The Worth of a Reliability Engineer
Abstract
Chris and Fred discuss how much a reliability engineer (potentially like you) … is worth. Want to know?
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Your Reliability Engineering Professional Development Site
by Christopher Jackson Leave a Comment
Chris and Fred discuss how much a reliability engineer (potentially like you) … is worth. Want to know?
ᐅ Play Episode
by Christopher Jackson Leave a Comment
Chris and Fred discuss the importance of understanding value when you make decisions. And value needs to mean something to you and your organization. Not something in a dictionary.
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by Carl S. Carlson Leave a Comment
Carl and Fred discussing the myriad of reliability methods and tools, and how they can be differentiated by how they support program decisions and add value.
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by Christopher Jackson Leave a Comment
Chris discusses … what you want. Pretty broad I know. But there are things we really want – things we dedicate our time, effort and attention to. And then there are things we say we want. And the human brain is actually specifically structure to pick up on different cues to work out if you are really interested in something (or not). So we can pretty easily work out if you say you want something – but don’t really want it to the extent you want other things. Why does this relate to reliability engineering? Click here to learn more.
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by Carl S. Carlson Leave a Comment
Carl and Fred discussing reliability methods from a value perspective. The value of your finding needs to be comparable to what the organization is valuing.
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by Adam Bahret Leave a Comment
Adam and Fred discussing how to determine ROI for investment in reliability activities
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by John Paschkewitz Leave a Comment
John and Fred discussing the problem of only bringing failures to a team. We often are the bearers of bad news.
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by Fred Schenkelberg 1 Comment
The investment in creating a reliable product pays dividends during the operation of the equipment or system.
The ability to estimate future savings or costs based on reliability engineering is key. Minimizing lifecycle cost occurs with reliability.
by Fred Schenkelberg Leave a Comment
Let’s explore finding the value of reliability tasks and how to articulate the importance of those activities in business terms.
Estimating the return on investment for risk assessment or accelerated testing can help you justify the investment in these and similar tools.
This webinar discusses the importance of estimated value and helps you discover and state the value of common activities.
Put a number on the value of tasks that you bring to the organization with your work.