Accendo Reliability

Your Reliability Engineering Professional Development Site

  • Home
  • About
    • Contributors
    • About Us
    • Colophon
    • Survey
  • Reliability.fm
  • Articles
    • CRE Preparation Notes
    • NoMTBF
    • on Leadership & Career
      • Advanced Engineering Culture
      • ASQR&R
      • Engineering Leadership
      • Managing in the 2000s
      • Product Development and Process Improvement
    • on Maintenance Reliability
      • Aasan Asset Management
      • AI & Predictive Maintenance
      • Asset Management in the Mining Industry
      • CMMS and Maintenance Management
      • CMMS and Reliability
      • Conscious Asset
      • EAM & CMMS
      • Everyday RCM
      • History of Maintenance Management
      • Life Cycle Asset Management
      • Maintenance and Reliability
      • Maintenance Management
      • Plant Maintenance
      • Process Plant Reliability Engineering
      • RCM Blitz®
      • ReliabilityXperience
      • Rob’s Reliability Project
      • The Intelligent Transformer Blog
      • The People Side of Maintenance
      • The Reliability Mindset
    • on Product Reliability
      • Accelerated Reliability
      • Achieving the Benefits of Reliability
      • Apex Ridge
      • Field Reliability Data Analysis
      • Metals Engineering and Product Reliability
      • Musings on Reliability and Maintenance Topics
      • Product Validation
      • Reliability by Design
      • Reliability Competence
      • Reliability Engineering Insights
      • Reliability in Emerging Technology
      • Reliability Knowledge
    • on Risk & Safety
      • CERM® Risk Insights
      • Equipment Risk and Reliability in Downhole Applications
      • Operational Risk Process Safety
    • on Systems Thinking
      • Communicating with FINESSE
      • The RCA
    • on Tools & Techniques
      • Big Data & Analytics
      • Experimental Design for NPD
      • Innovative Thinking in Reliability and Durability
      • Inside and Beyond HALT
      • Inside FMEA
      • Institute of Quality & Reliability
      • Integral Concepts
      • Learning from Failures
      • Progress in Field Reliability?
      • R for Engineering
      • Reliability Engineering Using Python
      • Reliability Reflections
      • Statistical Methods for Failure-Time Data
      • Testing 1 2 3
      • The Manufacturing Academy
  • eBooks
  • Resources
    • Accendo Authors
    • FMEA Resources
    • Glossary
    • Feed Forward Publications
    • Openings
    • Books
    • Webinar Sources
    • Podcasts
  • Courses
    • Your Courses
    • Live Courses
      • Introduction to Reliability Engineering & Accelerated Testings Course Landing Page
      • Advanced Accelerated Testing Course Landing Page
    • Integral Concepts Courses
      • Reliability Analysis Methods Course Landing Page
      • Applied Reliability Analysis Course Landing Page
      • Statistics, Hypothesis Testing, & Regression Modeling Course Landing Page
      • Measurement System Assessment Course Landing Page
      • SPC & Process Capability Course Landing Page
      • Design of Experiments Course Landing Page
    • The Manufacturing Academy Courses
      • An Introduction to Reliability Engineering
      • Reliability Engineering Statistics
      • An Introduction to Quality Engineering
      • Quality Engineering Statistics
      • FMEA in Practice
      • Process Capability Analysis course
      • Root Cause Analysis and the 8D Corrective Action Process course
      • Return on Investment online course
    • Industrial Metallurgist Courses
    • FMEA courses Powered by The Luminous Group
    • Foundations of RCM online course
    • Reliability Engineering for Heavy Industry
    • How to be an Online Student
    • Quondam Courses
  • Calendar
    • Call for Papers Listing
    • Upcoming Webinars
    • Webinar Calendar
  • Login
    • Member Home
  • Barringer Process Reliability Introduction Course Landing Page
  • Upcoming Live Events
You are here: Home / Articles / Planner help us solve the skills shortage problem!

by James Reyes-Picknell Leave a Comment

Planner help us solve the skills shortage problem!

Planner help us solve the skills shortage problem!

Skilled labor is in short supply. Companies are struggling to find talent. Education systems throughout North America have done a poor job of producing ‘job ready’ graduates. Companies have cut back on training and apprentice program funding. Immigration programs did not prioritize the intake of needed and ready-to-us skills. Governments have been slow to see the problem and even slower to act on it.

