My Wcm

And while I love the flexibility of a headless approach, "My WCM" isn't just about headless. It’s about balance.

Beyond the machines, "My WCM" is fundamentally about people and methodology. The most profound change in my daily work has been the adoption of the PDCA (Plan-Do-Check-Act) cycle and problem-solving tools such as the "Why-Why" analysis. Before WCM, I might have simply cleaned up a spill and moved on. Now, when faced with a defect, I ask "why" repeatedly until I reach the root cause. For instance, when a packaging seal failed, the first answer was "operator error." Instead of stopping there, I asked why the operator erred, discovering that the safety guard’s glare obscured their vision. The countermeasure was not a disciplinary note but an engineering change to the lighting. This experience defined "My WCM" as a blame-free environment where the process is interrogated, not the person. It fosters a culture of scientific thinking, where data, not gut feeling, dictates action. The Cost Deployment pillar taught me to prioritize these actions not by what is loudest, but by what impacts the bottom line most, turning maintenance from a cost center into a strategic investment. my wcm

The foundational pillar of "My WCM" is the uncompromising commitment to eliminating the ten major losses. Initially, I viewed machine downtime and minor stoppages as inevitable costs of production. However, through the WCM lens, I learned to apply the "Total Productive Maintenance" (TPM) pillar. I began conducting autonomous maintenance checks, cleaning my equipment not just for hygiene but for inspection. By listening to the rhythm of a conveyor belt or feeling the temperature of a bearing, I moved from being a passive operator to an active guardian of the asset. This hands-on approach taught me that the factory floor is a laboratory. Every oil leak or misaligned sensor is a clue. Solving these small, chronic losses compounds into massive gains in Overall Equipment Effectiveness (OEE), proving that world-class status is achieved through thousands of microscopic improvements rather than a single revolutionary breakthrough. And while I love the flexibility of a