Framework For Asset Management
Framework For Asset Management
Framework For Asset Management
AMBoK Publications are issued for the information and guidance of the asset management community,
following endorsement by the Asset Management Council Asset Management Body of Knowledge (AMBoK)
Team.
The online version may be accessed at amcouncil.com.au
Future editions
AMBoK Publications are reviewed regularly and refined as appropriate. Comments are welcome and may be
directed by email to [email protected].
Copyright
Asset Management Council Ltd, 2014
This work is copyright. Apart from any use permitted under the copyright Act 1968, no part may be
reproduced without written permission of the Asset Management Council, PO Box 2249, Hawthorn, Victoria,
Australia 3122.
Print Version ISBN 978-0-9870602-6-6
Acknowledgements
The Asset Management Council would
like to thank the following people for
their contribution to this document:
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Deryk Anderson
John Chambers
Richard Dwight
Kevin Fletcher
Ross Francis
John Hardwick
James Kennedy
Peter Kohler
Ernst Krauss
Tom Ledwidge
Max Murray
Sally Nugent
Peter Robinson
Kristen Watts
Gary Winsor
Peter Buckland
Michael Killeen
Martin Kerr
Mo Barghash
Madeleine Berenyi (Editor)
Framework for
Asset Management
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Framework for
Asset Management
Preamble
The benefits of asset management are numerous: more predictable and sustainable cash flows; the final
outcome of the profit and loss; the value of the assets on the balance sheet; and the ability to both support
an expected share price and achieve market share. These benefits are being increasingly recognised by
business and government alike, and are supported by a number of factors, including the publication of
numerous state and national government reports into the management of critical community and public
assets; and the development and publication of an international standard on asset management (the ISO
55000X suite was published in January 2014).
The realisation that asset management contributes directly and indirectly to a number of important factors
means that a common asset management language, for better communication within organisations and
across industries, is increasingly considered by top management to be more important than ever.
The Asset Management Council is committed to advancing the asset management knowledge and capability
of both its members and stakeholders, and as such, it has brought together some of the best technical asset
management professionals within Australia to further expand and strengthen the Asset Management Body of
Knowledge (AMBoK).
The AMBoK Team are charged with making AMBoK accessible to, and useable by, members and
stakeholders of the Asset Management Council. A forward-thinking Technical Team, consisting of numerous
volunteers in senior positions in asset-intensive industries across the board, the AMBoK Team supports the
Asset Management Council in enabling value from effective asset management. The Asset Management
Council has a strong link to best practice in the field of physical asset management, no doubt due to our
diligent AMBoK Team. Members of the AMBoK Team are actively involved in the development and continual
improvement of Asset Management Council content.
This publication provides the asset management community with a concise picture of the principles,
concepts and processes of asset management, including emphasis on the key roles of stakeholders,
leadership, culture and asset management maturity. It is the interaction of the tangible and intangible
aspects of an organisation that can produce asset management maturity and excellence, and therefore the
biggest benefit for organisational efforts.
AMBoK Publication 000: Framework for Asset Management, Second Edition presents an intellectual
framework and context through which asset management information can be developed and universally
understood, whilst providing opportunities for both individuals and organisations to build their asset
management capabilities.
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Strengthen and enhance the asset management and maintenance engineering capabilities of
asset management practitioners and organisations
The Asset Management Council continues to grow as a greater number of organisations understand the
importance of employing asset management principles to enhance their organisational capability. Our
membership base reaches far and wide, and has representation from a range of asset intensive industry
sectors and service providers, including government and private organisations.
In order to undertake this leadership role in asset management in Australia, the Asset Management Council
comprises a Board, national office staff, 13 regional Chapters and volunteers from across Australia. This
dedicated group of people deliver a range of programmes to Asset Management Council members and the
broader asset management community, including the Asset Management Body of Knowledge (AMBoK)
publications and models, asset management training and certification, asset management awards, technical
journal and articles and a range of conferences and forums.
TABLE OF CONTENTS
1
Introduction ................................................................................................................................................. 7
1.1
1.2
1.3
1.4
Stakeholders ............................................................................................................................................... 9
4.2
Introduction ...................................................................................................................................... 15
Introduction ...................................................................................................................................... 20
8.2
8.3
8.4
8.5
Introduction ...................................................................................................................................... 32
9.2
9.3
9.4
10
10.1
Introduction ...................................................................................................................................... 45
10.2
Organisational Elements.................................................................................................................. 45
10.3
10.4
10.5
11
12
Bibliography ......................................................................................................................................... 49
13
Abbreviations ....................................................................................................................................... 51
14
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1 Introduction
This publication, AMBoK Publication 000: Framework for Asset Management, is based on factors that are
intrinsic to the Asset Management Body of Knowledge. These factors are the Asset Management Councils
definition of asset management, its principles of asset management and the Asset Management Council
Models.
This publication outlines these foundational factors below, and then examines in detail the Asset
Management Council Models.
1.1
1.2
Asset management is founded on a set of principles. If any one of these principles is missing from the
management of assets, the organisation will likely see a reduction in the value that its assets provide. The
principles should directly influence an organisations asset management systems and plans.
These principles of asset management are:
1. Output Focus
2. Capabilities
3. Level Assurance
4. Learning Organisation.
These are discussed further in Section 7.1.4.
1.3
The Asset Management Council has developed a number of models that illustrate and describe asset
management. They are:
1. Asset Management Concept Model: Conceptually presents the basis of successful asset
management.
2. Asset Management System Model: Illustrates the key components of an asset management
system and how they inter-relate.
3. Organisational System Model: Depicts the typical components of an organisations management
system and how they integrate.
4. Capability Delivery Model: Schematically presents processes, within a number of disciplines, that
may be used in part or entirety, to deliver successful asset management.
5. Maturity Model: conveys the extent to which leadership, culture, human performance and the asset
management system are integrated into the whole organisation, while contributing to its success.
These models will be examined in detail from Section 7 onwards.
1.4
Collectively, the definition, the principles and the asset management models serve two purposes: to provide
the Asset Management Council with a consistent framework for the development, provision, maintenance
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and improvement of delivered services; and to provide the asset management community with a concise
picture of the principles, concepts and processes of physical asset management.
The models, principles and definition of asset management, together with the Asset Management Council
vision, values and code of ethics provide the governance framework for the business activities of the Asset
Management Council.
These activities involve the processing of a range of inputs and demands to develop a range of outputs for
the asset management community. Inputs, for example, may include standards, technical writings and
stakeholder requirements etc.; while the outputs may include AMBoK activities, training, events, forums,
conferences, publications, and building individual and organisational capabilities.
This process is represented by the flow chart below (Figure 1):
Asset Management
Concept Model
Asset Management
System Model &
Organisational
Systems Model
Asset Management
Award
Capability Delivery
Model
Asset Management
Maturity Model
Certification
Publications
Asset Management
Knowledge & Standards
AM Council Website
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2 Stakeholders
Stakeholders frame an organisation and determine the needs and constraints on the business. Stakeholders
are therefore key to all asset management processes, plans and decisions. Accordingly, stakeholders play a
critical role in all Asset Management Council Models presented in this publication. Stakeholders sit at the
uppermost levels of the each model, emphasising their overarching influence.
Given this, it is crucial to be clear about what stakeholder actually means. As reinforced in ISO 55000, a
stakeholder or interested party refers to an individual or organisation that can affect or be affected by (as
perceived by the stakeholder) an organisational decision or activity. With respect to asset management,
stakeholders within an organisation can be internal or external.
Stakeholders set requirements for leadership to execute the organisational objectives. These requirements
typically include, shareholders expectations, regulators expectations, employee expectations, customer
expectations, suppliers expectations and the broader publics expectations. Stakeholders needs and
expectations should be documented and communicated. These may be captured in a statement of
stakeholder needs and should reference any mandatory requirements, as well as the expectations of
different stakeholder groups.
