All over
the world, most plants have morning meetings. As a consultant, I have been asked
to sit in on many of these meetings, and my conclusion from these experiences is
that most of them are not very effective or meaningful to the attendees.
First of all, the focus of the meetings is often on past events. For
example, each department reports what happened yesterday, and very little time
is spent on today's plans. In addition, even less time is spent on activities
that must take place tomorrow and beyond.
The worst-case scenario
Let me
tell you a little about the least effective meetings I have attended by
describing a generic case. At this meeting, the room is noisy, people have to
stand up because there is no place to sit, and there are no visual aids such as
an overhead projector, flip charts or a white board.
In addition, the
leader of the meeting does not lead the meeting at all and often speaks with a
low voice, making it impossible to hear. Attendees receive the latest production
report and are asked – one by one – to read the part for which they are
responsible. At this point, it is common to see that people do not listen to
parts of the production report that do not directly apply to them. In addition,
when they read their own parts, others do not listen to them either.
In the very worst scenarios, maintenance
craftspeople do not start working in the morning until they have talked with
their supervisor. This often causes a delay in work because the supervisor
attends the morning meeting at 8 a.m., while the crew arrives at 7 a.m. The crew
has learned, from long experience, that job schedules and work assignments are
frequently changed as a result of the morning meeting. Therefore, they wait
until the supervisor comes back from the morning meeting around 8:30 a.m. to
begin work for the day.
Creating
more effective meetings
To improve the effectiveness of your plant’s morning meetings, I propose that you ask yourselves some of the following basic questions:
Effective meeting characteristics
Some very effective meetings I have attended share some of the following characteristics:
No meetings?
Personally, I believe it is good to have meetings if they are productive, and it is a given that attendees must include operations and maintenance people at a minimum. If the purpose of your meetings is to spread information, you can sometimes accomplish this using internal televisions and computer networks. With those capabilities, you can possibly have fewer meetings.
Torbjörn (Tor) Idhammar is partner and vice president of reliability and
maintenance management consultants for IDCON Inc. His primary responsibilities
include training and implementation support for preventive maintenance/essential
care and condition monitoring, planning and scheduling, spare parts management,
and root cause problem elimination. He is the author of “Condition Monitoring
Standards” (volumes 1 through 3). He earned a BS in industrial engineering from
North Carolina State University and an MS in mechanical engineering from Lund
University (Sweden). Contact Tor at 800-849-2041 or e-mail info@idcon.com. |