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by James Kovacevic 1 Comment

STOP! Break the Reactive Cycle with Roles & Responsibilities

The key to driving performance to new heights is Roles & Responsibilities.

Play drawing
Image from opensource.com

Your planner is putting together a scheduler to 8:00pm on a Friday night for Saturday morning.  Your storeroom doesn’t have the parts you need and you maintenance supervisor is running back and forth.  On top of this, you are unable to meet your maintenance goals, preventing the orgainzation from achieving its goals.

Depending on your organization, you may walk into this type of chaos every morning, and those that don’t, chances are you did at some point.

So what seperates the organizations that have this choas and those that don’t?  Clear Roles & Responsibilities is what seperates these two types of orgainzations.  This is the first of a series of 6 posts on the topic of Roles & Responsibilities.

What Roles & Responsibilities Enable

Roles & Responsibilites enables the organization to break free of the reactive cycle and deliver significant improvements in their department.   In addition, clarity of roles is provided, teamwork is established and every role get clear accountabilities.  With clear accountabilities, everyone knows what they are measured on, and as such, they will work on that.  This prevents duplication of work and poor quality work.

How to Define Roles & Responsibilities

Defining Roles & Responsibilities is not as simple and writing down who is going to do what (but it is a key part of the process).  When defining the roles and responsibilities, there is a process;

  • Define the maintenance goals (but make sure it is aligned with the business goals)
  • Define how the maintenance goals will be achieved
  • Idenfity the gaps in the processes that are preventing you from achieving the goals
  • Create a new process to close the gaps
  • Define who will do each step in the process, and how each person will be measured
  • Define how the information will be communicated during each step of the process
  • Identify the pain points that will be eliminated with the new process
  • Share the new process, pain points eliminated,  and the responsibilities and acountabilities with the team
  • Develop a plan with the team to put in place the new process
  • Measure the adoptation and address as needed

Using this process, more than a few sites have made significant improvements in their process and their performance.

How Roles & Responsibilities Make a Difference

Why does this work?  It works because it aligns the team and allows the individuals to focus on their key function.  When the individuals know who they can depend on for what, it will make a difference for everyone.  I recently read in an article, that “discipline equals freedom” (you can read that article here).  Roles and responsibilities does equal discipline.  Discipline to the role, which allows the team to make significant improvements in the performance of the site.

The site that was mentioned above, made significant improvements after defining a roles & responsibilities.  The planner had the schedule ready for Thursday morning, the storeroom, not only had the parts, but they were kitted by the end of day Friday.  Also, the supervisors had the time to coach the technicians and take part in Root Cause Analysis.   The site not only met their production goals for the first time in 3 years, but they exceeded them.

Do you have more than a job description to define roles & responsibilities?  Do you feel it is more than enough to move your team in the right direction?  If you feel defining Roles & Responsibilities is overhwhelming, just contact High Performance Reliability and we will be happy to help move our deparment forward.

Remember, to find success, you must first solve the problem, then achieve the implementation of the solution, and finally sustain winning results.

I’m James Kovacevic
HIGH PERFORMANCE RELIABILITY
Solve, Achieve, Sustain
Follow @HPReliability

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Filed Under: Articles, Maintenance and Reliability, on Maintenance Reliability

About James Kovacevic

James is a trainer, speaker, and consultant that specializes in bringing profitability, productivity, availability, and sustainability to manufacturers around the globe.

Through his career, James has made it his personal mission to make industry a profitable place; where individuals and manufacturers possess the resources, knowledge, and courage to sustainably lower their operating costs.

« The Reliability Engineering Role
FMEA Success Factors – Part 1 »

Comments

  1. Waleed Mouhammed says

    March 17, 2020 at 1:47 PM

    Hi James,
    Your article is very structured and informative and i’d like to thank you personally on such knowledgeable article. I just like to add: it will be more effective to define a RAMS for each maintenance team member, R for role, A for accountability, M for measures, and S for skill set required to do such a role.

    Thanks again for your article.

    Reply

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Maintenance & Reliability series


by James Kovacevic
High Performance Reliability

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