Stakeholder requirements may include decision making criteria; safety and environmental issues; profit and
financial needs; community expectations; product volume and quality; and legal compliance.
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Figure 2: Asset management must have the right environment to flourish; the right leadership, behaviour and
culture. This tree metaphor was chosen because it illustrates, at an axiomatic level, that leadership, culture,
emotions and behaviours are vital. It is imperative that all these elements function together if the desired
outcome is to be achieved (Living Asset Management, 2013)
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by the same token, an aligned and integrated approach requires a matched leadership style to successfully
achieve the desired outcomes. The leadership style of an organisation should be focused on the
organisational intent, and engaged employees should understand the organisational purpose, and
consistently achieve the organisations goals and objectives. Leadership and commitment from all levels of
management is an essential prerequisite for successfully establishing, operating and improving asset
management within an organisation.
This focus on leadership and culture, in conjunction with the technical, tangible side of asset management,
provides the difference between high performing organisations and those that are not. Leadership and
culture can facilitate or impede the implementation of the asset management system. It is the interaction of
the tangible and intangible aspects of an organisation that can produce asset management maturity and
excellence. Traditional tangible changes, such as reliability, quality, safety and asset management manuals,
alone are not as effective as a change in culture and leadership.
Achieving desired outcomes, whether they are higher share prices, improved efficiency and performance, or
lower costs and reduced risk, are all potential results of the right leadership and culture within organisations.
Asset management-focused organisations proactively apply these concepts to become, and distinguish
themselves as, high performing organisations. It is for these reasons that leadership and culture feature
prominently in all models presented in this publication.
For more information on leadership and culture in asset management, please see Living Asset Management,
a publication from the Asset Management Council and ABRAMAN (The Brazilian Society of Maintenance
and Asset Management).
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4.1
The notion that the outcome of the management of assets is a balance between the cost of providing the
asset performance to an agreed level of risk is a key concept of asset management, and contained in ISO
55000. The phrase used in ISO 55000 is Effective control and governance of assets by organisations is
essential to realise value through managing risk and opportunity, in order to achieve the desired balance of
cost, risk and performance.
As such, the Asset Management Council considers that for such a balance to be demonstrable the following
issues should be considered, namely that:
risk is usually expressed as the agreed residual risk associated with the delivery of the agreed
asset performance, based upon the organisational risk management approach and the
stakeholder agreed decision making criteria, imbedded in the risk approach;
performance is usually expressed as quantitative measures such as Reliability, Availability,
Maintainability and Supportability (RAMS) against an agreed time frame and an agreed
performance functional specification (expressed in terms that relate to the business needsuch as an agreed speed/power curve and specific fuel consumption per unit power etc.), over
which the relevant risks have been identified and mitigated; and
cost is usually expressed in dollar terms, but may include other measures, where appropriate.
The cost associated with this balance is usually reflective of the aggregation of the risk
mitigation measures (maintenance, spares, access, special tools etc.) and the direct enabling
costs (such as fuel etc.). It may also include the opportunity costs associated with any asset
down time. Each organisation will need to have its own agreed cost structure.
4.2
The Asset Management Council recommends the use of rational decision making using quantitative criteria
that are demonstrably linked to the objectives of the organisation via a defined and repeatable process.
This is demonstrated in ISO 55001 by the requirement that an organisation (through its stakeholders)
develop and apply agreed and approved decision making criteria.
Organisations should therefore consider how such a balance might be able to be demonstrated.
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5 Key Terms
The key terms presented below may aid the reader in better understanding this publication.
Key Term
Definition
Acquisition
Capabilities
Configuration Management
Continuous Improvement
Culture
Demand Management
Inputs
Leadership
Learning organisation
Level of assurance
Life cycle
Outputs
Physical asset
Systems Engineering
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Meaning
Component
Elements
Framework
Landscape
Lenses
Qualities
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Introduction
7.1.1
Purpose
The purpose of the Asset Management Concept Model is to both present the basis (way of thinking) of asset
management, and to document the fundamental basis of asset management.
Description
The Asset Management Concept Model documents the basis of asset management. The models intent is to
serve as a conceptual framework from which the foundational elements of asset management can be
identified, documented and implemented.
The Asset Management Concept Model consists of four key principles, connected by a set of processes
within which a Plan Do Check Act approach is implemented. These are encased by a Stakeholder Circle.
7.1.3
Stakeholders
Principles
The second part of the Asset Management Concept Model are the principles of asset management.
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Output Focus
The first key principle of asset management is that an organisation and its assets must have an output
focus. This focus on the delivery of an output must be matched to the organisational objectives as
described in agreed policies, strategies and plans. These business objectives will usually be defined in the
external agreements that the organisation has committed itself to achieve.
These outputs may be defined in a variety of ways where each can be measured in an agreed manner so
that it is clear whether the output or service was actually delivered.
7.1.4.2
Capabilities
When establishing the need for enabling capabilities it is critical to link them to the output intent within the
operating context. Thus, a maintenance task from an Original Equipment Manufacturer may be of little value
if the context of use of the asset is not known or is significantly different from its original context of use.
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7.1.4.3
Level of Assurance
Learning Organisation
The fourth key principle of asset management is a learning organisation where lessons are harvested from
measuring and analysing performance and learning is disseminated and actioned. An organisation that
actively seeks change in environment or domain knowledge and adapts to improve its products or services is
a learning organisation.
It is self-evident that good asset management organisations are learning organisations. They have
transparency of process, and transparency of the decision making involved. Their approach can be
considered as a view of continuous improvement that focuses on people, their understanding of their role
within the organisation; their ability to look at the processes and resources provided, and their ability to
challenge those arrangements and not feel threatened. Plan Do Check Act: A Process
Within the principles of the Asset Management Concept Model is the Plan Do Check Act Process. Asset
management is a process, or a series of steps or acts, for performing a function or accomplishing a result,
meaning that there is a start and a finish. In between, there are feedback loops to continuously sustain
alignment of the managed assets and the stakeholders who are served or affected by the asset.
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Model
8.1
Introduction
The purpose of Asset Management System Model is to illustrate the key elements of an asset management
system and how they inter-relate
8.1.1
The purpose of Organisational Systems Model is to depict the typical components of an organisations
management system and how they inter-relate.
8.2
8.2.1
A stakeholder of a system is an individual or a group that is directly affected by the performance of the
system and can have an influence in creating its future (Gharajedaghi, J., (2011-08-09). Systems Thinking:
Managing Chaos and Complexity: A Platform for Designing Business Architecture (Kindle Locations 62996301). Elsevier Science). In these models, stakeholders are depicted as the top influence for the Asset
Management System, and Organisational Systems. For more information on stakeholders, see Section 2.
8.2.2
Leadership
These models illustrate how leadership transforms stakeholder requirements into organisational objectives,
then into asset management objectives. For more information, see Section 3.
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8.2.3
Organisational Objectives
An organisational objective refers to an overarching purpose or target which sets both context and direction
for organisational activities. Organisational objectives are derived from stakeholder needs and are officially
established through the strategic level planning activities of the organisation.
Organisational objectives are set within the context of the organisation.
8.2.4
Asset management objectives are translated from the organisational objectives as part of strategic asset
management development.
Asset Management Objectives must be in concert with all other management system/function objectives, as
per the Organisational Systems Model. When combined with all other management objectives (e.g. financial,
safety, production/operations, etc.), they collectively enable the achievement of the required business
objectives.
The scope of the asset management objectives relates to those activities necessary for the management of
assets (in the achievement of the organisational objectives). When determining this scope, the organisation
should consider: the organisational context, the requirements from stakeholders, and the interaction with
other management systems, if used.
The organisation should define the assets and/or asset systems covered by this scope, and the scope
should be documented information.
