By: Brian Cole, Senior Principal; Krystyna Riley, Senior Principal
Turnarounds are a complex, challenging, and expensive part of capital intensive industries (e.g., refining, mining, power generation). Successful turnarounds require significant collaboration and alignment between operations, maintenance, and engineering to ensure best-in-class performance.
Many organizations have an established process for managing their turnarounds, but often the lack of alignment between senior leaders and their different functional work groups prevents them from achieving their operational, financial, and safety goals for turnarounds. In our experience, a Turnaround Steering Team is the key to taking turnaround performance to the next level and as well as driving longer-term sustainable performance improvements in the turnaround management process.
An effective Turnaround Steering Team brings together the key leaders in a facility who are accountable for turnaround success. The team’s purpose is two-fold. First, it’s responsible for establishing the goals, priorities, and longer-term strategies that build an organization’s capability to deliver successful turnarounds. Second, it serves as a source of accountability and oversight for the turnarounds that are presently underway in a facility.
So, what does it take to have an effective Steering Team? Let’s look at two things:
Get the Right People in the Room, Regularly— In our view, it’s critical that the Steering Team be comprised of the leaders who represent the key functions responsible for effectively scoping, planning, and executing turnarounds, and that they meet together routinely.
Charter the Team—The charter should include a clear statement of the Steering Team’s purpose, well-defined roles for its members, a clearly defined decision-making process, the specific goals and improvement initiatives the team is focused on, and the results targets it aims to influence.
Align and Focus— To effectively lead their organization in achieving better turnaround results, the Steering Team members themselves must first be aligned on two critical direction-setting elements.
Based on our experience, misalignment at the top of the organization is THE most significant barrier to improving turnaround performance.
Clear Ownership for Turnarounds— The Steering Team must be absolutely clear on who “owns” turnarounds. This also means explicitly communicating to the rest of the organization, who is ultimately accountable for a turnaround’s planning and execution: Operations? Maintenance? Engineering? In the work we do with our clients, clarifying this one key issue lays the foundation for dramatic improvements in turnaround results. In those cases where accountability is unclear, unspoken, or shared between functions, we’ve seen serious issues arise with scope definition, resource planning, and schedule optimization – all of which contributed to poor predictability and significant cost and schedule overruns.
Organizational Alignment— Getting the Steering Team aligned is the first step. The real power and leverage comes from getting the rest of the organization aligned; it’s one of the most important benefits from having an effective Steering Team. Aligning the rest of the organization means getting function leaders on the same page and talking to each other, sharing critical information, and breaking down silos.. Here are just a few of the benefits our clients have experienced by having a Steering Team that’s focused on organizational alignment:
Good Strategic Discussions— An effective Steering Team looks at the big picture and focuses on multi-year strategic plans. Good strategic discussions
Our clients often say it’s challenging to select the few behaviors that will enhance turnaround planning and execution. A good starting point is to focus on what CLG calls the 5 Core Leadership Behaviors:
We’ve found that leaders’ consistent demonstration of these behaviors is highly predictive of improved turnaround performance. (We’ll talk more about leadership behaviors in an upcoming post.)
A well-functioning Steering Team can be your key asset to improving cost control, scheduling, resource commitment, contractor usage, safety, and overall turnaround execution. A Steering Team is all about the right leaders, performing the right leadership behaviors, to get things done the right way.
The Next Post in our turnaround series looks at minimizing late scope.