Description

Book Synopsis

By outlining how reliability engineering practices fit within a product development program, the reader will have a better understanding of how roles and goals align with the program and how this applies to their specific role.

Reliability Culture: How Leaders Build Organizations that Create Reliable Products, will help readers develop a deep understanding of reliability, including what it really means for organizations, how to implement it in daily operations, and, most importantly, how to build a culture that is centered around reliability and can generate impressive profits. When senior leaders work toward reliability, product details often get lost in translation. This book will enable organizations to overcome this problem by showing leaders how their actions truly affect product development. They will be introduced to new methods that will immediately enable them to have carefully crafted product specifications translated into matching, highly reliable products

Table of Contents

Series Editor’s Foreword by Dr. Andre Kleyner xi

Acknowledgements xiii

Introduction xv

1 The Product Development Challenge 1

Key Players 1

Follow the Carrot or Get Out of the Race 3

It’s Not That I’m Lazy, It’s That I Just Don’t Care 5

Product-specification Profiles 8

Product Drivers 9

Bounding Factors 10

Reliability Discipline 11

References 15

2 Balancing Business Goals and Reliability 17

Return on Investment 17

Program Accounting 18

Rule of 10s 20

Design for Reliability 21

Reliability Engineer’s Responsibility to Connect to the Business Case 23

Role of the Reliability Professional 26

Summary 28

References 29

3 Directed Product Development Culture 31

The Past, Present, and Future of Reliability Engineering 32

Influences 32

The Invention of “Inventing” 33

Quality and Inventing Are Behaviors 34

As Always, WWII Changed Everything 35

The Postwar Influence Diminishes 36

The Emergence of Japan 37

Reliability Is No Longer a Luxury 38

Understand the Intent 39

Levels of Awareness 40

Summary 41

References 42

4 Awakening 43

Stage 1 43

Stage 2 43

Stage 3 44

Stage 4 44

The Ownership Chart 44

Comparing Charts 45

Benefits of the Ownership Chart 45

Communicating Clearly 50

Behind the Words at Work 51

When You Want to Improve 53

My Personal Case 53

Getting the Message Across 54

The Importance of Time 54

When We Can’t Communicate at the Organizational Level 55

When Scheduling Trumps Testing 57

Summary 58

5 Goals and Intentions 61

Testing Intent 61

Testing to Improve 61

Quick Question 61

Ownership 62

Fear-driven Testing 62

Transferring Ownership 63

Leadership and Transference 64

Objectives and Transference 65

What Transferred Ownership Looks Like 67

The Benefits of Successful Transference 67

A Racing Bike Analogy 68

Guided by All the Goals All the Time 69

The Roadmap Conundrum 69

Why We Embrace Tunnel Vision 69

When No One Has a Plan 69

Summary 70

References 70

6 New Roles 71

Role of Change Agents 71

Reliability Czar 72

The Czar is a Link 73

Direct Input 74

Distilling Information 74

Who is the Czar? 74

How the Czar Works with the Team and Leadership 76

Tips for the Czar 77

Role of Facilitators 78

Facilitation Technique 78

Creating a Narrative 80

Role of Reliability Professionals 80

Stop Asking for Resources 81

Connect Reliability to the Market 81

Summary 83

7 Program Assessment 85

Measurements 85

What to Measure 86

Using Reliability Testing as Program Guidance 86

The Primary Wear-out Failure Mode 88

The Random Fail Rate During Use Life 90

Reliability Maturity Assessments 90

Steps for an Assessment 91

The Team 92

The Topics 93

The Scoring 94

Analyze: The Reliability Maturity Matrix 94

Review with the Team and Summarize 95

Recommend Actions 98

Assess Particular Areas in More Detail 98

Golden Nuggets 98

Summary 99

References 99

8 Reliability Culture Tools 101

Advancing Culture 101

Manipulative Managing 101

Manipulative Management in Action 102

An Alternative to Manipulation 102

Transfer Why 103

Reliability Bounding 103

Fire and Forget 103

Reliability Feedback 104

Strategy Bounding 104

Strategy Bounding Toolkit 104

Midprogram Feedback 105

The Bounding Number 105

Bounding ROI 106

Invest and Return Tables 107

Deciding by Bounding 110

Anchoring 110

Closed Loop Control 112

Open Loop Control 112

Intent Anchor 113

Delivery Anchor 114

The Value of Anchoring 115

Focus Rotation 115

The Focus Rotation Steps 115

Working in Freedom and with Ownership 116

The Gore Example 117

Why Don’t All Companies Do This? 118

Summary 118

9 Guiding the Program in Motion 119

Guidance Bounding 119

Guidance Bounding ROI 120

The Plan 120

The Issue 120

Technology Cascade 120

Timing is Everything 121

Our Choice 121

Using Bounding 121

The Results 122

Program Risk Effects Analysis 122

What Now? 123

Just Let It Go 123

Fully Access Risk 124

Program Freezes Don’t Work 124

The Chill Phase 125

PREA Tables and Calculations 126

Summary 130

10 Risk Analysis Guided Project Management 131

Failure Mode Effects Analysis Methodology 131

Design Failure Mode Effects Analysis 132

Have an Experienced Facilitator Who Is Only Facilitating 132

The Facilitator Should Not Be the Scribe or “Spreadsheet Master” 132

Don’t Let Conversations Go So Deep that 90% of the Room Is Just Listening Without Being Able to Contribute 133