8.2.5
Performance monitoring is imbued in everything, in every system and every process. It is concerned with
monitoring the delivery of various objectives, including KPIs and KRAs. Performance monitoring and
improvement comprises two parts:
performance monitoring and improvement of the assets themselves against the objectives set; and
The relationship between the parts is also important in understanding the performance of the asset
management system. Table 1 defines the relationship between the achievement of the asset management
objectives and the compliance with the asset management system.
Asset management objectives achieved
Yes
Management
system
compliance
No
Low
High
No problem
Asset management performance should be evaluated against whether the asset management objectives
have been achieved, and if not, why not. Where applicable, any opportunities that arose from having
exceeded the asset management objectives should also be examined, as well as any failure to realise them.
Performance evaluation and improvement of the asset management objectives is dependent on two subfunctions. The first is continuous improvement, which increases the efficiency within the existing paradigm or
framework.
The second is strategic review. This sub-function identifies that the current plan will not achieve the
objectives and develops a new plan which is then embodied in the management system. The types of
changes this sub-function may generate include changes to policy, changes to the procedures manual, and
changes to the objectives.
Performance monitoring is a strategic, top-level activity. Its operational function sits in the continuous
improvement function in the Capability Delivery Model (see Section 9.3.10 for more information).
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8.2.5.2
The performance of the asset management system should be evaluated against any objectives set
specifically for the system itself (either when it was established, or following previous evaluations). The
primary purpose of evaluating the system should be to determine whether it is effective and efficient in
supporting the organisations asset management. The adequacy of the decision-making processes should
be examined carefully. Periodic audits should be used to evaluate the performance of the asset
management system; these may be complemented by self-assessments.
8.2.5.3
Auditing is a useful activity to monitor and understand compliance with the management system. Key
elements of the management system shall be audited every two years with a view to completing the
equivalent to Table 1 and taking action appropriately.
An audit may comprise:
review of the artefacts the management system has generated and comparison of these to what is
defined as a requirement in the management system; and
8.2.5.4
Effective asset data management and the transformation of data to information is a key to monitoring and
measuring asset performance. The process for analysis of data and its conversion into information shall
include the:
a) methodology and techniques for evaluating and validating the information collected and recorded
against the established performance indicators;
b) quality control of data used and information reported;
c) responsibilities for compiling, analysing, storing and protecting data; and
d) transforming of data into relevant and reliable information for interpretation of relevant employees.
8.2.6
Decision Making
As every organisation is faced with the need to make decisions in a range of areas including asset
management, effective decision making is an essential part of any management system. Despite this, there
is a high degree of variability in terms of the approach and results. This often leads to frustration with those
seeking to have decisions made, as they are constantly requested to bring forward new options, provide
inordinate amounts of detail or generate slight variances on the existing options despite the seemingly
disproportionate amount of effort required to generate the additional analysis.
Unfortunately, much of this additional analysis is more often about the alternatives and risks whereas
decisions, including those in asset management, are about four things:
1. the context of the decision,
2. objectives,
3. alternatives, and
4. potential risks.
In addition to being clear about the decision to be made, asset management decision making needs to
explicitly identify the objectives or the criteria against which the options/alternatives will be assessed.
Whilst there are a range of decisions made in asset management - too many to mention here - decisions are
usually one of five types:
The complex decision that requires examination of a large amount of information and involves the
judgment of many people. For example, repair or replace decisions for major assets.
The Yes/No decision that involves only two alternatives: to take or reject a course of action; or to
do something in a different way or to continue as before. For example, the decision on whether or
not to proceed with a modification recommended by the original equipment manufacturer (OEM).
The decision as to whether a single proposed course of action is sound enough to be implemented.
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The decision in which an original alternative must be developed by the decision-maker or asset
management. For example, the design and construction of new plant and equipment or building.
The routine decision for example, hiring, purchasing of equipment or services, developing of
personnel policies, and other everyday decisions.
The objectives or decision criteria explicitly define the implicit rules of decision making, whereas decisions
themselves are applications of the decision rule to specific situations. Achieving a higher order of individual
responsibility or decentralised decision making requires a higher order of collective responsibility or
centralised agreement on decision criteria.
In asset management the decision criteria are prescribed by the asset management objectives: each
decision needs to provide value as determined by the contribution of the options to the asset management
and organisational objectives and the consequences of the decision need to be assessed against these
criteria.
Assuming a rational approach, each alternative needs to be considered against the decision criteria and the
best option selected. If cost, risk and performance are the three Key Result Areas (KRAs) for an asset
management system and each organisation generates its own Key Performance Indicators (KPIs)
associated with these KRAs, then the effects of each alternative on these KPIs should be separately
assessed and the best one chosen as the preferred option. The extent to which this can be quantitatively
conducted will depend on the quality of the data available to support the decision.
Typically, policies establish those criteria by which people make decisions. Whereas the asset management
policy will contain some of the acceptable values for the typical examples above, other business
management system policies will contain acceptable values for others, for example the Finance policy or
AASB 116 may be used to define whether life cycle cost should be used and what values should be
included. Ultimately though, the decision may be a trade-off between the musts and wants of the decision
criteria, and the preferred option may not be without some downside which needs to be assessed.
Clearly, decision making needs to be integrated with the process and organisational roles elements of the
management system.
From an organisational roles perspective, the management system needs to ensure decisions are being
made by appropriately authorised and competent people with due consideration to an objective and rational
decision making. A critical step in the process is to identify who can make the decision. The person needs to
have the necessary authority (actual or delegated) to make the decision. The identification of the decision
maker can be tactically important if it is likely that the decision will be subject to any legal challenge as, if this
occurs, the decision maker is likely to be an important witness.
8.2.7
Risk Management
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Even on a daily basis, the management of risk is incorporated into the safety systems applied before, and
during, operational and maintenance activities. What is common across all of these processes is that the
assessment of risk, and the organisation's current attitude to risk, will impact the decisions made to eliminate
or mitigate risks during the specification, design, construction/acquisition, operation, maintenance and
eventual disposal of assets.
An organisation's risk profile will be the aggregation of many individual risks, each with their own individual
levels of severity. The organisation's risk management plans should also provide a view as to how these
risks are collectively managed and communicated. There are many techniques to do this, but organisational
risk registers are a common tool used to record these risks. Each risk register has a set of mitigating
actions/controls identified from the risk analysis processes, and each risk is allocated an organisational
'owner', who has accountability that the identified risk remains managed to a level which is acceptable within
the organisation's attitude to risk.
All staff should understand the risk management framework and its application within the asset management
system processes, particularly as it involves the reporting of risks and the requirement to follow risk
treatment plans as applicable.
8.2.8
Process Management
Business processes define how work is performed in an organisation. There are a broad range of asset
management taxonomies including APQC and CMMI, ISO 15288 Systems engineering System life cycle
processes which can apply to the full life cycle of systems/assets, typically covering conception,
development, production, utilisation, support and retirement of systems, and to the acquisition and supply of
systems.
The deliberate intent of the ISO/IEC 15288 Systems Engineering standard is to provide a combined technical
and managerial approach to the way in which processes should be managed that is, identified, developed,
produced, used, supported and retired.
The processes and activities performed during the life cycle of a system, according to ISO15288, can be
placed into one of four process groups:
Agreement processes
Technical processes.
The four process groups and the processes included in each group are depicted in Figure 1. Each of the
processes within those groups can be described in terms of its purpose and desired outcomes and the
activities and tasks, which need to be performed to achieve those outcomes.
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In relation to the management of assets, project management is a tool that is employed at all levels (both
strategic and operational). Such typical projects often known as strategic planning and/or capability
planning, involve the development of concepts of operations and functional performance specifications
leading to the identification, design and build of key and often complex and costly assets and asset systems.
At the operational level, projects are typically represented by project/maintenance planning, be it in response
to a breakdown or the development of a shutdown outage followed by project assessment and control
processes.
