4th generation maintenance

4th Industrial Revolution Requires 4th Generation Maintenance

Today the Fourth Industrial Revolution is upon us. Aladon and The Aladon Network are leaders worldwide in guiding asset owners to stay ahead of the challenges of the Fourth Industrial Revolution with our Fourth Generation Maintenance approach, RCM3™. 

The following insight by an IBM Global Entrepreneur captures the essence of the technological upheavals of the Fourth Industrial Revolution that is currently sweeping through the global economy: 

  • World’s largest taxi company owns no taxis (Uber)
  • Largest accommodation provider owns no real estate (Airbnb)
  • Largest phone companies own no telco infra (Skype, WeChat) 
  • World’s most valuable retailer has no inventory (Alibaba)
  • Most popular media owner creates no content (Facebook)
  • Fastest growing banks have no actual money (SocietyOne) 
  • World’s largest movie house owns no cinemas (Netflix)
  • Largest software vendors don’t write the apps (Apple & Google)

The Fourth Industrial Revolution, also known as the Second Machine Age, is fundamentally changing each and every aspect of our life. To understand why, first consider the three industrial revolutions to come before it.

First Industrial Revolution

The First Industrial Revolution changed human life drastically, with more created in the last 250+ years than in the previous 2,500+ years of known human history.

The First Industrial Revolution was a fundamental change in the way goods were produced, from human labor to machines. This led to more efficient means and higher levels of production, triggering far-reaching changes to industrialized societies. This First Industrial Revolution started largely in the United Kingdom during the last quarter of the 18th Century and included:  harnessing steam power, mechanization of the textile industry, transportation (trains and trams) and communication (telegraph, telephone and radio) and the birth of the modern factory. Machines began to replace the need for humans in agriculture and manufacturing.

Second Industrial Revolution

The Second Industrial Revolution, also known as the Technological Revolution, was a phase of the larger Industrial Revolution corresponding to the latter half of the 19th century up until World War I. It is considered to have begun with Bessemer steel in the 1860s and culminated in mass production and the production line, improving workflow and scientific management. The Second Industrial Revolution was driven by electricity, a cluster of Inventions, internal combustion engines, the aeroplane and moving pictures. Increased mechanization of industry and improvements to labor efficiency increased the productivity of factories while undercutting the need for skilled labor. 

The first two industrial revolutions made people richer and more urban. The Third Industrial Revolution made life and manufacturing go digital. The Third Industrial Revolution included digital technology, personal computing, internet and mass customization. According to the Economist the Third Industrial Revolution is known for a number of remarkable technologies that converged: clever software, novel materials, more dexterous robots, new processes (notably three-dimensional printing) and a whole range of web-based services. The factory of the past was based on producing identical products: Ford famously said that car buyers could have any color they liked, as long as it was black. Today factories focus on mass customization, using new and lighter materials that are stronger and more durable than the old ones. New techniques shape engineering, and the internet allows ever more designers to collaborate on new products.

Factories are no longer full of grimy machines manned by men in oily overalls. Many are squeaky clean and almost deserted. Most jobs are no longer on the factory floor but in the offices nearby, full of designers, engineers, IT specialists, logistics experts, marketing staff and other professionals. Manufacturing jobs require more skills, and dull repetitive tasks have become almost obsolete.

Third Industrial Revolution

The Third Industrial Revolution did not only affect how things are made, but also where. Labor costs are growing less and less important: Offshore production is increasingly moving back to rich countries not because Chinese wages are rising, but because companies now want to be closer to their customers so that they can respond more quickly to changes in demand and customization.

The lines between manufacturing and services are blurring. Rolls-Royce no longer sells jet engines; it sells the hours that each engine is actually thrusting an aero plane through the sky.

What Makes Today’s Fourth Industrial Revolution Drastically Different

Professor Klaus Schwab, founder and executive chairman of the World Economic Forum and author of The Fourth Industrial Revolution, says the lines between the physical, digital, and biological spheres are getting blurred in the Fourth Industrial Revolution. The revolution is disrupting almost every industry in every country. The “breadth and depth of these changes herald the transformation of entire systems of production, management, and governance.”

The Fourth Industrial Revolution does not only change what we are doing but it also changes us. We need new economic models and a value shift. It changes the way we collaborate on every level of society and civilization. It will fundamentally alter the way we live, work, and relate to one another, how we generate, supply, and move energy around and interact with machines. Millions of traditional jobs may be lost to technology and robots, but with new education and innovation, millions more will be created. The Fourth Industrial Revolution (and how we respond to it) will lead to better productivity, improved safety, reliability, and quality.

Digitalist Magazine summarizes 5 key factors that are changing modern businesses:

  • Hyper-connected products that wirelessly collect, store and send data through the Internet of Things
  • Supercomputing analytical tools that provide store and interpret Big Data
  • Cloud computing platforms that collect and store large sets of data
  • Smart technology like wearables, robotics, machine learning, artificial intelligence, and 3D printing
  • Cybersecurity solutions that protect data and soothe privacy concerns from varying physical, human and virtual threats

For manufacturers this means real time factory and enterprise level insights, zooming in on granular levels of the supply chain with high-tech sensors. These sensors securely enable virtual tracking of assets, processes, resources and products to optimize and automate supply and demand. As more manufacturers employ smart processes into workflows the amount of waste, energy, and unplanned downtime is forecasted to decrease. 

None of this will be possible without the correct maintenance response

Aladon and The Aladon Network are leaders worldwide in guiding asset owners to stay ahead of the challenges of the Fourth Industrial Revolution with our Fourth Generation Maintenance approach, RCM3™. 

John Moubray wrote about the Third Generation Maintenance in his book Reliability-centered Maintenance (RCMII – Second Edition) where he explained the Growing Expectations of Maintenance, The Changing Views of Equipment Failure and Changing Maintenance Techniques. Similar to how the Fourth Industrial Revolution is building on the third, Aladon took the foundation of the third generation maintenance and lessons learned over 30 years in industry and developed a robust Fourth Generation Maintenance methodology (RCM3™), which recognizes the shift in demographics, even more changing expectations (outcome based), asset performance monitoring and predictive analytics (IoT), mobility and defect elimination (Reliability Centered Design™) all to meet the challenges the Fourth Industrial Revolution brings.

According to Marius Basson from Aladon, the Fourth Generation Maintenance will bring about the same change in how industry views maintenance when compared to industry’s response after Nowlan and Heap released the report from United Airlines called Reliability-centered Maintenance in 1978. However, the velocity, scope and system impact of the Fourth Generation Maintenance are exponentially faster than in generations past.

Read more about RCM3 and how to purchase the book here. Click here to contact Aladon