Bluefield 30 in 30

Gerard Wood

Bluefield 30 in 30 is a podcast intending to capture key learnings from mining professionals with a minimum of 30 years experience in 30 minutes.

  1. 10/14/2021

    Caring for the Fleet with a Focus on People with Christian Darby

    Our guest today, Christian Darby, is an exceptional leader in the maintenance industry. He joins us today to talk about the learnings from his 30 plus years in the mining industry, and how he attributes the success of his fleet to the way he treats his people.  Christian is a highly experienced and qualified Maintenance Specialist, with years of experience working in various roles within Australia and around the world. As an inclusive leader and manager, he has a proven record of exceeding performance goals and creating a holistic, sustainable workshop safety culture. In this episode, Christian talks about the importance of taking ownership of the machines he is working on to improve fleet reliability and asset performance. He shares some of the best and worst experiences he’s had over the years and his approach to improving work executive quality. We talk about why developing an asset management plan is one of the most important factors in rectifying a reactive workshop and how this flows into every area of the site, instilling clarity and focus. Christian also shares his advice for aspiring maintenance managers, which is to focus on the people. If you treat people well and give your trust freely, the people will buy in and the overall performance of the fleet will improve. LINKS: Website: https://www.bluefield.com.au/en/ Christian LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/christian-darby-28635727/?originalSubdomain=au

    30 min
  2. 03/09/2021

    Taking a Systematic Approach to Ouput Improvement with Dick Pettigrew

    Our guest today has been at the forefront of operational reliability improvement in various industries around the world for many years. Dick Pettigrew joins us today, sharing from his extensive experience as we discuss his integrated approach to design, maintenance and operations.   With a degree in Chemical Engineering and a love for machinery, Dick started out working in process engineering support. As he progressed into design and project management, Dick began to observe fundamental issues surrounding the approach to reliability improvement and maintenance operations. In this episode, Dick shares about his career journey, some of the major learnings of his experience thus far and his holistic approach to problem solving on site, not just within maintenance reliability.   We discuss how output improvement is more valuable than maintenance cost reductions, how there’s a difference between the problem and the cause and that taking a broadened approach from reliability improvement into total manufacturing improvement is what will create sustainable improvements.   Dick talks us through some of his experiences improving outcomes and how the assessment process itself isn’t as important as the commitment from the leadership team and people on site to implement the improvements. We discuss the importance of establishing a good culture and how working with people directly on the floor brings the plant up to standard and restores pride in the operation.   Dick has spent a lot of time creating measurement systems and writing books to take a systematic approach to output improvement. He discusses his asset utilisation model and how combining this with the theory of constraints enabled him to improve the output of many plants he’s been involved in.   We discuss using RCM not as a project but as a way of thinking about plant reliability and how it can make a real difference when utilised this way. Dick shares his advice to aspiring maintenance and operational managers, honing in on the vital component of the human aspect. TOPICS DISCUSSED AND WHERE TO FIND THEM [2:00]: How Dick started out as a chemical engineer and worked in process engineering support, moving into design and project management [3:30]: How Dick became frustrated by the fact that the chemical plants he built weren’t being operated and maintained in the way they were intended to and that they needed an integrated approach to design, maintenance and operations [4:30]: As he moved into maintenance management, Dick discovered there wasn’t a logical approach or codified practises as there were in design [6:00]: How Dick was asked by the vice president of a large plant to discover ways to improve the maintenance and how they hired a maintenance consultant, wrote a book, developed a bench-marking process and performed many assessments on their plants [8:00]: How all problems flow down to maintenance but they developed a measurement system and philosophy that went back to the source of the problem. [10:30]: Combining the asset utilization model with the theory of constraints enabled them to start improving the output of their plants [11:20]: How output improvement is 5-10 times more valuable than maintenance cost reductions [12:30]: The opportunities that exist within the unscheduled operational downtime [14:00]: How Dick retired from the chemical business in 2003 and established his own consulting business which led him to work with an Australian mining company. He rewrote the chemical plant assessment book into mining terms. [16:45]: How they implemented a successful process where the site took ownership for the outcomes of the assessment [18:50]: Relialitics Equipment Condition Supervisor software [21:00]: The assessment process itself isn’t as important as the commitment from the leadership team and people on site to implement the improvement [22:16]: How any errors should be classed as unscheduled downtime, regardless of the source of the problem because there’s a difference between the problem and the cause. [23:00]: How often maintenance and operations are at odds but working together is essential [25:00]: A successful plant that changed to become much more reliable, largely due to the local management and their focus on teamwork. [27:15]: How the state and size of the storeroom is a good indicator of the success of the plant [28:30]: How the commitment from local management and the people on site is what really makes change possible [32:00]: How senior managers understand how difficult improvement can be and have been more understanding of the process than Dick himself [34:20]: How the culture of a place with the right people, attitudes and standards create sustainability [39:00]: Working directly on the floor in clean and tag operations brings the plant up to standard and restores pride in the operation [42:10]: planning and scheduling is there to improve the efficiency of scheduled maintenance downtime but doesn’t actually improve reliability if the quality of the work isn’t there [43:30]: Dick’s advice to aspiring maintenance and operational managers - the human aspect has to be at the forefront of your thinking and the technical aspects of RCM, importantly addressing functional requirements not the machine itself How you think about failures and manage them through the RCM mentality   BOOKS MENTIONED: The Goal by Eliyahu M. Goldratt Reliability-Centered Management by John Moubray   Website: https://www.bluefield.com.au/en/