Project management therefore has a key role in the management of assets.
8.2.8.2
Within the management of assets, financial management can involve complex analyses to identify,
document and compare costs and benefits over long timeframes. The need to include financial management
and its associated systems, approaches and standards within the management of assets though, is an
obvious connection. As noted above, this integration remains an immediate challenge.
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Regardless of that challenge, the role of financial management in relation to the management of assets is to
participate in approaches to develop an appropriate balance between the cost to do something (treat the
risk), the resultant risk from the expenditure of those resources and the expected asset (and organisational)
performance output/outcome.
The IFRS and accompanying IAS suite of standards published by the International Accounting Standards
Board (IASB) provides good practice standards relevant to asset management financial decision making and
reporting.
The standards provide a common set of terms to be used in the financial management of assets and asset
systems. A cornerstone of the IFRS/IAS suite is the use of accrual accounting methodologies.
The principal objectives of the IFRS Foundation (who publish the IFRSs) are to:
develop a single set of high quality, understandable, enforceable and globally accepted International
Financial Reporting Standards through its standard-setting body, the International Accounting
Standards Board;
take account of the financial reporting needs of emerging economies and small and medium-sized
entities (SMEs); and
promote and facilitate adoption of IFRSs, being the standards and interpretations issued by the
IASB, through the convergence of national accounting standards and IFRSs.
The IASB is the independent standard-setting body of the IFRS Foundation. Its members are responsible for
the development and publication of IFRSs.
8.2.8.3
These systems engineering life cycle process descriptions and their associated notes are not intended to
preclude or discourage the use of additional processes that organisations might find useful. Nor do they
provide a complete and implementable set of quality procedures that achieve a complete description of a
task set. Further detail is necessary to provide a more accurate representation of how to conduct a defined
task. An example of that level of detail is provided in IEC standards and others.
Organisations should use tailoring guides and their detailed technical knowledge of the business and
industry to develop and apply a set of detailed standards. In this case the IEC Dependability standards
support a number the higher level SE processes which would satisfy some or all of the ISO 55001
requirements.
8.2.8.4
Application of standards
Systems engineering is supported by three related standards with differing purposes and levels of detail.
This is evident from the following purpose statements:
ANSI/EIA 632 To provide an integrated set of fundamental processes to aid a developer in the
engineering or re-engineering of a system.
IEEE 1220 To provide a standard for managing a system from initial concept through development,
operations and disposal.
ISO/IEC 15288 To establish a common structure for describing the lifecycle of systems created by
humans.
provide a benchmark of what must be done and why, when defining an organisations policies and
procedures for systems engineering functions;
describe how the organisation can establish technical processes, as well as the use of those
processes by suppliers and the assessment of both internal and supplier systems engineering
capability;
8.2.8.5
Agreement Processes
Organisations are producers and users of systems. One organisation (acting as an acquirer) can task
another (acting as a supplier) for products or services. This is achieved using agreements.
Framework for Asset Management
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Generally, organisations act simultaneously or successively as both acquirers and suppliers of systems.
Agreement Processes can be used with less formality when the acquirer and the supplier are in the same
organisation. Similarly, they can be used within the organisation to agree on the respective responsibilities of
organisation, project and technical functions.
8.2.8.6
The organisational project-enabling processes are concerned with ensuring that the resources needed to
enable the project to meet the needs and expectations of the organisations interested parties are met. The
organisational project-enabling processes are typically concerned at a strategic level with the management
and improvement of the organisations business or undertaking, with the provision and deployment of
resources and assets, and with its management of risks in competitive or uncertain situations.
The organisational project-enabling processes establish the environment in which projects are conducted.
The organisation establishes the processes and life cycle models to be used by projects; establishes,
redirects, or cancels projects; provides resources required, including human and financial; and sets and
monitors the quality measures for systems and other deliverables that are developed by projects for internal
and external customers.
The organisational project-enabling processes create a strong business image for many organisations and
imply commercial and profit-making motives. Nevertheless, the organisational project-enabling processes
are equally relevant to non-profit organisations, since they are also accountable to stakeholders, are
responsible for resources and encounter risk in their undertakings. This International Standard can be
applied to non-profit organisations as well as to profit-making organisations.
8.2.8.7
Technical Processes
The technical management processes are concerned with managing the resources and assets allocated
by organisational management, and with applying them to fulfil the agreements into which the
organisation or organisations enter. They relate to the management of projects, in particular to planning in
terms of cost, timescales and achievements, to the checking of actions to ensure that they comply with
plans and performance criteria, and to the identification and selection of corrective actions that recover
shortfalls in progress and achievement. They are used to establish and perform technical plans for the
project; manage information across the technical team; assess technical progress against the plans for
the system products or services; control technical tasks through to completion; and to aid in the decisionmaking process.
Please note that technical management is the application of technical and administrative resources to plan,
organise and control engineering functions (IEEE STD 1002-1987).
Typically several projects will co-exist in any one organisation. Technical management processes can be
employed at a corporate level to meet internal needs.
The Technical Processes are concerned with technical actions throughout the asset life cycle. They
transform the needs of stakeholders first into a product and then, by applying that product, secondly, provide
a sustainable service, when and where needed in order to achieve customer satisfaction. Technical
processes are applied in order to create and use a system, whether it is in the form of a model or a finished
product. They apply at any level in a hierarchy of system structure.
8.2.9
Organisational Roles
Roles and responsibilities must support the decisions made within the approved processes used within the
asset management system. Responsibility and accountability for the acquisition, operation and
maintenance, improvement and disposal of assets should both support the management chain and be
delegated through the management chain.
The asset management system exercises no authority or control over how programs and projects are
organised or administered. The asset management system should complement, and be consistent with, the
responsibility that all managers have for the safe and appropriate operation and maintenance of assets. The
asset management system requires that decisions relating to the design, construction and maintenance
of assets are based on an assessment of the impact on the technical integrity, and that such assessment is
undertaken by personnel who are deemed both competent and authorised to make that assessment.
All staff should have some level of responsibility within the risk management plan of their organisation,
particularly to identify and report hazards. The responsibilities of key personnel in the asset management
system should be detailed in the risk management plan. The risk management plan must also contain the
approved decision making criteria to be used by individuals who make decisions. In this way, consistency in
identifying and managing risk is achieved across the whole organisation.
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The top management is to ensure that risk is managed and properly coordinated and audited. This
responsibility may be delegated to a dedicated individual.
Responsibility for risk passes through the management chain, therefore the individual making a decision
must have the appropriate level of authority to make a decision. A decision not only represents a chosen
alternative (and why it was chosen), but also represents an instance of the use of a level of authority that an
organisation uses to formally control the quantum of risk accepted by the organisation.
As a result, assessment and treatment of risks to technical integrity should be undertaken by staff with the
appropriate level of engineering delegation. The authorisation (or delegation) of those staff should be based
upon measurable competencies and should be formally recorded by the organisation, including the level of
authorisation, based upon the risk exposure to the organisation.
8.2.10 Competency and Engagement
8.2.10.1 Competency
The organisation should identify competencies required to implement the processes (make decisions) used
within the asset management system and as may be expressed in position description/profile statements.
These statements are to include any specific competencies required to manage the organisations risk
associated with the making of decisions.
All personnel within the asset management system should be assessed as being competent to perform their
duties before undertaking them. The organisation should ensure that there is a system in place to review the
competency of key personnel at regular intervals and take appropriate action where a competency gap is
identified.
8.2.10.2 Engagement
Employee engagement is crucial for successful asset management. Providing a transparent, traceable and
logical link between decisions, activities and tasks of employees to the organisational objectives allows those
employees to be engaged in their work, and able to make timely and accurate decisions to the benefit of the
organisation as a whole.
