The concepts of an agile / smart plant, facility are not just in the assets, equipment, and systems, the key to the modern world is the efficiency in the work, and how people and expertise is used across the given tribes of people working and contributing to the business success. This article by Stan captures what is core to that culture.
Dr. Stephen Covey
has embraced these and he has written a book called Principle-Centered
Leadership, which recommends a combination of changing the goals and measures,
combined with a different approach to managing performance.
In the above
diagram, the most important goals are called Wildly Important, and these are
made clear and prominent. The second
step is to shift from the traditional “lagging” measures to “leading” measures,
so that organizations can continually prevent problems and take full advantage
of opportunities. The third step is a
“compelling” scoreboard, which requires all workers to have information with
sufficient frequency and detail that affects their jobs. This often requires hourly information
focused on manufacturing or processing “cells” or “units”. And the fourth step is a supervisor “cadence”
or regular review and adjustment of targets.
In many industrial facilities, this might occur daily.
The Smart Plant culture reaches across
organization silos, reaches across locations and reaches across time to share
ownership of challenges and solve problems together. The “blame game” is minimized and new
employees are oriented into the shared beliefs and experience of
problem-solving and sharing information, both good news and bad news. Training shifts from isolated prevention of
blame to team training which share performance.
Article authored by Stan DeVries Snr SOlution Architect at Schneider - Electric
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