
I have worked in water and wastewater field operations since Saint Patrick’s Day of 1997. I did prepare for work that morning by donning a green shirt and walking into a small city hall having no idea what a water operator was. The work was simple,complete tasks my boss assigned and every once in a while fill out a work order to turn in to City Hall. This was my first exposure to work orders. It was not a CMMS by any means but it brought information from the field to the office to update a billing and work order system.
Fast forward over 20 years and I now hold a Director of Operations position with over 250 employees on my team. My company’s business model is primarily of a time and materials make up. Up until a few months ago our region alone printed, filled out by hand, entered, and billed around 20,000 work orders each month on paper! I would imagine anyone reading this might imagine to themselves….. why? Why would a large operations group pour all of the resources into such a manual process? Why not get a new system to resolve this issue? Why stay with this process for years when there are solutions out there? My inbox routinely gets hit with solicitors reaching out to me because they have a system that will “Solve so many of my issues!” or “Bring new efficiencies than I could never imagine!” But in the end they are just another system that need to be built, customized, and implemented properly or that new shiny system may not only drag down your business, it may damage your workflow and ultimately hurt the bottom line. Too often leaders select a system, hire a consulting firm to send a team in and implement the system, and the team using the system are left wanting or frustrated with the final product. If a system causes you to lose functionality or inhibits your current processes, it’s the wrong system for you! I have been involved in many system implementations. Some went well. Some went great! Other did not go well and I’ve been a part of a team that pulled the plug entirely after many hours had been dedicated to a new mobile work order system and CMMS. So, the question is: What is the right work order system for you? There are many tier one platforms out there that most definitely might fit your needs but not everyone has the budget for those. Are there risks with a smaller company’s system,of course, but I am here to tell you all systems experience downtime. If you get a sales pitch from a software vendor that says they never have downtime, run. Also, if they are not willing to share uptime/ downtime metrics with you it may be a good idea to explore other options, but I digress. This article is intended to help guide you through system implementation, lessons I’ve learned, strategies to ensure your next software purchase is smooth, and most importantly ensure that you get what you need and that is a system that is built around your processes not the other way around. Where do we start? There are 3 main areas that make a business run. 1. People2. Process
3. Technology If you’re wondering, those are in a particular order for a reason. If you don’t have the right people to lead a project and you don’t have clearly identified processes no technology is going to come and save your business (no matter what the salesperson is pitching). People We, as leaders, need to split our people out into groups for this portion of the exercise. Who are the leaders? Who will need on an implementation team? Who will be using the product? Are there any support departments that are going to be affected by a system change or upgrade? After we have these lists, I want you leaders out there to ask yourself one question: Who’s the most important group in the list you have made? Answer, it’s the people that will be using the product. If the folks using the product don’t have a say in what they need, you’re off to a horrible start.
Ensure that a proper timeline, statement of work (SOW), and service level expectations (SLE) are part of the agreement that is signed between you and the vendor