Employee engagement is built on the foundation of earlier concepts like job satisfaction, employee
commitment and organisational citizenship behaviour, although employee engagement is broader in scope.
It shows the two-way relationship between employer and employee, It is usually a good predictor of
organisational performance and is usually assessed through a series of survey questions. Engaged
employees are emotionally attached to their organisation and highly involved in their job with a great
enthusiasm for the success of their employer. Engaged employees will go the extra mile beyond the
employment contractual agreement.
8.3
There are several key points of the inter-relationship between the parts of the Asset Management System
Model.
The role of the stakeholders, leadership and culture and the organisation objectives is to frame and scope
the requirements for the asset management system. Stakeholders define the risk appetite of the organisation
through the development, publication and approval of the risk plan and related decision making criteria
(Go/No Go) to be used by the organisation. Leadership and culture define the style and behaviours that
support the management of assets within the organisation. Finally, the organisational objectives are the
more tangible translation of the strategic direction and specific targets of the organisation to be achieved,
and within the required timeframe.
The role of asset management objectives is essentially a linking one. The understanding that asset
management objectives should be developed in concert with and in support of, the other functional
objectives of the organisation is crucial. Asset management objectives must clarify how all the elements of
the Asset Management System Model (as designed) contribute to those objectives.
Performance monitoring and improvement holds two roles. Specifically, in relation to the asset management
objectives, performance monitoring and improvement should be applied to the continual improvement of the
achievement of those objectives. Additionally, performance monitoring and improvement should be applied
to all aspects of each part of the Asset Management System Model.
The role of the decision making function is to ensure that the application of the stakeholder-approved
decision making criteria should be demonstrable within the defined technical and financial processes.
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The role of the risk management portion is also two-fold. It ensures that the application of the stakeholderapproved risk management plan should be demonstrable within all elements of the Asset Management
System Model; and the application of risk based, data driven technical and financial processes are
demonstrable.
The role of process management section is to apply processes that can demonstrate what must be done and
why, when defining an organisations policies and procedures for asset management functions, and describe
how the organisation can establish and use technical and financial processes.
The organisational roles section holds several functioning roles. This section ensures the organisational
structure is consistent with the objectives and functions of the organisation, as well as ensuring there is
clarity in individuals responsibilities, and accountabilities for both the individual and the rest of the
organisation. Its role is to further enable people to make decisions who are demonstrably authorised to do so
by the organisation, and finally to apply engineering and financial regulatory structures.
The role of competency and engagement is the application of people to make decisions who are
demonstrably competent by the organisation; and the management of factors that ensure the work force
wants to do a good job, understands the objectives of the organisation and feels that their actions are
contributing to those objectives. It is also responsible for the application of engineering and financial
competency structures.
8.4
Stakeholder Decision Criteria A document that contains senior management approved information
that supports consistent decision making throughout the organisation. Such decision making criteria
contains the approved Go/No Go criteria either in quantitative or qualitative form. This information
might normally be included in the organisations risk management plan.
Asset Management Policy a document which states the intentions and direction of an organisation,
as formally expressed by its top management (ISO 55000). Asset management policy is a decision
criterion at a higher level of abstraction. Policy essentially deals with choice dimensions (variables
involved), why questions, underlying assumptions, and expected outcomes. Asset management
policy decisions are value-loaded choices that are explicit about their implications for the asset
management objectives (Gharajedaghi, J., (2011-08-09). Systems Thinking: Managing Chaos and
Complexity: A Platform for Designing Business Architecture (Kindle Locations 6779-6781). Elsevier
Science).
Strategic Asset Management Plan (SAMP) documented information that specifies how
organisational objectives are to be converted into asset management objectives, the approach for
developing asset management plans and the role of the asset management system in supporting
achievement of the asset management objectives (ISO 55000).
Asset Management Plan (AMP) documented information that specifies the activities, resources
and timescales required for an individual asset, or a grouping of assets, to achieve the organisations
asset management objectives (ISO 55000).
Other detailed artefacts (plans and required documents) are produced from within the Capability Delivery
Model, and are presented in Section 9.4.
8.5
The Organisational Systems Model illustrates the inter-relationship between the various management
systems of the organisation, including the Asset Management System Model.
Like the Asset Management System Model, the Organisational Systems Model identifies the importance of
firstly, stakeholders and secondly, leadership, and their roles in creating the organisational objectives. The
model illustrates then how organisational objectives influence various functional objectives, including asset
management objectives. The Asset Management System Model sits within the Organisational Systems
Model.
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There are two key points of the inter-relationship between the elements of the Organisational Systems
Model. Firstly, the role of the functional objectives, in that each set of functional objectives (e.g. asset
management objectives) are individually necessary and are collectively sufficient, to achieve the
organisational objectives.
Secondly, the role of strategic plans of each function of the organisation, in that each functional strategic
plan (e.g. the SAMP) is individually necessary and collectively sufficient, to achieve the organisational
objectives, and further that the organisational strategic plan is the collective of all the functional strategic
plans.
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Introduction
In order to implement an asset management system, an organisation itself must choose appropriate:
The Capability Delivery Model schematically presents processes that may be used in part or entirety to
deliver the stated outputs of the organisation.
The processes are shown in six main disciplines:
1. Demand Management
2. Systems Engineering
3. Configuration Management
4. Acquisitions
5. Operations and Maintenance
6. Continuous Improvement.
These disciplines are associated with a number of national and international Standards, such as ISO/IEC
15288 Systems Engineering.
Each of these disciplines have a number of enabling competency elements and sub-elements, which in turn
may have a number of competency sets and supporting units of competency. The disciplines and enabling
competency elements are discussed in further detail in Section 9.3.
9.2
The primary purpose of the Capability Delivery Model is to document a typical set of processes that can be
used to:
Other purposes of the Capability Delivery Model include identifying and documenting:
how to create and define organisational functions within an asset management organisation; and
the relevant ISO and international engineering and financial management standards relevant to the
processes associated with the management of assets (see bibliography for Standard names).
9.2.1.1
The IEC TC 56 Dependability committee is currently in the process of developing a Technical Specification
that documents the relationship between ISO 55000 and ISO 55001 to the IEC Dependability Standards and
the International Financial Reporting Standards. That document is expected to be available in June 2014.
A number of Asset Management Council members are participating in the development of that specification.
That technical specification is intended to provide:
a brief introduction to both asset management and the requirements for an asset management
system;
the benefits from the use of an established and common set of asset management system
processes and procedures, tools and techniques to manage assets; and
Framework for Asset Management
Page 32
a description of the relationships between the Asset Management System to the tools and
techniques, processes and procedures of:
relevant International Financial Reporting Standards (such as IAS 16 Property Plant and
Equipment and the IFRS Taxonomy Guide); and
through the use of the ISO/IEC 15288 Systems Engineering as a technical process
management standard.
The specification will enable industry specific guidelines to be developed using a common structure and
common technical and financial terminologies.
9.3
9.3.1
Stakeholders
In this model, stakeholders are depicted as the overarching influence for the asset management system, and
its disciplines. For more information on the role of stakeholders, refer to Section 2.
9.3.2
Demand Management
Demand management establishes sound relationships with stakeholders who may be internal or external to
the organisation.
Figure 10: Wizard of Id, 2011, www.JohnHartStudios.com (by permission of John L. Hart FLP and Creators
Syndicate, Inc.)
The demand management process comprises three core parts. Needs analysis which is applied to capture
requirements and identify and assess the value of each need in preparation for demand analysis, which
critically examines value against potential cost of each need and agree a final need definition. Demand
analysis assesses each identified need within a wider context of use by all stakeholders and future
operational and environmental scenarios. The needs definition is generally stated in the form of a business
case that links value to initial expectations of program cost and hence an understanding of the potential
return on investment.
Demand management takes a very proactive stance in identifying future changes in need through statistical
modelling techniques. Increasingly, the ability to assess the future is enabling a more accurate determination
of risk, leading to quantitative rather than qualitative
solutions.
