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Sustaining Lubrication Excellence
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Drew Troyer, Noria Corporation
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"Patience
and tenacity of Why do programs designed to improve plant lubrication come and go? The storys plot often resembles a sinusoidal wave - on again, off again. Excellence in lubrication, like other quality efforts, dies for a number of reasons. But the phenomenon can be essentially reduced to a failure to institutionalize excellence in machinery lubrication - meaning the values of the organization were never changed at the core. The program begins to dwindle as soon as the manager or engineer who spearheaded it gets transferred or promoted; or when the technician who possessed all the skills in his head reaches retirement; or a host of other reasons why new initiatives fail to provide a lasting impact on the organization. Without preemptive effort, a program is just a program. A new program is not institutionalized until it replaces the old business-as-usual with a new business-as-usual that works. A big part of the reason why a program fails to sustain itself lies in the motivation for the programs creation . . . it is often destined to fail from the start. So what prompts an organization to implement lubrication excellence? Lets discuss the most common reasons and why they fail.
Ive
Seen the Light What is left is a group of people who desperately want to see things through, but lack access to management, or perhaps arent quite as talented at selling the concepts as the golden child who started the program. Without leadership and salesmanship, the program slowly atrophies, drifting back to its previous state. Some aspects of the change may persist for a while, but much is lost, and little or no further gain is made until the next golden child comes along - someone with a focused, albeit fleeting eye on lubrication. Catastrophe
Strikes Survivor Making
Lubrication Excellence Last So what is the secret to success? Commit - dont react. The organization must decide to lubricate its machines properly, do it and continue to improve. The common thread running through all the failure scenarios previously described is a lack of commitment - plain and simple. None of the scenarios above describe a company committed to lubrication excellence. Creating procedures, buying software, training staff, upgrading lubricants and filters, and implementing oil analysis are tactics. Collectively or alone they have merit, but they cant deliver maximum benefit to the organization unless they are implemented within the context of a focused equipment lubrication strategy. The strategy must be driven from the top, and it must be focused on achieving lasting change by replacing the old, inferior business-as-usual with a new one. If you expect results, the effort cannot be tied to the efforts of one individual, it cannot be implemented to demonstrate effort after a failure and it cannot merely come and go with the companys business cycles. We have to be good miners when the deposits are good, not just when they are poor. Achieving lubrication excellence requires a cultural transformation. Is your organization ready to commit? Can it muster up the patience and tenacity of purpose to make it last? If so, you are ready to achieve lubrication excellence. Your machines will reward you for it. You may also find yourself spending less money than you do to lubricate the machines poorly and haphazardly. That is my viewpoint. As always, I am interested in yours. |
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