    50 min
  3. 01/19/2021

    Improving Safety and Work Quality Outcomes with Steve Flannery

    Our guest today, Steve Flannery, has clocked up just over 30 years working primarily in the mining industry. Starting off as a plant mechanic apprentice to gain hands on experience, completing his mechanical engineering degree and working in numerous large corporations, Steve has vast experience in asset management with a focus on work quality. Steve’s current role is in Asset Management Services as Manager of Eastern Region (NSW/Vic/NZ) at Bluefield. In this episode, Steve shares his journey in the industry and how having a trade background makes a big difference with people on the ground, understanding the challenges of the job and how to find positive solutions. Steve shares how good maintenance is all about having the right people doing the right work at the right time and that work quality and safety go hand in hand.  He recounts some incidents on site leading to injuries and how in his experience, incidents most commonly involve an asset, design or maintenance element. When asked about his best outcome from assets, Steve shares about the challenge he faced in 2012 to cut his maintenance budget by 30%.  He was able to achieve this target in a sustainable way whilst maintaining fleet performance through strategy and good data. This experience taught Steve a lot and he discusses how he has learnt to focus on the work execution team to obtain the best results. Steve recounts his worst experience as a maintenance manager and his most difficult time dealing with a GM and how he dealt with it. He also shares about his positive fix mentality and leaves us with his top pieces of advice for those looking to enter into the maintenance managers space.   LinkedIn: https://au.linkedin.com/in/stephen-flannery-5880ba14 Website: https://www.bluefield.com.au/en/

    36 min
  4. 11/24/2020

    Listening to your Team to Achieve Results with Dave Archinal

    Our guest today is Dave Archinal, the South Australian Manager at Bluefield, and he shares from his wealth of knowledge and experience in the reliability and improvement arena.  Having worked in the industry for over 30 years, Dave has travelled the world working on different improvement programs across numerous industries and commodities. In this episode, Dave talks about how he got started in the industry in a mechanical engineering cadetship and how he worked his way through supervisory and planner roles, eventually finding his niche in reliability and improvement.  Dave was encouraged to step up into a supervisory role at the young age of 19 and he shares some of the lessons he learned early on about the importance of asking the right questions, listening and enabling others to perform at their best. As a young apprentice, David was never satisfied with simply completing transactions.  He felt the need to question how the system could be made easier, which led him into maintenance improvement initiatives and eventually into the consulting space.  David shares numerous experiences working with companies to improve their systems by asking the right questions and challenging the existing processes in place. David shares his 3 golden nuggets for those looking to embark on a reliability improvement project and talks about the importance of taking the time to listen to the people around you.  You can have all the ideas in the world, but until you know what the problem is, you won’t find the solution.   LINKS: LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/davidarchinal/?originalSubdomain=au Website: https://www.bluefield.com.au/en/ Book: The Knowing Doing Gap

    37 min
  5. 11/11/2020

    Lifting People up to a Common Goal with Richard Blayden

    Our guest today has quite a few more than 30 years experience under his belt. Recognised as the father of the pipeline model for understanding work management, Richard Blayden was the first to put together a detailed framework for operational readiness processes. His developments have become the standard reference point for many of us in the industry. Starting out his career as a young apprentice, Richard went back to study engineering and progressed into project management. With a broad range of knowledge and depth of experience, he provides asset management and organisational performance improvement services to the mining industry and other industries. In this episode, Richard shares from his years of experience and how and why he came to develop the pipeline model. Having been involved in maintenance and project management from early days, he found that a lot of issues on site were due to a lack of information, communication and poor data analysis. Richard discusses common issues on site and how the pipeline model helps to lift people up to a common goal rather than dwelling on their personal thoughts about a particular issue. Richard discusses his involvement in the BHP maintenance evaluation in the early days and the three key issues that were discovered from that process. He shares his thoughts on why people aren’t good at data analysis, how a character string analysis identified an issue that was costing millions of dollars every year and how identifying and implementing the right process helped to fix it. LINKS: Website: https://www.bluefield.com.au/en/

    31 min
  6. 08/24/2020

    Keeping Your Systems Simple with Leigh Jameson

    A system is a tool that delivers on business processes to reach strategic goals.  A common mistake, however, is when businesses focus on the system instead of the outcome the system is intended to achieve. Our guest today is Leigh Jameson, Senior Asset Management Specialist at Bluefield, and he shares from his wealth of knowledge regarding data analysis, systems and processes.  Beginning his career as a motor mechanic and moving into diesel fitting and numerous roles within the mining industry, Leigh’s vast experience has provided a unique perspective into how keeping systems simple lead to the best performance outcomes. Throughout Leigh’s experience in the workplace, he discovered a passion for improving systems and asking the right questions to enable better outcomes and work quality.  Motivated by his desire to thoroughly investigate issues, Leigh spent nights reading and educating himself which eventually led him into the asset management space. In this episode, Leigh shares his passion for systems improvement and how quality data underpinned by good business processes leads to work quality and positive outcomes on site.  He shares some of his positive and challenging experiences over the years and the lessons learned regarding the importance of simplifying systems. A great system is only one aspect of achieving great results.  Leigh shares about the importance of developing a proactive culture on site where each person has a part to play.  When people are valued, motivated, and educated they can work together to look for areas of improvement and reduce administrative burden. Linkedin: https://au.linkedin.com/in/leighjameson Website: https://www.bluefield.com.au/en/

    44 min

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Bluefield 30 in 30 is a podcast intending to capture key learnings from mining professionals with a minimum of 30 years experience in 30 minutes.