The process is recursive meaning that the same activities
of analysis and definition take place firstly, at a strategic
level creating strategic plans intent on acquiring broad
capabilities. A more detailed application of the same
processes at a project level, rather than whole of portfolio
level, would then define requirements for specific projects
and then at lower levels to define requirements for
specific items of equipment.
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9.3.3.1
Needs Analysis
Demand Analysis
Needs Solution
Needs solution is a process used to develop and document user needs in an output-focused, non-technical
manner, where user needs are expressed in descriptive, measurable terms reflecting the users normal
expressions. User needs are usually described in an Operational Concept Document (OCD) or Concept of
Operations (CONOPS).
An OCD or CONOPS may:
describe the systems characteristics and behaviours from a users point of view; and
The OCD is a user-oriented document that describes the characteristics from which an asset solution will be
developed. The OCD is used to communicate overall quantitative and qualitative system or situation
characteristics to the users, designers and other organisational elements.
For example, the users could express in the OCD their need for a highly reliable system, and their reasons
for that need, without having to produce a measurable reliability requirement at the same time. The OCD
provides a mechanism for users and organisations to express thoughts and concerns on possible solution
strategies and to record design constraints, the rationale for those constraints, and to indicate the range of
acceptable solution strategies.
The OCD also provides analysis that bridges the gap between the users operational needs and visions and
the designers technical specifications, without becoming bogged down in detailed technical issues. The
OCD documents a systems characteristics and the users operational needs in a manner that can be
confirmed by users without requiring any technical knowledge beyond that required to perform normal job
functions.
9.3.4
Systems Engineering
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A simpler definition would be the translation of a set of stakeholder requirements into a balanced and
verified solution.
The verification process is carried out to ensure that the outputs of the design stage (or stages) meet the
design stage input requirements. The solution is verified by checking that system specification requirements,
which are measurable and hence testable, are achieved layer by layer, from performance requirements into
sub systems, equipment and parts.
Design validation is the process of ensuring that the final product conforms to defined user (customer) needs
and/or requirements. The Systems Engineering V Process is shown in Figure 13.
9.3.5.1
through stakeholder and market survey, feasibility analysis and trade-off studies. Alternative solutions to
meet an identified need are also developed.
Concept validation involves development of experimental or prototype models and removal of any high-risk
aspects that may be evident in the conceptual solution. Support systems needed across the life cycle are
also identified and included in the evaluation of alternatives to achieve a balanced life cycle solution.
Typical outputs of the concept exploration and validation stage are stakeholder requirements, concepts of
operation, assessment of feasibility, preliminary system requirements, outline design solutions in the form of
drawings, models, prototypes, etc., and concept plans for enabling systems, including whole life cost and
human resource requirements estimates and preliminary project schedules. Stakeholder feedback to the
concept is obtained.
Implementation of this stage requires appropriate methods, techniques, tools and competent human
resources to undertake market/economic analysis and forecasting, feasibility analysis, trade-off analysis,
technical analysis, whole life cost estimation, modelling, simulation, and prototyping. At the completion of
this stage, decisions such as whether to continue with the development of a solution in the following
specification stage or to cancel further work are made.
9.3.5.2
Specification
Engineering specifications provide the design basis for equipment to be designed or purchased and become
part of the configuration documentation for an approved design. They range in complexity from a
comprehensive document that describes the functional and performance requirements, to a simple one
page statement of requirements.
Specification commences with a detailed understanding of the functional requirements and outline of a
feasible solution that can be achieved with manageable risk. Planning for this stage begins in the preceding
stage to ensure the organisation has the necessary capabilities available to undertake acquisition (if needed)
by whatever method is chosen. The capabilities include methods, techniques, tools and competent human
resources. Developing this information set is a complex task and has profound implications for the remainder
of the asset life cycle.
The outputs of this stage must be sufficient to enable the managed acquisition of assets (as part of the
CAPEX) and their necessary support such as operational and maintenance capabilities (as part of the
OPEX). Additionally, the hardware, software and operator interfaces must be specified, and the functional
requirements for integrated support defined.
To reduce error, most organisations use defined specification formats and content. Specifications also
provide the necessary hooks into company-specific standards and policies, enabling the company to specify
not only what is to be achieved, but also provide its view of what is the range of acceptable design solutions
and practices.
9.3.5.3
Design
Design is both the process and the end product. The design competency element translates requirements
into solutions which are represented by structured data such as a drawing or plan or process description.
Design in this case can be defined as:
Design (verb) - the process of defining, synthesising, selecting, and describing solutions to
requirements in terms of products and processes; and
Design (noun) - the product of the process of designing that describes the solution (conceptual,
preliminary or detailed) of the system, system elements or system end items.
Effective design management is essential to maintain the safety and integrity of assets and to comply with
state and industry statutory obligations. It enables the business to obtain and maintain quality accreditation
1
such as AS/NZS ISO 9001 and to deliver a quality design service in support of the business outputs.
The key design tools in determining likely risks of failure in terms of operational and maintenance impact is
Failure Modes Effects and Criticality Analysis (FMECA). The FMECA process is best conducted during
design, when improvement options are relatively cheap to implement while only paper/electronic media is
involved.
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Inevitably, design work involves the application of established design principles, rules and standards to meet
the requirements of a specification for new or altered infrastructure. These are known as design standards.
Selecting and applying design standards is integral to the design activity and essential to achieving
appropriate levels of safety and integrity. Inappropriate use of standards that considerably exceed needs can
substantially increase the cost of construction and maintenance. The application of design standards leads
to the creation of two supporting standards as shown in Figure 15.
Support Analysis
Asset support requirements are the wherewithal that enable a design solution to achieve its output capability
today, tomorrow and for the duration of the intended life of the design.
Support analysis involves analysing support needs, over the life of the asset, to optimise where to invest
money. The greatest challenge in the support analysis process is, if there is only certain funding available,
how is it spread amongst these support elements, which all affect each other and also impact on dead and
live time? this is the greatest challenge in asset management for engineers, statisticians and data collectors.
The advantage of having determined support analysis during the development of the design solution is that
when the asset is acquired, there is enough time to buy the support for it. Required support should be in
place on the first day of the commissioning function and in fact its verification should be part of that
commissioning activity. It matters little that the asset is brand new: it can, and will, fail if the right spare is not
available or the staff are not trained appropriately. Without required support, the design intent of the asset
will not be achieved and the business case will be compromised.
9.3.6
Configuration management is the management of the functional and physical attributes of a system, an asset
and its part sub-systems and assemblies. It also includes the derived information representing the integrated
support needs.
Configuration management is a poorly understood and applied discipline in most organisations, including
many regarded as good managers of assets. Certainly all have some fundamental knowledge of establishing
asset registers and processes for change control and of drawing numbering and version control. However,
these disconnected capabilities do not achieve the core intent of good configuration management practices.
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They do not formally manage the changing functional and physical configurations of their asset systems
along with the derived information necessary to sustain the asset capability both short and long term.
Configuration management is the guardian to the acquisition process. This role recognises that if the
functional requirements for a system change, it is likely that the design and subsequently the support
requirements will also change. Configuration management change control provides a formal test check that
identifies the implications and answers the questions:
o
9.3.7.1
Engineering Change
Engineering change requires a structured process around the identification of why change is required, the
impact of change on current business, and the outcome of the change. The level of approval of the
Engineering change will depend upon the complexity of the change. For instance a simple like-for-like asset
replacement will require a lower level approval than a complex system change associated with a major
upgrade or investment.
It is good practice to identify levels of change based on the risk associated with the change, the complexity
of the change and the effort to implement it. Governance of change must address all elements of systems
engineering to ensure the correct support functions are updated and assure the required level of support.
