Asset Life Cycle and Maintenance Management
| Start Date | End Date | Venue | Fees (US $) | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Asset Life Cycle and Maintenance Management | 24 May 2026 | 28 May 2026 | Barcelona, Spain | $ 4,950 | Register |
| Asset Life Cycle and Maintenance Management | 30 Aug 2026 | 03 Sept 2026 | Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia | $ 4,500 | Register |
| Asset Life Cycle and Maintenance Management | 13 Dec 2026 | 17 Dec 2026 | Dubai, UAE | $ 3,900 | Register |
Asset Life Cycle and Maintenance Management
| Start Date | End Date | Venue | Fees (US $) | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Asset Life Cycle and Maintenance Management | 24 May 2026 | 28 May 2026 | Barcelona, Spain | $ 4,950 |
| Asset Life Cycle and Maintenance Management | 30 Aug 2026 | 03 Sept 2026 | Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia | $ 4,500 |
| Asset Life Cycle and Maintenance Management | 13 Dec 2026 | 17 Dec 2026 | Dubai, UAE | $ 3,900 |
Introduction
Upon completion of this management training course, attendees will be able to evaluate their plant’s maintenance practices and develop a program to achieve “world class” maintenance performance.
Objectives
Understand how their plant’s maintenance practices compare with industry leaders. In addition, they will be able to identify key improvement areas and understand the steps that are required to achieve the desired savings.Understand the practices used by industry leaders to achieve successful T/As. They will learn the seven phases of T/A management and the actions necessary in each phase.Be able to conduct work request justification reviews, which are based on the business principle of return on maintenance investment. They will have an understanding of how to develop risk scenarios reflecting realistic consequences and probabilities that can be used to establish the needed scope and timing of maintenance work.Be able to understand the principles of Life Cycle Maintenance Management (LCMM). They will have an understanding of how to develop LCMM plans for their key equipment and the application of this information to the development of maintenance budgets.
Training Methodology
The training methodology is interactive with group exercises and is suitable for all employees involved in functions management. The pace and level of the training workshop is customized to the understanding of the delegates. Ongoing back-up and support is available after the training on request to the supplier, and the training course is also available for in-house presentation as well as for “Competency Transfer”.
Who Should Attend?
Supervisors and Managers who are assigned the following responsibilities:
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Maintenance cost, equipment and unit reliability. Attendees should have an understanding of their plant’s current performance, maintenance practices, and opportunities for improvement.
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T/A cost and unit performance. Attendees should have an understanding of their current T/A practices.
Course Outline
Section 1 – Maintenance Practices That Improve Plant Profits
This section introduces the concepts of benchmarking maintenance performance against industry leaders. It focuses on changing maintenance philosophy and outlines top performer practices. A stepwise approach to improving maintenance performance is presented. The following topics are covered:
- Strategy for maintenance excellence
- Symptoms of poor performance
- Competitive performance
- Changing maintenance philosophy
- Top performer practices
- Achieving progress
Section 2 – Turnaround (T/A) Management
This section introduces the concepts associated with the successful planning and execution of major T/As. It presents milestones identifying the actions needed and their appropriate timing. The following topics are covered:
- Strategic planning
- Scope control
- Budget development and control
- Detailed planning
- Contracting
- Execution
- Close out assessment
Section 3 – Work Request Justification
This section introduces the concept of risk based work justification. It presents the methodology for justifying the need, scope, and timing of maintenance work. The following topics are covered:
- Organizational roles
- “Required vs. discretionary”
- Risk based decision making
- Priority setting
- Justifying work scope
- Savings/cost analysis
- Time value of money
Section 4 – Life Cycle Maintenance Management
This section introduces the concept behind Life Cycle Maintenance Management (LCMM). It presents a stepwise approach to develop LCMM Plans based on top performer practices. The following topics are covered:
- Define areas of vulnerability
- Identify critical components
- Timing and consequence assessment
- Assess timing and scope of maintenance intervention
- LCMM for spared equipment
- Managing LCMM data