Make a Scoring System that Is Meaningful, Not Standardized 133

The Scoring Is Comparative, Not Absolute 133

Reliability Design Risk Summary 134

The Objective of RDRS 134

Three Ranking Factors 135

Scoring and Evaluation 135

The Benefits of RDRS 136

Process Failure Mode Effects Analysis 136

Use Failure Mode Effects Analysis 136

Failure Reporting and Corrective Action System 137

Root Cause Analysis 138

Reaching a Wrong Conclusion 138

Reaching the Right Conclusion 138

The Stages of RCA 139

Brainstorming 140

Fundamentals of Brainstorming 140

Preparing for a Session 141

Select Participants 141

Draft a Background Memo 141

Create a List of Lead Questions 141

Three Simple Brainstorming Warm-ups 141

Setting Session Rules 142

Variations on Classic Brainstorming 142

Summary 143

References 144

11 The Reliability Program 145

Reliability Program Plan 145

Common Reliability Program Plan Pitfalls 146

The Plan Doesn’t Account for a Broad Audience 146

Not Including Return on Investment (ROI) 146

Too Much 147

Too Little 147

Major Elements of a Reliability Program Plan 149

Purpose 149

Scope 150

Acronyms and Definitions 150

Product Description 151

Design for Reliability (DfR) 151

Reliability Goals 152

Use Case, Environment, Uptime 153

Recommended Tools by Program Phase 154

Design Risk Analysis 155

Failure Mode Effects Analysis (FMEA) 155

Reliability Allocation Model 157

Testing 159

Summary 166

12 Sustained Culture 167

Lasting Change 167

The Seven-stage Process 167

Summary 168

Index 171

Reliability Culture

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    A Hardback by Adam P. Bahret

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      Trusted by thousands of customers. See 2,385+ Customer Reviews

      View other formats and editions of Reliability Culture by Adam P. Bahret

      Publisher: John Wiley & Sons Inc
      Publication Date: 18/02/2021
      ISBN13: 9781119612438, 978-1119612438
      ISBN10: 1119612438

      Description

      Book Synopsis

      By outlining how reliability engineering practices fit within a product development program, the reader will have a better understanding of how roles and goals align with the program and how this applies to their specific role.

      Reliability Culture: How Leaders Build Organizations that Create Reliable Products, will help readers develop a deep understanding of reliability, including what it really means for organizations, how to implement it in daily operations, and, most importantly, how to build a culture that is centered around reliability and can generate impressive profits. When senior leaders work toward reliability, product details often get lost in translation. This book will enable organizations to overcome this problem by showing leaders how their actions truly affect product development. They will be introduced to new methods that will immediately enable them to have carefully crafted product specifications translated into matching, highly reliable products