9.3.8
9.3.8.1
Integrated Support
Integrated support comprises all the support needed for the asset to
deliver the requisite output, namely:
Maintenance;
Spares;
Finance;
Training.
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Integrated support has inherent characteristics that affect two major performance aspects of the ownership
of equipment. Firstly, how long it is alive for often measured as mean time between failures which defines
the reliability of the asset; and secondly, how long it is dead for often measured as mean down time or the
maintainability of the asset.
These two design-inherent performance characteristics of reliability and maintainability will determine the
availability of the equipment. Regrettably, each and all of the integrated support elements affect both
reliability and maintainability.
For example, the spares that are procured will affect how often a system dies and when it does die, how long
it takes to bring it back to life again. If multiple spares have not been bought or are stored far from the item,
then mean down time will be longer. If the spares are of poor quality, or stored incorrectly they may not last
as long and the mean time between equipment failures will be shorter. This same influence on both
reliability and maintainability is a characteristic of each one of those support elements all affect reliability or
maintainability in some way.
This integrated approach is intended to assure that necessary support is available on the first day of service
so that on the second day of owning the asset, if there is a failure, the spares, employees, facilities and tools
are available to fix it. The necessary support is available to achieve the inherent design capabilities of that
equipment. Both operations and maintenance functions require similar support elements. For example, the
operations function will need simulators, will need manuals and training and will certainly need people, etc.
9.3.8.2
The create and dispose process incorporates measures to ensure that the:
delivered asset meets the operational and business needs of the organisation and can be
maintained in a safe and effective condition throughout its life, as specified in specification and
request for tender documentation produced in the previous stage;
final design or delivered product is verified and validated against the specified requirements
using systems engineering and quality assurance processes and procedures;
disposal process is completed, for major asset disposals in line with the disposal plan; and
These tasks may be conducted by different organisations depending on the acquisition method selected.
Either way, the end user must manage its risks by assuring that the processes followed represent good
practice no matter who is contracted to deliver them.
This stage has important implications for
safety and environmental management and
for ongoing support costs. Disposal must be
considered during acquisition and the
implications of selected materials and design
solutions on life cycle cost clearly identified.
Short life systems subject to regular
obsolescence should have a disposal plan
costed into the acquisition program.
Disposal does not simply represent a decision
to stop using the asset. Only when full owner
accountability has ceased and the asset is
removed from Technical Maintenance Plans
and the equipment register can the
equipment be regarded as fully disposed of.
This will also include the disposal of all
supporting capability that is dedicated to the
disposed asset. Retention of some risk and
FMECA data could be required under the
State legislation.
Deactivating or disposing of infrastructure assets often involves maintaining it in a safe condition (nearly
always because not all hazards relate to the item being used) before it can finally be removed, but after it is
no longer in active use. Disposal may include managing a particular site or equipment, such as a
decommissioned bridge with significantly changed operational functions. These could include local
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community use, environmental management requirements, or operating in line with Government heritage
requirements.
Asset disposal should be considered when the asset is in the earliest stages of planning. The costs of
disposal can be recognised early and provided for in future budgets. Additionally, a superseded asset and its
support provisions are removed from service and from the inventory at the appropriate time to manage risk
and reduce cost of maintaining unproductive inventory.
9.3.9
Maintenance
The objective of maintenance is to ensure the realisation of the required safety and reliability levels of the
asset, at a minimum total cost, commensurate with the company business plan. Information, which is
necessary for design improvements, is obtained during the maintenance process.
Based on the maintenance objectives there are two basic types of maintenance - preventive maintenance
and corrective maintenance. Both are an inherent outcome of a design function (as against design
synthesis) which includes the support analysis necessary to determine the support required to achieve a
certain capability with a known and measurable level of assurance.
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Preventive Maintenance
Preventive maintenance manages operational risk in that it is safety-and-reliability-focused and not costfocused. Preventive tasks include all scheduled (planned) maintenance actions intended to retain a system
or product in a specified condition. These tasks comprise three basic task types:
Hard time activity - Applicable to a population of equipment that is serviced in some way,
removed and repaired/overhauled or else removed and thrown away as uneconomically
repairable. This includes tasks such as cleaning filters, replacing electrolytic capacitors or
lubricants, overhauling complex equipment where loads are consistent and can be related to
time.
Functional testing - Applicable to equipment with hidden failures and intended as a confidence
check that it is still working, examples are smoke detector tests and circuit breaker full
function tests.
9.3.9.3
Corrective Maintenance
Corrective maintenance tasks return failed equipment to a specified standard. There are two types of failures
generally determined by a breach of a maintenance standard that defines functional and conditional limits:
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Functional failures are those where the functional specification has been exceeded, such as
leak rate limits or input voltage or signal strength degradation below operable levels,
resulting in loss of specified capability. These failures are generally fixed (or temporarily
repaired) immediately. For example, replacement of failed circuit cards, switch open circuits,
AMBoK Publication 000
ruptured pressure vessels or failed pressure piping, cavitating pumps or short circuits in
transformer or electrical
rotor windings, corroded
electrical joints and wiring
In understanding what requires improvement and
etc.
where is the greatest risk impacting the business
Operations
The Capability Delivery Model deliberately depicts maintenance and operations as a pair. Alone, neither
maintenance or operations deliver the requisite asset outputs and levels of service and both need each
other.
Like maintenance, operations requires the development and execution of approved tasks. Like maintenance,
only approved persons are able to execute assigned operations tasks.
9.3.10 Continuous Improvement
Continuous improvement is a process to assess, identify and improve the asset management process
through assurance that defined processes are properly and effectively followed. This is the more operational
facet of the performance monitoring and improvement (Section 8.2.5) function of the Asset Management
System Model.
At this point in the model the stakeholders have been identified, their needs polled; those business needs
translated into a specification and a design solution has been established. A support solution has also been
established and is being used fully in operations and maintenance.
Is the process perfect? Probably not.
Many assumptions about the support environment, or the expected reliability and maintainability
performance of the selected equipment were made during the design process. Some were accurate, being
drawn from existing equipment use, others less so. Additionally, the environment might have changed
between the establishment of the initial requirement and the delivery of the assets.
It is actual asset usage that gives us information to verify the entire integrated support package that informs
the operations and maintenance staff.
The combined maintenance and operations function is the beginning of the feedback loop. Measure and
assess what is occurring in the delivery of those operations and maintenance arrangements, and then feed it
Framework for Asset Management
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back through a series of loops in the model that are critical in sequence and structure. This is continuous
improvement.
The loop can now be closed again, moving back through the originating requirements at the front end of the
model, and the sequence and structure can be repeated again with new input. Have the stakeholders
changed? What are the key asset-related risks that must be managed? Is an asset solution required? Are
the needs definitions correct? Does that definition match the stakeholders expectations and how they want
capability delivered? Is there delivery of sustainable triple bottom line outcomes for economic, social and
financial performance?
Revisit demand analysis; or bring in new laws to stop people using as much water, or decreased pressure to
keep the water pipes lasting longer. Push back on demands for better services or press for lesser services.
Revisit solutions and look at existing non-asset and asset solutions, given changes in technology over time.
Revisit the stakeholders. Who are they, really? What do they really think and do, and what do they really
want? Establishing strong relationships with stakeholders and developing sound negotiating approaches to
communicating openly and honestly is crucial to continuous improvement.
The process has now gone full circle. Starting with stakeholders, managing their demand and establishing
relationships through this concept of demand management, using well-known practices and standards for
systems engineering, integrated support, the integration of operations and maintenance management in an
optimal process.
9.3.11 Continuous Improvement Competency Elements
9.4
The following artefacts are developed from the Capability Delivery Model, namely:
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Systems Engineering Management Plan (SEMP) - A document that describes the plans and
procedures for the management of an integrated engineering program that meets the organisations
business needs. The SEMP describes both what and how technical effort will be identified,
implemented, coordinated and integrated to the meet the organisations cost, risk, timeliness and
performance aspects of its business objectives.
