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10 Reasons to Do Reliability - podcast
Manage episode 367345380 series 2359252
10 Reasons to Do Reliability
podcast episode with speaker Chris Jackson
Everyone knows' why we do reliability engineering right? Customer experience. Organization reputation. Reduced warranty claims ten years from now. But these are boring reasons that really don't motivate me to take reliability seriously now. Why should I invest so much time into an activity that benefits the company' or the customer' in the future but won't make an immediate difference when my boss gives me a gold star' on my next performance appraisal? Besides, no one person is responsible for reliability, so any effort I invest in reliability will be lost in the noise' anyway. And, of course, reliability will increase the budget and schedule today. Right?
There is a simple trick that organizations who do reliability' well use. They understand that reliability engineering solves problems starting today. That means there are fewer crises during production (costing time and money), a focus on the VITAL FEW things that matter (not the TRIVIAL THOUSANDS that lead to over-engineering), and no 300-slide PowerPoint presentations where we need to discuss reliability stuff' every week. No more build-test-fix' treadmill. Come and listen if you want to hear the ten reasons to do reliability engineering well that reduce production timelines, save budget, eliminate the overwhelm', and otherwise motivate everyone to bake reliability into the first design.'
This Accendo Reliability webinar was originally broadcast on 27 June 2023.
To view the recorded video/audio and PDF workbook of the event, visit the webinar page.
Additional content that may be of interest
Decisions and Value episode
The Value of Curiosity episode
Boost Your Professional Value by 50% Why Communications Matters episode
Value of Certification episode
Added Value Strategies for Digitalized Lubrication Online Lubrication Monitoring with Guillermo Miró episode
Finding Value with Reliability Tasks
This webinar discusses the importance of estimated value and helps you discover and state the value of common reliability activities.
Life Cycle Cost Analysis for a Reliability Engineer
Life cycle cost: Let's explore estimating the total lifecycle costs for a complex system from the point of view of a reliability engineer.
Predicting the Value of a Reliability Goal in Your Organization
When setting a reliability goal, considere the value that reliability goal may provide. Let's explore three ways you can estimate the value.
Fundamentals of Cost of Poor Reliability
A discussion of the wide range of the impact of the cost of poor reliability on engineers, organizations, customers, and society.
Fundamentals of the Cost of Unreliability
When a product or system fails there is a consequence. Often there is a loss of value. A warranty replacement costs money.
The Reliability Value Map. It is a thing.
A value map is an organized chart that helps you track down every possible good' thing that reliability can do for you.
Reliability Making Money
You need to work out how many spare parts, so put some numbers in a computer and use the that result. Right?
Reliability Making Money 2 Case Study
Let's explore a Weibull plot and enjoy reliability making money. In this episode, we look at an actual Weibull plot for an actual example
How to Make a Decision
This webinar takes you through the key steps of decision-making particularly relating to reliability engineering.
9 Ways Reliability is Green Engineering
Visit a scrap yard to witness the impact of getting a new car'. Let's explore the many ways creating a reliable product is beneficial.
The post 10 Reasons to Do Reliability appeared first on Accendo Reliability.
188 episodes
Manage episode 367345380 series 2359252
10 Reasons to Do Reliability
podcast episode with speaker Chris Jackson
Everyone knows' why we do reliability engineering right? Customer experience. Organization reputation. Reduced warranty claims ten years from now. But these are boring reasons that really don't motivate me to take reliability seriously now. Why should I invest so much time into an activity that benefits the company' or the customer' in the future but won't make an immediate difference when my boss gives me a gold star' on my next performance appraisal? Besides, no one person is responsible for reliability, so any effort I invest in reliability will be lost in the noise' anyway. And, of course, reliability will increase the budget and schedule today. Right?
There is a simple trick that organizations who do reliability' well use. They understand that reliability engineering solves problems starting today. That means there are fewer crises during production (costing time and money), a focus on the VITAL FEW things that matter (not the TRIVIAL THOUSANDS that lead to over-engineering), and no 300-slide PowerPoint presentations where we need to discuss reliability stuff' every week. No more build-test-fix' treadmill. Come and listen if you want to hear the ten reasons to do reliability engineering well that reduce production timelines, save budget, eliminate the overwhelm', and otherwise motivate everyone to bake reliability into the first design.'
This Accendo Reliability webinar was originally broadcast on 27 June 2023.
To view the recorded video/audio and PDF workbook of the event, visit the webinar page.
Additional content that may be of interest
Decisions and Value episode
The Value of Curiosity episode
Boost Your Professional Value by 50% Why Communications Matters episode
Value of Certification episode
Added Value Strategies for Digitalized Lubrication Online Lubrication Monitoring with Guillermo Miró episode
Finding Value with Reliability Tasks
This webinar discusses the importance of estimated value and helps you discover and state the value of common reliability activities.
Life Cycle Cost Analysis for a Reliability Engineer
Life cycle cost: Let's explore estimating the total lifecycle costs for a complex system from the point of view of a reliability engineer.
Predicting the Value of a Reliability Goal in Your Organization
When setting a reliability goal, considere the value that reliability goal may provide. Let's explore three ways you can estimate the value.
Fundamentals of Cost of Poor Reliability
A discussion of the wide range of the impact of the cost of poor reliability on engineers, organizations, customers, and society.
Fundamentals of the Cost of Unreliability
When a product or system fails there is a consequence. Often there is a loss of value. A warranty replacement costs money.
The Reliability Value Map. It is a thing.
A value map is an organized chart that helps you track down every possible good' thing that reliability can do for you.
Reliability Making Money
You need to work out how many spare parts, so put some numbers in a computer and use the that result. Right?
Reliability Making Money 2 Case Study
Let's explore a Weibull plot and enjoy reliability making money. In this episode, we look at an actual Weibull plot for an actual example
How to Make a Decision
This webinar takes you through the key steps of decision-making particularly relating to reliability engineering.
9 Ways Reliability is Green Engineering
Visit a scrap yard to witness the impact of getting a new car'. Let's explore the many ways creating a reliable product is beneficial.
The post 10 Reasons to Do Reliability appeared first on Accendo Reliability.
188 episodes
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