Introduction
Enterprise
asset management (EAM) software and computerized maintenance management
systems (CMMS) continue to grab headlines as a realistic way to reduce
expenses and increase revenues. For one, maintaining an adequate level of repair
and service parts inventory based on forecasted equipment usage can prevent
already limited funds from being over-allocated just to achieve a false sense
of security. Also, an effective preventive maintenance program can improve equipment
utilization and availability, enabling production schedules to be achieved especially
when an exorbitantly expensive equipment replacement is a no-option during depressed
economic times. Extending into the customer base, this applies as much to standards
of service as it does to product quality.
What
attracts companies to this class of software is that the savings are tangible
and real—you know, the kind that you can take to the bank. Consequently, the
advantage that EAM/CMMS has over other types of enterprise applications is that
its return on investment (ROI) is often reasonably quickly achieved
and easily quantified. Namely, it is a relatively straightforward exercise to
demonstrate the bottom line value provided by optimized utilization that results
from optimally maintained production equipment and the facility where it is
housed.
This
article looks at where CMMS ends and EAM takes over, with particular emphasis
on features and functionality of EAM software. If you are unsure of the capabilities
of CMMS and need a quick refresher course, read the TEC article entitled, CMMS:
A Tutorial.
Offerings
from software vendors, IFS AB (XSSE: IFS) and Intentia
(XSSE: INT B), two fellow Swedish providers of enterprise business applications
for midsize and large enterprises, will be used to help illustrate some of the
advanced features of EAM.
The
remainder of this article compares CMMS and EAM software and explores, in more
detail, two key differentiators: integration concerns and reliability-centered
maintenance (RCM). The article ends with a background on Intentia and IFS,
and with a general discussion about enterprise resource planning (ERP) vendors'
foray into the EAM/CMMS arena.
This
is Part One of a four-part note.
Part
Two will address integration concerns.
Parts
Three and Four will present an analysis of two major vendors.
Comparing CMMS and EAM
Many regard EAM as CMMS on steroids, which is an oversimplification and does not paint the true picture. Typically, CMMS deals strictly within the confines of the work order and preventive maintenance activity. Specific functions include
- Scheduling
preventive maintenance based on triggers (such as hours of operation) or timed
events (for example, every three months)
- Ensuring
probability-based availability repair and spare parts
- Serial
number tracking and tracing
-
Suggesting and originating the purchase of needed repair parts
- Warranty
tracking
- Ensuring
availability of manpower resources with required skills and training
- Maintaining
an asset registry and repair parts database (i.e. nomenclature, hierarchy
structure, where used, support descriptions, etc.)
- Tracking
costs of maintaining individual pieces of equipment
- Differentiation
and appropriate management of fixed, mobile, and continuous assets
- Recording
unexpected events for further analysis
- Statistical
analysis of equipment performance and reliability, and providing a variety
of reports from static and dynamic sources (i.e. equipment utilization, equipment
downtime, MTBF—equipment mean time between failure, MTTR—equipment mean time
to repair, etc.)
EAM
software encompasses these functions and, in most cases, extends their capabilities
but EAM software offers many features that can provide additional capabilities,
value added functionality, and savings to your company. As seen above, a CMMS
solution usually includes purchasing and procurement, inventory management,
as well as equipment, parts, and asset tracking. However, CMMS applications
typically do not have financial and accounting (other than mere cost recording)
or human resource (HR) management capabilities (other than basic staffing
needs recognition) and are typically purchased to integrate with the applications
that support financial and HR management more deeply. These back-office applications
are also typically designed to run at and for a single plant.
The CMMS functionality is thus typically extended to EAM by the addition of financial management modules, and more advanced HR management to cater for roster creation and management, and for recording and monitoring necessary skills. Technically, the EAM applications are also designed to scale to larger numbers of users and facilitate running at multiple sites from a single central database, thereby catering better to entire enterprises, rather than departmental or individual plant needs.
To
that end, both IFS and Intentia's EAM offerings can schedule preventive maintenance
and manage these activities as well as unplanned maintenance. However, these
products seamlessly extract and update data from Microsoft Project
workplans, a popular project management tool. Additionally, Intentia's EAM is
integrated with Movex Advanced Production Planner (APP),
its production optimization tool. As a result, production orders and maintenance
work orders for the same production line can be planned simultaneously, thus
providing the possibility of scheduling maintenance work into available production
windows. Moreover, the product is designed to plan production work around any
maintenance issues, so that production is optimized.
EAM Offers More
EAM
software offers a more robust methodology for documenting equipment and their
parts to include warranties, schematics, and computer aided design
(CAD) drawings. Through IFS's Plant Design set of modules,
once data is entered into the common database, it immediately becomes available
to the other IFS modules. As a result, information can be recycled, remain consistent,
and updated, and never has to be entered twice. Plant Design also provides designers
with a drawing tool for process and instrumentation design. Predefined forms
and convenient lookup functionality are further examples of features that benefit
all design disciplines.
EAM
software provides better and more conclusive analysis of the maintenance,
repair, and, overhaul (MRO) alternatives. The Intentia Diagnostics module,
which is used to provide RCM functionality, calculates the cost of failure based
on the downtime costs multiplied by the downtime plus any additional repair.
It also provides an additional analysis, namely cost prevention, which is based
on the cost of the maintenance service, including labor and parts, over the
same period of time as the mean time between failures (MTBF).
What does it mean to your company to have the resource available, based on historical trends and a preventive maintenance schedule? Or more simply stated: is it costing the user more to maintain the resource than the value it is providing? On the other hand, through an interface with its fixed assets module, IFS provides an interesting wrinkle to the overhaul alternative. Its EAM offering will consider undertaking a major overhaul, say of an engine replacement, if this activity results in a significant extension of the useful life of the asset to generate sufficient depreciation expense to warrant the overhaul.
Both
of IFS and Intentia's EAM offerings provide excellent tools by which to customize
access to the software. This customization includes screen views, database queries,
and report layouts. Personal portals cover the most common functions and features
required by maintenance technicians. The end result is an easier assimilation
and use of the software and can smooth the learning curve. As will be discussed
later in this article, a major differentiator of EAM software is the reliability-centered
maintenance (RCM) concept, which is supported by both IFS and Intentia.
With
input from Daryl Mather's recent TEC article entitled, The
Total EAM Vision Strategic Advantages in Asset Management, the chart
below summarizes features and functions expected in CMMS and EAM software.
|
Typically
Found In |
Functions
and Features |
CMMS |
EAM |
Database
structure and hierarchy |

