Page 268 - TPM A Route to World-Class Performance
P. 268

242  TPM-A  Route to World-Class Performance

                   Six further sites will be identified during this year for a TPM programme
                 which will embrace all significant RJB locations before the end of  2001.
                   Two ’facilitators’ - Sean Kelley and Tim Marples - have been recruited to
                 help roll out a programme which potentially could save the company millions
                 of  pounds, reduce production costs and improve safety. Sean, 28, previously
                 worked for Elida Fabergk, part of  the Unilever group, where he was a full-
                 time TPM facilitator, while Tim, 37, was previously with Miller Mining, where
                 he  had  valuable  experience  in problem-solving  techniques  and  change
                 management facilitation. Their responsibility within the organization will be
                 to train, assist in implementation and provide continual practical support for
                 TPM  across  the  business,  and  to  sustain  an environment of  continuous
                 improvement.
                   Says RJB’s Mining Services Director, Grant Budge:
                        As was explained in the last edition of  Newscene, TPM is about
                        developing the business together and continuously focusing on
                        the areas of  lost potential within our processes.
                        TPM is not  designed to replace our current practices, but to
                        support and develop them so that we can collectively improve
                        the  safety and performance of  our workplace. It’s not  about
                        working harder - it’s all about working smarter.
                   While new to RJB, TPM is an internationally accepted business development
                 strategy and has been used by  a large number of  companies, and a wide
                 range of  disciplines, over the past twenty years. It extends the ’team philosophy’
                 across the shifts and disciplines, seeking to maximize efficiency and product
                 quality through teamwork.
                   Being  results-driven,  TPM  looks  at  the  complete process,  rather  than
                 individual  elements, reviewing the  entire  cycle of  events  to  identify  and
                 correct weaknesses and minimize losses.


                 4.0  It’s  all about teamwork
                 Time is money - and on Daw Mill’s key 204s coalface, an additional 1 per
                 cent improvement in equipment effectiveness could increase production by 2
                 per  cent. It’s here, 600 metres below ground in Shakespeare country, that
                 Command Supervisor, Mark Emmett, and his boys are doing the business
                 thanks to a forward-looking management style that’s seen face teams grasp
                 the nettle of  change.
                    On Warwickshire Thick 204s, a 300-metre faceline taking a four-metre coal
                 section with some of  the highest rated equipment ever seen at a British mine,
                 a core team charged with improving equipment effectiveness and planned
                 maintenance systems has been formed  - and from the support they are getting,
                 they’re producing results.
                    Total Productive Mining is no midsummer night’s dream at Daw Mill. As
                 Mark says:
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