The skills shortage is particularly obvious in maintenance. The Great Recession decimated retirement savings and pension funds and many skilled baby boomers are now staying in the workforce longer than they’d like. Fortunately, those who are now reluctant to retire are providing us with a window of opportunity to solve the problem before they depart (between 2025-2030).

Capital investment to replace aging plants with newer, higher tech, less labor-intensive assets will help but companies are sitting on hordes of cash. Risk-averse executives must realized that they cannot horde their companies into prosperity! Many industrial facilities in developing nations are modern, highly automated and require few people (at much lower wages) to run. They are becoming more competitive – we are not.

Younger people are part of the solution. Fortunately, the word is out that they are starting to see trades as good career options.

Solving our skills-shortage challenges takes time, investment, social and political will. The solutions are major opportunities to those who can see them. Meanwhile, industry is still running out of skills.

One solutions that is readily available to industry and requires no hiring at all is often missed. A planner, doing proper planning of work and being used proactively to plan future work can easily be an organization’s most highly leveraged employee. Planners can unlock workforce capacity currently wasted by nearly doubling effective working capacity.

Properly planned and scheduled work requires much less time to complete than unplanned work (one third is a widely accepted average). That frees capacity to get more done. Wrench time (hands on tool time) increases dramatically – it can nearly double. Moreover, a single planner can help to achieve this for upwards of 20 to 30 trades-persons.

Many companies have planners, but don’t use them properly. They plan work that just arose or they chase parts when it’s too late for emergencies; in those cases you need the maintenance fire (repair) department.

But planners should not be stand in supervisors. The best planners do come from the tools, but involving them in day-to-day urgent matters undermines their essentially proactive focus. Supervisors are excellent at solving today’s problems, planners look at tomorrows. These are inherently different perspectives. Planners shouldn’t work in support of supervisors – they will get dragged into the panic. This all takes them away from planning future work. It prolongs the move away from a reactive, break-then-fix culture.

Planners should not be responsible for deciding on preventive and predictive maintenance program content, yet they are the ones to ensure it gets scheduled and done. They are not reliability engineers.

Many planners are untrained or poorly trained. Coming from the trades, they do have essential technical background, but they need more. Planning requires being organized and focused, knowing how much detail is needed, being a good communicator, and being able to see beyond his own trade skill limits. Training is needed (not a lot of training – just a few days). Some organizations use planners to plan for a given trade. While that may be comfortable for the planner with a trade background, it is not the most effective way to structure the planning group – they should be planning for teams or areas, not for only one trade. This implies that they must a learn a bit about the other trades – if they are unable or unwilling to do so, then they aren’t good planner material to begin with.

Perfection gets in the way. We are often obsessed with getting it right the first time and that slows results. Planners need to be happy to write a plan, put it in action, accept that it probably won’t be perfect and fix it with feedback from the field. They should accept that it is okay to make mistakes as  long as there is a mechanism built into the work management process to learn from those mistakes. Learning is key to continuous improvement with each and every plan.

There is so much more that companies can do to improve their planning, unlock capacity that’s already there and begin to address their skills shortages today. Rethink your planner’s roles and how they’re being used. Make sure they are trained properly and stop undermining their effectiveness.

— It was first published in PEM Magazine, now incorporated into MRO Magazine.

Filed Under: Articles, Conscious Asset, on Maintenance Reliability

About James Reyes-Picknell

James is the best-selling author of “Uptime – Strategies for Excellence in Maintenance Management”, now in its 3rd edition, co-author of “Reliability Centered Maintenance – Re-engineered”, co-founder and Principal Consultant of Conscious Asset.

He is a Mechanical Engineer, graduate of the University of Toronto and has more than 44 years working in Operations, Maintenance, Reliability and Asset Management.

« The Untapped Gold in the World of Physical Asset Management is…
How to Identify and Manage Uncertainties of an Unpredictable Future »

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Conscious Asset series

Article by James Reyes-Picknell

Join Accendo

Receive information and updates about articles and many other resources offered by Accendo Reliability by becoming a member.

It’s free and only takes a minute.

Join Today

Recent Posts

  • Gremlins today
  • The Power of Vision in Leadership and Organizational Success
  • 3 Types of MTBF Stories
  • ALT: An in Depth Description
  • Project Email Economics

© 2025 FMS Reliability · Privacy Policy · Terms of Service · Cookies Policy