      Table of Contents

      Series Editor’s Foreword by Dr. Andre Kleyner xi

      Acknowledgements xiii

      Introduction xv

      1 The Product Development Challenge 1

      Key Players 1

      Follow the Carrot or Get Out of the Race 3

      It’s Not That I’m Lazy, It’s That I Just Don’t Care 5

      Product-specification Profiles 8

      Product Drivers 9

      Bounding Factors 10

      Reliability Discipline 11

      References 15

      2 Balancing Business Goals and Reliability 17

      Return on Investment 17

      Program Accounting 18

      Rule of 10s 20

      Design for Reliability 21

      Reliability Engineer’s Responsibility to Connect to the Business Case 23

      Role of the Reliability Professional 26

      Summary 28

      References 29

      3 Directed Product Development Culture 31

      The Past, Present, and Future of Reliability Engineering 32

      Influences 32

      The Invention of “Inventing” 33

      Quality and Inventing Are Behaviors 34

      As Always, WWII Changed Everything 35

      The Postwar Influence Diminishes 36

      The Emergence of Japan 37

      Reliability Is No Longer a Luxury 38

      Understand the Intent 39

      Levels of Awareness 40

      Summary 41

      References 42

      4 Awakening 43

      Stage 1 43

      Stage 2 43

      Stage 3 44

      Stage 4 44

      The Ownership Chart 44

      Comparing Charts 45

      Benefits of the Ownership Chart 45

      Communicating Clearly 50

      Behind the Words at Work 51

      When You Want to Improve 53

      My Personal Case 53

      Getting the Message Across 54

      The Importance of Time 54

      When We Can’t Communicate at the Organizational Level 55

      When Scheduling Trumps Testing 57

      Summary 58

      5 Goals and Intentions 61

      Testing Intent 61

      Testing to Improve 61

      Quick Question 61

      Ownership 62

      Fear-driven Testing 62

      Transferring Ownership 63

      Leadership and Transference 64

      Objectives and Transference 65

      What Transferred Ownership Looks Like 67

      The Benefits of Successful Transference 67

      A Racing Bike Analogy 68

      Guided by All the Goals All the Time 69

      The Roadmap Conundrum 69

      Why We Embrace Tunnel Vision 69

      When No One Has a Plan 69

      Summary 70

      References 70

      6 New Roles 71

      Role of Change Agents 71

      Reliability Czar 72

      The Czar is a Link 73

      Direct Input 74

      Distilling Information 74

      Who is the Czar? 74

      How the Czar Works with the Team and Leadership 76

      Tips for the Czar 77

      Role of Facilitators 78

      Facilitation Technique 78

      Creating a Narrative 80

      Role of Reliability Professionals 80

      Stop Asking for Resources 81

      Connect Reliability to the Market 81

      Summary 83

      7 Program Assessment 85

      Measurements 85

      What to Measure 86

      Using Reliability Testing as Program Guidance 86

      The Primary Wear-out Failure Mode 88

      The Random Fail Rate During Use Life 90

      Reliability Maturity Assessments 90

      Steps for an Assessment 91

      The Team 92

      The Topics 93

      The Scoring 94

      Analyze: The Reliability Maturity Matrix 94

      Review with the Team and Summarize 95

      Recommend Actions 98

      Assess Particular Areas in More Detail 98

      Golden Nuggets 98

      Summary 99

      References 99

      8 Reliability Culture Tools 101

      Advancing Culture 101

      Manipulative Managing 101

      Manipulative Management in Action 102

      An Alternative to Manipulation 102

      Transfer Why 103

      Reliability Bounding 103

      Fire and Forget 103

      Reliability Feedback 104

      Strategy Bounding 104

      Strategy Bounding Toolkit 104

      Midprogram Feedback 105

      The Bounding Number 105

      Bounding ROI 106

      Invest and Return Tables 107

      Deciding by Bounding 110

      Anchoring 110

      Closed Loop Control 112

      Open Loop Control 112

      Intent Anchor 113

      Delivery Anchor 114

      The Value of Anchoring 115

      Focus Rotation 115

      The Focus Rotation Steps 115

      Working in Freedom and with Ownership 116

      The Gore Example 117

      Why Don’t All Companies Do This? 118

      Summary 118

      9 Guiding the Program in Motion 119

      Guidance Bounding 119

      Guidance Bounding ROI 120

      The Plan 120

      The Issue 120

      Technology Cascade 120

      Timing is Everything 121

      Our Choice 121

      Using Bounding 121

      The Results 122

      Program Risk Effects Analysis 122

      What Now? 123

      Just Let It Go 123

      Fully Access Risk 124

      Program Freezes Don’t Work 124

      The Chill Phase 125

      PREA Tables and Calculations 126

      Summary 130

      10 Risk Analysis Guided Project Management 131

      Failure Mode Effects Analysis Methodology 131

      Design Failure Mode Effects Analysis 132

      Have an Experienced Facilitator Who Is Only Facilitating 132

      The Facilitator Should Not Be the Scribe or “Spreadsheet Master” 132

      Don’t Let Conversations Go So Deep that 90% of the Room Is Just Listening Without Being Able to Contribute 133

      Make a Scoring System that Is Meaningful, Not Standardized 133

      The Scoring Is Comparative, Not Absolute 133

      Reliability Design Risk Summary 134

      The Objective of RDRS 134

      Three Ranking Factors 135

      Scoring and Evaluation 135

      The Benefits of RDRS 136

      Process Failure Mode Effects Analysis 136

      Use Failure Mode Effects Analysis 136

      Failure Reporting and Corrective Action System 137

      Root Cause Analysis 138

      Reaching a Wrong Conclusion 138

      Reaching the Right Conclusion 138

      The Stages of RCA 139

      Brainstorming 140

      Fundamentals of Brainstorming 140

      Preparing for a Session 141

      Select Participants 141

      Draft a Background Memo 141

      Create a List of Lead Questions 141

      Three Simple Brainstorming Warm-ups 141

      Setting Session Rules 142

      Variations on Classic Brainstorming 142

      Summary 143

      References 144

      11 The Reliability Program 145

      Reliability Program Plan 145

      Common Reliability Program Plan Pitfalls 146

      The Plan Doesn’t Account for a Broad Audience 146

      Not Including Return on Investment (ROI) 146

      Too Much 147

      Too Little 147

      Major Elements of a Reliability Program Plan 149

      Purpose 149

      Scope 150

      Acronyms and Definitions 150

      Product Description 151

      Design for Reliability (DfR) 151

      Reliability Goals 152

      Use Case, Environment, Uptime 153

      Recommended Tools by Program Phase 154

      Design Risk Analysis 155

      Failure Mode Effects Analysis (FMEA) 155

      Reliability Allocation Model 157

      Testing 159

      Summary 166

      12 Sustained Culture 167

      Lasting Change 167

      The Seven-stage Process 167

      Summary 168

      Index 171

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