Contributing Editor
Rosemont, IL in April could never be confused with the sunny south. Nor will it ever be classified as a relaxing resort, entertainment hub or exotic portof- call. Nonetheless, despite having made a weeklong pilgrimage to Rosemont around this time for the past five years, I keep coming back for more.
This year, as usual, the huge “buffet” I have grown accustomed to finding in Rosemont did not disappoint. Over time, it has continued to serve up a vast selection of the tastiest, most nutritious items for our times. With many places to visit, the lines were again short and the crowds, representing a cross-section of people from all over North America and the world, were very friendly. Year after year, those of us who join in this pilgrimage spend our time sharing with each other about our interests, our work and the many and varied mysteries in our lives.
No, my annual trip to Rosemont is not a family outing. It’s not recreation. It’s not a vacation. What it is, however, is one of the best work-related venues available to those in our industry. It’s where participants— regardless of company and specific job titles and responsibilities—can get fired up about reliability, get excited about change and get answers to most, if not all, of their maintenance and reliability mysteries. The Maintenance & Reliability Technology Summit (MARTS) event provides so much for so many. This year, as always, it was a true meeting of the minds, focused on improving plant, facility and equipment performance and reliability.
Plenty of offerings
This April, I met many people who had been reading
my columns for years—and many more who had just
begun reading them. They came from a wide variety
of industry sectors, including manufacturing industries,
power & utilities, petro-chemical processing,
mining and production, higher education, facility
engineering and more. More than 190 companies
were represented, from 36 states, five Canadian
provinces and two from outside North America.
The “nutritious buffet” went well beyond the meals to include something for every maintenance and reliability person in attendance:
Come to think of it, MARTS is not just a meeting of the minds; it’s a veritable “one-stop shopping” destination for today’s (and tomorrow’s) maintenance and reliability leaders!
Plenty of take-aways
I met people from many different industries and
locations who were looking for something specific,
be it in the form of a tools, a strategy or just a new
way to help improve their plant or facility performance
and reliability. Some were new to our profession,
some were old hands. Some of the participants
were there with teams of others from their respective
companies, dividing up among the sessions to learn
about as many answers/solutions as they possibly
could in a few short days—answers/solutions that
they could take back to their plants and begin sharing
with others.
While I wasn’t able to sit in on all of the sessions, I listened to a range of variety of presenters who told of their maintenance and reliability challenges and how they successfully addressed them. I heard from seasoned veterans and leading experts—people who I have followed throughout my own career—as they talked with authority about maintenance and reliability best practices.
Session participants asked some very hard-hitting questions about problems or opportunities back at their workplace—and expected hard-hitting answers. They received invaluable advice. MARTS sessions not only covered the nuts-and-bolts topics, they also covered some of the “soft” side of maintenance and reliability—i.e., people, organizations, training and work methods. Here are just a few of the nuggets I gleaned from MARTS 2008:
Plenty of tools
“Tools you can use” is a term that frequently
came to mind as I was sitting in the conference
sessions. In other words, what all of us were
picking up at MARTS were real tools we could
take back to our jobs and immediately put to
use. Sometimes these “tools” were the ones that
could be used to pry some of the old ideas and
paradigms out of the rut we often find ourselves
in back at work.
The well-prepared exhibitors also provided tools and methods for addressing specific performance issues with modern and not-so-modern, plants and facilities. Smart tools and smart equipment incorporating some of the “smartest” technologies in the marketplace were demonstrated everywhere we looked in the exhibit hall.
An added bonus at this year’s MARTS was the participation of the 2007 North American Maintenance Excellence (NAME) Award winners. Representatives of the two honored plants—Alcoa Mt. Holly, SC, and Baldor Electric/Reliance Dodge, Marion, NC—discussed their “winning ways.” In both cases, these operations had created a “reliability culture” using the proven methods of Total Productive Maintenance (TPM) to achieve best-in-class equipment and process reliability. The “lessons learned” from past NAME Award winners included examples of operational excellence focused on a foundation of health, safety and environmental plans; clear organizational and strategic planning goals; reliability engineering and defect elimination teams; operators involved in routine maintenance; and asset reliability as a shared responsibility between manufacturing and maintenance.
Plenty of satisfaction
The part of this two-day conference
and the two days of pre- and
post-conference workshops that
impressed me the most was how
“hungry” for knowledge the participants
were. As noted previously,
I talked with countless attendees
who were looking for something
specific—something that they could
put to work back at their facilities
to help make their jobs easier,
their plants more reliable and their
businesses more competitive. Their
gnawing hunger certainly appeared
to be satisfied by week’s end!
Thanks to you
To all of you who attended and
presented at MARTS 2008, I wish to
thank you for sharing your insights
with me and with each other. Every
year at this event, I learn so much
about your various challenges—and
so much about the effective solutions
that you’re implementing to address
those challenge. As a contributing
editor, your sharing with me is
extremely important. It helps me to
focus more accurately on the types
of issues that confront you day-in
and day-out. Everyone who participated
(regardless of your role)
added great value to this and future
MARTS—as well as future issues of
this magazine. I am already looking
forward to meeting you next year
in Rosemont to learn even more
from you.
This year’s meeting of the minds may have come to a close, but the tools, the ideas and the insights are no doubt being put to good use by all of you to make your jobs easier and more productive. What you learned at this year’s MARTS (and those of past years) will contribute to your own organization’s performance, reliability profitability and growth, as well as bolster your respective countries’ competitiveness in a difficult global economy.
We’ll see you at MARTS 2009.