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Maximo Implementation for a Multi-Site Organization

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Content Description
Original date: 
Wednesday, September 13, 2023
Abstract: 

The Regional Municipality of Durham is a community that makes up the east end of the Greater Toronto Area (GTA), which comprises multiple cities and townships. The region provides a multitude of services to approximately 745,000 residents and maintains $17.85 billion in assets and infrastructure. The region was using several disconnected applications and business processes to manage these services, many of which had limited functionality, reporting, and analytics, as well as a lack of integrations to other systems. In an effort to standardize and streamline these services, the region amalgamated all of the tracking of regional assets, maintenance management, and business technology processes. The region began the process of requirements gathering in 2013; at this time, a steering committee was created to govern the project, and project leads and business subject matter experts were engaged to ensure the product selected met business requirements. In 2015, the region began the procurement process: request for proposal, evaluation, vendor presentation, and negotiations. Maximo was the selected enterprise maintenance management system. Durham used a multi-phased implementation plan—including Planning, Design, Execution, and Closing—which consisted of three go-live dates. This multi-phased approach would span over the course of three years. The initial phase of the project included detailed design, organizational impact analysis, future business process design, future role modifications and development, and multiple-tiered information sessions. The organization identified current operational gaps and business process changes were required. It followed Use Case business processes with some adaptation for operational responsiveness and consistency within the To-Be roles. The business was able to retain current operational practices as much as possible but built in a structured and disciplined approach to maintaining assets. This will influence and impact the quality of analytics and reporting. Through its approach, the region was able to implement a centralized maintenance management system across multiple divisions. This implementation impacted 800 end users across 13 divisions and multiple third-party system integrations. It also performed a readiness assessment of departments, divisions, and areas and organizational, process, and technology criteria. It created a go-live and system support strategy, and monitored system, sustainability, and performance throughout the implementation process.

BoK Content Source: 
MainTrain 2023
BoK Content Type: 
Video
Asset Management Framework Subject: 
01 Strategy & Planning, 1.05 Asset Management Planning, 02 Asset Management Decision Making, 2.00 Asset Management Decision Making General, 03 Lifecycle Delivery, 3.00 Lifecycle Delivery General, 04 Asset Information, 4.04 Data & Information Management, 05 Organization & People, 5.00 Organization and People General, 06 Risk and Review, 6.04 Management of Change, 6.09 Stakeholder Engagement
Maintenance Management Framework Subject: 
09 Information Management, 9.1 Information Systems, 9.2 Standards & Specification, 9.3 Master Data Management, 9.5 Records Management, 10 Continuous Improvement, 10.1 Metrics / KPIs
Author Title: 
Business Technology Coordinator
Author Employer: 
Taylor Regional Municipality of Durham
Author Bio: 

Adam Taylor has extensive knowledge in mechanical design, facilities maintenance operations, and asset management. He has experience in specialized projects relating to building automation, enterprise maintenance management systems, and ongoing end user support and product enhancements and development.