Operations Management Plan (Ops Plan) - A document used to describe the plan for managing and
directing the delivery of asset/asset system functions (including both asset performance and ILS
support requirements) in support of business needs.
Integrated Logistics Support Plan (ILS Plan) - A document used to describe the necessary logistic
support activities, responsibility for those activities and the completion schedule, in support of
business needs. In particular, the ILS Plan is used to describe the integrated and iterative processes
for developing materiel (being the ILS elements), and a support strategy that delivers the requisite
support, as and when needed. Although originally developed for military purposes, it is also widely
used in commercial product support or customer service organisations.
Capital Expenditure (CAPEX) - A document that describes the plan for the expenditure of capital
funds used by an organisation to acquire or upgrade capabilities or both (being physical assets such
as property, industrial buildings or equipment and its requisite ILS support) in support of business
needs. This type of outlay is made by companies to increase the organisational capability (increase
the scope of their operations) or to reduce their OPEX costs (increase the efficiency of their
operations).
Operating Expenditure (OPEX) - A document that describes the plan for the expenditure of annual
recurring funds that a business needs as a result of performing its normal business operations (that
is, using the designed capability (assets and ILS support) to deliver the required business outcomes.
Safety Management Plan (SMP) - A document that describes the safety management plan for the
implementation of the safety management system, including policies and procedures and roles and
responsibilities, to provide assurance that all activities carried out within an organisation, will achieve
the approved safety objectives.
Heritage Management Plan (Heritage MP) - A document that describes the Heritage Management
Plan for the implementation of heritage management, including policies and procedures and roles
and responsibilities, to provide assurance that all activities carried out within an organisation, will
achieve the approved heritage objectives.
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A set of Organisational Elements Structuring, Governance, Structured and the Business Assets;
A set of Maturity Lenses to focus on and analyse asset management across all four Organisational
Elements. These Maturity Lenses are used to analyse important aspects of asset management; and
A set of Qualities that provide a description of the essential nature of asset management maturity
across the whole organisation.
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use of, and access to, information to support asset management related decision making;
the degree to which asset management focusses upon a demonstrable balance of cost, risk and
performance outcomes;
use of competent, capable, authorised and motivated people within asset management.
Figure 23: Example of Asset Management Maturity Lenses; each lens provides information across all four
Organisational Elements
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an integrated approach to the management of assets adopted by all business functions; and
Figure 24: Asset Management Maturity depicting the interrelation of Organisational Elements and Maturity
Lenses assessed by Maturity Qualities
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11 Your Feedback
As the Asset Management Council is committed to continual improvement, this document will be formally
reviewed - as per the Asset Management Council Review Process - every two years. The next formal review
will take place in 2016.
As such, your feedback, ideas and comments are welcome and will be collected and considered for the next
formal review.
Please send your feedback to [email protected].
Page 48
12 Bibliography
AIAA Operational Concept Document (under review)
ANSI/GEIA EIA 632:2003 Processes for engineering a system
AS 60300.1:2004 Dependability management
AS 60300.3.1:2003 Application guide Analysis techniques for dependability
AS 60300.3.11:1999 Reliability centered maintenance
AS 60300.3.12:2001 Integrated logistic support
AS 60300.3.14:2005 Maintenance and maintenance support
AS/NZS 13000:2009 Risk Management, Principles and Guidelines
BSI PAS 55-1:2008 and PAS 55-2:2008 Asset Management Specifications
EIA 649:1998 National Consensus Standard for Configuration Management
IEC 60300-3-9:1995 Risk analysis of technological systems
IEC 812:1985 Procedure for a Failure Modes and Effects Analysis
IEEE P1220, Standard for Application and Management of the Systems Engineering Process
IEEE P1362, Guide for Concept of Operations Document
IEEE Standard 1362 Guide for System Definition - Concept of Operations (ConOps) Document.
IEEE STD 1002-1987 - IEEE Standard Taxonomy for Software Engineering Standards
International Electrotechnical Vocabulary (IEV) Part 191 dependability definitions
International Infrastructure Management Manual (IIMM), Institute of Public Works Engineering, 2006
ISO 10007:2003 Quality management systems Guidelines for configuration management
ISO 14001 Environmental Management
ISO 15504:2004 Process capability
ISO 3100X Risk Management
ISO Concept database for repository of structured items https://cdb.iso.org/cdb/search.action
ISO/IEC 15288:2008 Systems and software engineering System Life cycle processes
ISO/IEC TR 24748-1:2010 Systems and software engineering System life cycle management -- Part 1:
Guide for life cycle management
Nowlan and Heap, Reliability Centered Maintenance, 1978
US Department of Defence Performance Specification Guide SD 15
US Military Data Item Description DI-IPSC-81430A Operational Concept Description document (OCD)
US Military Standard 882C Program Safety Management
Forthcoming Framework Documents
Asset Management Data/Information
Asset Management Plans Content
Asset Management Systems
Assurance for Management Systems
Competencies and Qualifications
Configuration Management/Systems Engineering in Asset Management
Culture and Leadership
Glossary and Taxonomy Resources
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Integrated Support
Performance Indicators and KPIs for Asset Management
Principles
Process Capability
Risk Reliability and Safety
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13 Abbreviations
Abbreviation
/Acronym
Description
ALARP
ANSI
AS
Australian Standard
AS/NZS
BSI PAS
CAD
CCB
CI
Configuration Item
CM
Configuration Management
CMMS
CM Web
CMP
CPI
DoD
Department of Defence
DPWS
ECP/R
ED-ISG
EIA
ETA
FET
FMEA
FMECA
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FTA
Hazop
ICOMS
IEC
IEEE
ISO
LCC
LOCE
LORA
MDT
MPM
MTBF
NAVAIR
NOHS
OEM
OH&S
PAS
PDCA
PHA
PPE
PPP
QRA
RAMS
RBD
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RFT
RCM
RM
Routine Maintenance
SE
Systems Engineering
SWOT
TAM Manual
TMP
TP
Task Period
US MIL-HDBK
US MIL-STD
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Stakeholder engagement
Needs Analysis Strategic planning
Capital investment decision making
Risk assessment and management
Sustainable development
Asset costing and valuation
Demand Analysis
Demand analysis
Capital investment decision making
Risk assessment and management
Needs Solutions
Strategic planning
Capital investment decision making
Risk assessment and management
Sustainable development
Asset costing and valuation
Concept Validation
Strategic planning
Concept Exploration
Strategic planning
Capital investment decision making
Risk assessment and management
Specification
Strategic planning
Systems engineering
Design
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Support Analysis
Integrated Support
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Systems engineering
Configuration management
Operations
Maintenance
Process Monitoring
Systems engineering
Configuration management
Maintenance delivery
Asset operations
Asset information systems
Data and information management
Risk assessment and management
Process Audit
Systems engineering
Configuration management
Maintenance delivery
Asset operations
Asset information standards
Data and information management
Risk assessment and management
Support Change
Systems engineering
Configuration management
Maintenance delivery
Asset operations
Risk assessment and management
Asset performance and health monitoring
Framework for Asset Management
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Management of change
Engineering Change
Requirements Change
Stakeholder engagement
Leadership
Organisational Objectives
Strategic planning
Capital investment decision making
Life cycle value realisation
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Reliability engineering
Maintenance delivery
Asset operations
Asset information systems
Risk assessment and management
Contingency planning and resilience analysis
Management of change
Asset performance and health monitoring
Decision making
Risk management
Process Management
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Publication
Partnering Organisations
Va
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ue
re
ltu
p
hi
Cu
an
rs
de
Al
ig
nm
en
a
Le
r
su
As
ce
an
Decision Making
Competency &
Engagement
Organisational
Roles
Process
Management
Risk Management