Albert Museum.
- Looking for clues at the home of fiction's most famous detective, Sherlock Holmes.
- Strolling through one of the lovely parks, including Hyde Park, St James' Park or Kew Gardens.
- Eating Britain's most famous dish, fish and chips.
- Watching the street performers in Covent Garden.
- Enjoying the views at a South Bank cafe.