|

|
Repair
parts availability |

|

|
Manpower
resource availability |

|

|
Purchase
requisition |

|

|
Preventive
maintenance scheduling |

|

|
Cost accumulation
and tracking |

|

|
Inception
recording and tracking |

|

|
Standard
and exception reporting |

|

|
Whole life
asset care |
|

|
Maintenance
administration |
|

|
Predictive
maintenance analysis
|
|

|
Maintenance
alternatives analysis
|
|

|
Physical
asset risk management
|
|

|
Reliability-centered
maintenance
|
|

|
Root cause
analysis
|
|

|
Financial
cost/life analysis
|
|

|
Technical
document change management
|
|

|
Strategic
usage analysis
|
|

|
Strategic
planning for asset management |
|

|
This
concludes Part One of a four-part note.
Part
Two will address integration concerns.
Parts
Three and Four will present an analysis of two major vendors.
About
the Authors
Predrag
Jakovljevic is a research director with Technology Evaluation Centers,
Inc. (TEC), with a focus on the enterprise applications market. He has
over fifteen years of manufacturing industry experience, including several
years as a power user of IT/ERP, as well as being a consultant/implementer
and market analyst. He holds a bachelor's degree in mechanical engineering
from the University of Belgrade, Yugoslavia, and he has also been certified
in production and inventory management (CPIM) and in integrated resources
management (CIRM) by APICS. |
 |
Joseph
J. Strub has extensive experience as a manager and senior consultant in
planning and executing ERP projects for manufacturing and distribution
systems for large to medium-size companies in the retail, food and beverage,
chemical, and CPG process industries. Additionally, Strub was a consultant
and Information Systems Auditor with PricewaterhouseCoopers and an applications
development and support manager for Fortune 100 companies.
He can be
reached at JoeStrub@writecompanyplus.com. |
 |