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 / So, You Are a Reliability Engineer Forced into Being a Facilitator

by JD Solomon Leave a Comment

So, You Are a Reliability Engineer Forced into Being a Facilitator

So, You Are a Reliability Engineer Forced into Being a Facilitator

Technical professionals are often asked to “lead” teams through the application of assessment tools such as failure modes and effects analysis (FMEA), Root Cause Analysis (RCM), and Reliability Block Diagrams. In some cases, you may be a department manager. In other cases, you are the subject matter expert. Sometimes senior management simply knows you are willing to do it.

The issue is not whether you are smart enough or the most personable engineer in the group. The problem is that you may have all the hard skills required to do the assessment, but you lack formal training in the soft skills. Most of us do the best we can. 

This article provides some insights for doing better rather than just being adequate.

What Are You Being Asked to Do?

Facilitators lead teams to results, which in this case is some type of technical assessment.

Facilitation is defined as a structured session(s) in which the meeting leader (the facilitator) guides the participants through a series of predefined steps to arrive at a result that is created, understood, and accepted by all participants.

Leading people through predefined steps and arriving at results are part of the roles of a manager. Many organizations, and managers themselves, mistakenly decide to facilitate their own sessions. It is akin to an attorney representing themselves in a trial.

Fundamentally, leading teams in the application of assessment tools is facilitation.

Balancing Soft Skills and Hard Skills

Oxford University Press defines soft skills as “personal attributes that enable someone to interact effectively and harmoniously with other people.”  As an umbrella term, soft skills are associated with people and social skills.

Hard skills are technical skills that are specific to different professions. After World War II, the US Army referred to hard skills as anything related to the use of machinery. By contrast, the US Army defined soft skills as “job-related skills that involve little or no interaction with machines and whose application on the job is quite generalized.”

In Facilitation, Soft and Hard, the differences and importance of soft and hard skills are discussed. Reliability engineers need both.

Facilitator Responsibilities

The role of the facilitator is to guide the participants, not dictate or instruct. Furthermore, the facilitated result (risk management plan) must be created, understood, and accepted by all. These two aspects make the facilitator role fundamentally different from that of manager or subject matter expert.

There are a few basic responsibilities that every facilitator should understand and apply:

  • Prepare in advance – “who, what, why, where, and how”
  • Plan and distribute the agenda
  • Define objectives at the beginning of the event
  • Establish expectations with the executive sponsor and participants
  • Guide the group in presenting and sharing information
  • Provide closure and reiterate action items
  • Facilitators can often get cornered into a wider range of activities, such as notifying participants, reserving meeting space, bringing snacks, and providing session summaries.

There should be a recording secretary and a coordinator for any type of multi-session facilitation, including most reliability assessment tools. Roles and responsibilities should be identified and assigned before the first session.

Avoid Information Sessions

Effectively facilitating reliability assessment tools like FMEA and Block Diagrams means focusing on the analysis with the limited time you are provided in a group setting. Avoid lengthy information sessions and data-filled PowerPoint presentations.

I prefer to have a dedicated one or two-hour knowledge exchange separately from the facilitated assessment. This approach helps bring everyone’s knowledge to the same point, helps everyone who has experience with the assessment application, and can be used as a point for data exchange.

There are two primary pitfalls with presenting at an information session that equally applies to facilitating reliability assessment tools.

One common pitfall is to avoid using an information briefing as a time to wander. Set a specific short presentation period (say 15 minutes), allow the speaker to have no more than ten slides and shut down the presenter if they wander. Remember, the time spent wandering does not equate to a more effective presentation.

Another common pitfall is not providing the background data before the session. The participants should be able to read the data in advance, request additional information, and be armed and ready for the analysis when they come to the session. There is no good reason to have a detailed regurgitation of past data.

Facilitators should provide background information in advance. If you need an overview of the data in the formal sessions, make the overview a brief summary and be concerned with looking forward.

Prepare for Disruptions

All facilitators should prepare for disruption. In particular, technical sessions have disruptions because of the analysis, collaboration, and strong opinions that are involved. There are three disruptors that reliability assessments share with another thorny facilitated topic, risk management plans.

A changing organizational context is one big disruptor that comes in the form of different definitions across the organization or among participants. Changes in how previous and current management viewed reliability, risk, vulnerability, and resilience are sources of this disruptor.

Another disruptor comes from other initiatives such as safety, security (physical or cyber), physical asset management, environmental compliance, and capital project management. More specifically, the disruptor comes from their sponsors and subject matter experts who do not want to change their approaches.

A third disruptor relates to how the analysis should be performed. A common debate is how qualitative or quantifiable different aspects should be. Another related source is related to scales, measurement, and data quality. A third source is how the assessment steps should be executed. Subject matter experts are strongly associated with this disruptor.

Practical Applications

Technical professionals are often asked to “lead” teams through the application of assessment tools such as failure modes and effects analysis (FMEA), Root Cause Analysis (RCM), and Reliability Block Diagrams. The mistaken assumption is that you will be a good facilitator because you are the smartest person in the room or in charge of other people.

The solution is to take the facilitation role seriously by treating it as a dedicated, craft-oriented role. This article provides insights for doing the role correctly as a reliability engineer or any other technical professional.

  • Understand the formal definition of facilitation and the role of a facilitator
  • Develop soft skill and hard skills that are needed as a technical facilitator
  • Execute the basic responsibilities of a facilitator
  • Avoid wasting time the limited time you have with participants
  • Prepare for inevitable disruptions

Facilitating technical assessments and their underlying tools requires bringing many different parts together for outcomes that the individual parts can not create. The foundations of systems thinking apply to technical facilitation and play to the strengths of reliability engineers dedicated to perfecting the craft.


JD Solomon Inc provides facilitation, asset management, and program development solutions at the nexus of facilities, infrastructure, and the environment. Founded by JD Solomon, Communicating with FINESSE is the community of technical professionals dedicated to being highly effective trusted advisors and getting the boss’s boss to understand. Learn more about our publications, webinars, and workshops. Join the community for free.

JD Solomon is the author of Communicating Reliability, Risk & Resiliency to Decision Makers: How to Get your Boss’s Boss to Understand and Facilitating with FINESSE: A Guide to Successful Business Solutions.

Filed Under: Articles, Communicating with FINESSE, on Systems Thinking Tagged With: Facilitation, Root Cause Analysis (RCA)

About JD Solomon

JD Solomon, PE, CRE, CMRP provides facilitation, business case evaluation, root cause analysis, and risk management. His roles as a senior leader in two Fortune 500 companies, as a town manager, and as chairman of a state regulatory board provide him with a first-hand perspective of how senior decision-makers think. His technical expertise in systems engineering and risk & uncertainty analysis using Monte Carlo simulation provides him practical perspectives on the strengths and limitations of advanced technical approaches.  In practice, JD works with front-line staff and executive leaders to create workable solutions for facilities, infrastructure, and business processes.

« Maintenance Backlog Work Order Scheduling using Queuing Theory
The 6 Things I Learned as a Manufacturing Reliability Consultant »

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

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

Headshot of JD SolomonArticles by JD Solomon
in the Communicating with FINESSE article series

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