O&M professionals often deal with the unknown due to limited visibility in their current tools, hence the need for the right approach in their software tools to get a larger picture and overcome their day-to-day challenges, says Prabhu Ramachandran.
While there are defined frameworks for carbon footprint reduction in almost all large property portfolio operations, the question is how well equipped are O&M teams to innovatively manage energy emissions on a day-to-day basis. After all, the most critical links in the chain in the workforce are those who pace the floors performing routine schedules, altering system commands, responding to occupant requests, or taking up reactive or unplanned equipment servicing. But, here is the real deal – when it isn’t easy for them, the goals will not be met. Technology is a great enabler, but deploying the right platform can become a roadblock.
WHY THE TRADITIONAL MODEL CMMS WILL NOT WORK
First, let us take the case of the CMMS or CaFM platform, a crucial part of the property operations technology stack. It was designed to serve as a digital record of assets, create work orders or update maintenance schedules. However, even within that objective, teams worked with communication gaps and patched up workflows and systems data. This results in disjointed processes, leading to disparate data and lack of actionable insights; thereby it is bereft of any business value to the C-level executives, who rely on the data for effective decision-making to achieve sustainability goals.
More importantly, it leaves little or no space for O&M teams to derive efficiency from improved workflows and automation, and they continue to work with manual processes and outdated tools. So, how can a unified, Connected CMMS help meet sustainability goals? We know that buildings are interrelated systems – our tech platforms also need to be integrated to strengthen operations.
However, unless buildings systems (assets/equipment/ utilities), processes and people are unified into one single platform and the data is made accessible, it will lack the complete picture and purview to optimise resources for greater efficiency.
Here is how a Connected CMMS elevates building performance with the advantages of automation, IoT data and data accessibility…
However, the IoT-enabled connected CMMS seamlessly fits into an existing ‘tech’ stack and easily integrates with appliances, devices, sensors, BMS, BIM, BAS, CRM, ERP, or any business software. It adopts an API-first (Application Programming Interface) approach and enables a smooth flow of information. This opens up the scope for automation of predictive and condition-based maintenance across the entire maintenance lifecycle for improving asset health. For example, it is possible to automate a workflow from the time an alarm is raised.
A trigger is fed into the system and a work order is auto-generated. Technicians resolve the issue, and the tenant is informed of the resolution. Timely interventions reduce breakdowns. Also, there is scope to develop proactive maintenance workflows, like correlating asset faults with energy anomalies to increase asset life cycle. Instead of condition-based or reactive maintenance, such predictive maintenance workflows reduce breakdowns, improve asset health and lower OPEX.
Simply put, a data-led and unified operations and maintenance strategy is what can extend asset lifecycles and meet sustainability goals. To make that happen, deploying a Connected CMMS approach becomes a no-brainer.
The writer may be contacted at prabhu@facilio.com
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