Maintenance Management

Prepare and prevent, don't repair and repent

Although often used interchangeably, maintenance and maintenance management are not the same. Maintenance refers to the physical execution of tasks, such as:

It focuses on what work is done on assets

Strong maintenance management ensures that the right work is done, at the right time, on the right asset, at the right cost.

It focuses on what work is done on assets. Maintenance management is a strategic and systematic function that includes:

Traditional Maintenance

In aviation industry, If you only schedule maintenance by time/flight intervals (preventive maintenance schedule), You might prevent the ~11% of age-related failures. But you’ll likely still experience ~89% of failures which are not age related

Maintenance is often viewed only as a cost center, but its impact goes far beyond expenses.

Maintenance directly affects profitability (bottom line impact) through:

Poor maintenance strategies increase total cost of ownership (TCO) of assets and erode margins. Maintenance also has a strong influence on revenue generation (top line impact)

In short, maintenance excellence protects the bottom line and enables the top line.

Preventive and corrective maintenance are necessary — but they are no longer enough. To achieve higher plant availability, lower maintenance costs, and sustainable business growth, organizations must shift toward maintenance management excellence and reliability-centered thinking.

By optimizing preventive maintenance, focusing on asset reliability, and aligning maintenance strategies with business objectives, plants can transform maintenance from a reactive necessity into a powerful competitive advantage.

Talk to our experts at granMil® to assist your journey towards maintenance excellence