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Internal Service Funds Their Mission Impact and Using Performance Measurement to Employ Best Practices. Gary McLean, Fleet Manager, City of Lakeland. Agenda. Introduction A Reminder of What ISFs Represent Tailoring Measurement to the Customer Tailoring Service to the Customer
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Internal Service FundsTheir Mission Impact and Using Performance Measurement to Employ Best Practices Gary McLean, Fleet Manager, City of Lakeland
Agenda • Introduction • A Reminder of What ISFs Represent • Tailoring Measurement to the Customer • Tailoring Service to the Customer • COL Fleet’s Best Practices • Conclusion
Introduction • About Me • Born and raised in Melbourne, Florida • In fleet maintenance/management 30 years • Military and municipal fleet management • Experience in all fleet aspects, parts, body shop, mechanic, supervisor, manager • FBC Fleet Management service lead since 2009 • COL Fleet recognized as one of North America’s 100 Best Fleets in 2011 and 2012
Internal Service Funds • What ISF organizations represent • Usually, ISFs directly support all missions, ISF examples: • Facility Maintenance • Fleet Management • Information Technology • ISFs escape the attention of the public, but are very visible to government leadership, for better or for worse • ISF performance directly translates to operational effectiveness, organization-wide • Inefficient ISFs must improve themselves, or their customers/leadership will find other alternatives • Effective, data-driven ISFs enable the success of the entire local government organization
Tailoring Measurement to the Customer • Different departments, different challenges • Paramilitary requirements • Customer-driven service provided to citizens • Funding sources for revenue • The little guys versus the big guys • Curiosity must drive true data interpretation • Different departments, different support solutions
Tailoring Service to the Customer • Paramilitary Organizations (Police, Fire) • Require adequate reserve vehicles (spares) • Difficulties with timely turn-in of units for PMs • Special needs for vehicle equipment outfitting • Service Delivery Solutions • Active inspection of pool and spare vehicles • Dedicated PM cell ensures quick turn-time • Large PM parts inventory • Contracted vehicle outfitting with deadline
Tailoring Service to the Customer • Enterprise Fund Organizations • Utilities, Refuse/Recycling Collection/Airport • Customer expectation for service generally high • “Paying” customers (citizen revenue) drives very high priorities • Service Delivery Solutions • Service level agreements to ensure prioritization • Dedicated technicians for early shift starts, emergency operations • High level of parts inventory for priority vehicles
Tailoring Service to the Customer • The “Little Guys” • Small departments with a few vehicles • Budgets are tight • Stereotypical view is they are a low priority • Lots of mission support problems from low priority • Service Delivery Solutions • Aggressive, on-time replacement of vehicles for better reliability • Fleet-based loaner vehicles outfitted for their needs • Case-by-case leasing for required units with low utilization
COL Fleet’s Best Practices • Contracted Operated Parts and Inventory • NAPA Integrated Business Solutions, June 2010 • Full management of inventory, parts, tires, materials, fluids • Flexible staff availability for weekends, emergency operations • Performance measurement products on demand • Total elimination of technicians losing time to parts research and sourcing • Material costs are essentially flat-lined compared to past trends compared to organic process • Single biggest factor in Fleet’s improvements
COL Fleet’s Best Practices • Contracted Tire Servicing • GCR Tire Centers, June 2011 • Full on-site tire repair and replacement • On-site tire tread wear management in all heavy truck yards • Works with NAPA in-house parts store for tire ordering and inventory replenishment • Tread wear management improved retread tire use by 30% • Zero wait time for customers that need tires fixed or replaced • 30% drop in tire servicing expense, 20% drop in tire material expense
COL Fleet’s Best Practices • Preventive Maintenance Cell • Formally established October 2012 • Dedicates 4 technicians to preventive maintenance work to the exclusion of all else • Aggressive pursuit of overdue PM turn-ins • Appointment system ensures vehicle is serviced immediately upon drop-off • 100-plus PM inspection backlog reduced to zero in 2 months • Anticipated reduction in unscheduled maintenance cost expected at 10% - 15%
COL Fleet’s Best Practices • Change from Two to One Work Shift • Formerly ran two shifts, day and evening • Performance measurement validated lack of evening shift productivity • Changed to one 10-hour shift, 5 days weekly • Staggered shifts for Monday – Thursday, Tuesday – Friday coverage • Increased vehicle availability across the City • Enabled elimination of PM backlog • Enabled robust enterprise fund mission support • Quality of life improvement for employees with 3-day weekends throughout the year
Conclusion • Internal Service Fund organizations must look at data differently, tailored to the customer • Don’t compare customers with assumptions or baselines—curiosity drives interpretation • Work closely with the customer to develop the solutions and benchmark your neighbors • Data validates, not demands adjustments • The BEST best practice is customer focus and agile response to the need to improve