top 6 reasons rcfa initiatives fail

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Top 6 Reasons RCFA Initiatives Fail

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Organizations often expend precious resources to train people on root cause failure analysis (RCFA)

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Only to realize very little gain after a brief burst of interest and activity

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How does this happen?

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1. The company treats RCFA as a tool, when it is more of a process.

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Most of the best-practice RCFA processes consist of many steps, often the same steps, albeit sometimes grouped differently.

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2. Companies try to apply specific RCFA methods to all their problems.

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There are many methods – use the one that’s right for the job!

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3. Companies rely on inadequate failure analysis, causing them to fix the wrong problems.

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If you are looking for a lubrication failure root cause when the true failure mode was axial overload, you are unlikely to find an effective solution.

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4. Too many corrective action recommendations.

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Too many, often vague, recommendations are often the equivalent of not admitting “I really don’t know why it failed.”

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5. Poor execution.

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It is frustrating to be called to a site to perform an RCFA for a second failure, when the corrective actions from the RCFA for the first failure have not been implemented.

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6. Ironically, too many RCFAs.

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You realize that you don’t have nearly adequate resources to implement all of those corrective actions. Then comes the collapse. Time for another program of the month!

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So how do you prevent these things from happening?

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Design and implement an effective RCFA process that avoids these common pitfalls and see your production, quality, yield, safety, and cost performance improve. We can help!

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Need to Know More About Root Cause Analysis? Download Four Ways to Measure the Effectiveness of Your Root Cause Analysis Process. This free resource explores measuring the effectiveness of Root Cause Analysis as a business process intended to produce business results. Examples of the primary KPIs will help you keep your finger firmly on the pulse of your RCA process.

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For more resources and to learn more about Life Cycle Engineering visit: www.LCE.com

About Life Cycle EngineeringLife Cycle Engineering (LCE) provides consulting, engineering, applied technology and education solutions that deliver lasting results for private industry, the Department of Defense and other government organizations. The quality, expertise and dedication of our employees enable Life Cycle Engineering to serve as a trusted resource that helps people and organizations to achieve their full potential. Founded in 1976, LCE is headquartered in Charleston, South Carolina with offices across North America and experience around the globe.

Got a specific problem you’re trying to solve?Chances are that we have helped someone solve a similar problem. Email info@LCE.comand we’ll explain how we helped. Or visit our website www.LCE.com.

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