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Acquiring Maintenance Discipline By Steven Johnson Discipline. Many people don’t even like the sound of the word. It resonates something repressive, controlling, unpleasant and harsh. There are several Webster definitions for discipline, but a good one is “having the ability to do what is hard when it is the hardest to do.” Unfortunately, some kind of discipline is required in almost everything we do. The lack of this character trait has been the downfall of many good people, ideas and opportunities. Why is it so hard to attain? Because it requires a skill not usually acquired until the latter stages of our lives—after we have learned too many lessons the hard way.
Many companies
shut down and/or move overseas because of the lack of it. Sure,
politics has played an important role in stunting the growth of
businesses large and small, but other factors closer to home include a lack
of simple, everyday workplace discipline in performing prescribed
tasks, resulting in the general diminishing perception concerning the
value of shop floor trade skills. Reversing this exodus to foreign
countries will not only require major political moves, but also can be
affected by a single shop floor employee simply doing his job in a
more efficient, effective and disciplined manner. In the extremely
expensive field of mold repair—not doing so can most definitely be the
last straw. Discipline in Maintenance For a repair technician, it is the ability to follow prescribed administrative processes such as SOPs, BOPs, work instructions, etc. that provide instruction and continuous training to perform duties in a controlled and systematic way. By operating in this manner, results are more consistent and predictable. They allow us to make smart decisions behind a bench, in turn, allowing a company to optimize labor and tooling costs. Lacking a formalized, strategic plan for a repair tech to follow leaves them completely on their own to determine how best to spend their time (critical labor hours) along with thousands of dollars of company funds (tooling). It makes no sense to strand a repair tech at his bench, then pay him a low-ball hourly rate to control these thousands on a daily basis—one repair at a time—and we haven’t even begun to consider maintenance decisions that also directly affect part quality. Often, skilled tradesmen are by nature competitive, proud, freelancers. The question then is how to harness these individual qualities that separately have good moments, but jointly can achieve great accomplishments.
From a hands-on
perspective, discipline at the bench means performing tasks using
best-practice techniques, and with tools and methods learned through
experience with little or no supervision. A disciplined craftsman
performs in this manner simply because his gut tells him it is the
right thing to do. He knows working in a systemized approach—though
perhaps not always as interesting—will yield profitable results by
reducing costly mistakes on expensive mold components that occur
during the disassembly, troubleshooting, cleaning and assembly stages
of repair or anything bench-related that causes production to be
halted and a mold repaired before it’s scheduled. With all of the ingenuity and plastics processing technology at our disposal, many toolroom supervisors and managers still lack the ability—or discipline—to see the value of a structured and formalized maintenance roadmap for repair technicians. Assuming—incorrectly—that the ambiguous, illegible and incomplete journal entries of work order systems, coupled with the fear of losing their jobs, will motivate a repair technician to automatically perform at higher levels of craftsmanship. This management philosophy just does not work.
Having spent the
first couple of years out of the military, a somewhat rebellious and
undisciplined toolmaker, I relished the absence of systemization and
real accountability in our 14-man toolroom. With no plan to follow, my
work ethic on a given day was a reflection of my mood. Although this
attitude took a 180 when I hit my thirties, this maintenance style is
still in full force today among many who feel stuck at a workbench
with no viable means to measure their worth to the company or
themselves through proof of a job well done. A craftsman might not be
an accountant, but the majority still likes to see the discipline that
drives their troubleshooting skills, attention to detail and
increasing skill level reflected in a report that spins these
intangibles into dollars and cents.
Maintenance
discipline is just as much a factor of our working environment as it
is our individual character that controls an internal drive toward
performance excellence. A structured approach is not only necessary to
achieve continuous improvement in our processes and skills, but a
means to accurately measure this improvement over time. A structured
approach to maintenance provides order and accountability to common
toolroom tasks that are viewed subjectively by apprentice and
journeyman repair personnel alike.
This article first appeared in Moldmaking Technology, February 2008. Be a TPN Guest Speaker! If you'd like to submit an article for a future issue of the TPN, please contact Editor Cyndi Kustush at editor@tooling-product-news.com for editorial guidelines. Be sure to provide complete contact information and any proposed topics or ideas.
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