1. |
EAM/CMMS Evaluation Center

Nov 25, 2009
Today's usage of Decision Support Systems (DSS), combined with vetted EAM knowledge bases, allows organizations to save time and money, achieving better and more reliable/fully-documented decisions, a quantum improvement over the widely-used subjective process of selecting complex enterprise software...
|
| 2. |
EAM Versus CMMS: What's Right for Your Company? Part One ( Pages)
by Joe Strub and P.J. Jakovljevic
Mar 15, 2004 Abstract : As companies continue to look for more areas from which to squeeze out revenues and reduce expenses, enterprise asset management (EAM) and computerized maintenance management systems (CMMS) software continue to receive good press as the systems providing an answer--and with justification. But what software makes the most sense for your company and from which providers--EAM/CMMS best-of-breed incumbents or enterprise resource planning (ERP)
|
| 3. |
EAM versus CMMS: What's Right for Your Company ( Pages)
by Joe Strub and P.J. Jakovljevic
Jun 20, 2008 Abstract : This article looks at where computerized maintenance management systems (CMMS) end and enterprise asset management (EAM) takes over, focusing on features and functionality of EAM software. It also compares CMMS and EAM software and explores the two key differentiators.
|
| 4. |
EAM versus CMMS: What's Right for Your Company (0 Pages)
by Joe Strub and P.J. Jakovljevic
Aug 24, 2009 Abstract : This article looks at where computerized maintenance management systems (CMMS) end and enterprise asset management (EAM) takes over, focusing on features and functionality of EAM software. It also compares CMMS and EAM software and explores the two key differentiators.
|
| 5. |
How to Avoid Becoming Another CMMS Implementation Failure Statistic ( Pages)
by Aleks Vujicic
Mar 3, 2005 Abstract : Anywhere from 40 to 80 percent of CMMS implementations fail to meet expectations. However, by evaluating the company's business process flow, having proper organizational structure and buy-in, you can realize the true benefits of CMMS and avoid becoming another failure statistic.
|
| 6. |
Continuous Improvement Offers CMMS Maintenance Benefits ( Pages)
by David Berger
Feb 24, 2004 Abstract : Computer maintenance management system (CMMS) packages are excellent tools for collecting, analyzing, and reporting data and can offer insight into a process’ problem. Critical success factors for the effective use for the CMMS involves clear support from management and measurable drivers involving time, quality, and cost.
|
| 7. |
Use CMMS to Improve PdM Performance ( Pages)
by David Berger
Feb 19, 2004 Abstract : Companies that have moved from a highly reactive environment to a more planned one notice significant improvement. A computer maintenance management system (CMMS) or an enterprise asset management (EAM) is a useful tool to create a planned environment, help build accurate equipment history, and develop comprehensive analysis capability. Reprinted with permission from Plant Engineering and Maintenance magazine.
|
| 8. |
EAM versus CMMS: What's Right for Your Company? Part Four: IFS and Intentia Responses ( Pages)
by Joe Strub and P.J. Jakovljevic
Mar 18, 2004 Abstract : The primary benefit of enterprise asset management (EAM) is the reliability-centered maintenance. Let’s face it: any process that can help you improve what you are doing now and enables you to do it better in the future is the best thing since
|
| 9. |
EAM versus CMMS: What's Right for Your Company? Part Two: Integration Concerns ( Pages)
by Joe Strub and P.J. Jakovljevic
Mar 16, 2004 Abstract : In most cases, companies will acquire enterprise asset management (EAM) software but the interfaces to external systems will have to be constructed.
|
| 10. |
Computerized Maintenance Management Systems: A Tutorial Part One: Challenges and Features ( Pages)
by Joseph J. Strub
Jul 7, 2003 Abstract : Companies are looking for more areas to squeeze savings out of operations. One such area that may be fertile ground to explore is equipment maintenance. The class of software that can help to cultivate these savings is computerized maintenance management systems (CMMS). This article discusses the basics of CMMS and its key features, enabling you to determine whether your company should investigate this software as a potential source of savings.
|