Recruiting, Technology

How to Build an Effective Maintenance Technician Team

Your company invests several billions of dollars in automation machinery—miles of conveyor belts, intricately interlaced pneumatics, diverters, sorters, and stampers—to boost productivity and responsiveness. You hire a crack squad to install it properly, which is an additional nine-figure investment … and then it breaks.

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Source: Tetiana Yurchenko / Shutterstock

Is your on-site maintenance team up to the task of restoring production? You’re about to find out.

For employers in manufacturing, warehousing, and distribution, assembling a top-flight maintenance team is much more “buyer beware” than “mission impossible.” Here are some strategies that tackle building the best maintenance team.

Screen with Purpose

Even though they’re in high demand, talented maintenance candidates are more abundantly available on the job market than many other skilled trades. The difficulty employers face is finding the right candidates and putting them in a position to succeed before there’s a production breakdown. Screening is crucial.

The first key is to review candidates’ résumés and get the full story of where they’ve come from. Military veterans often have tech training, and even if not, the culture of the armed forces is very rooted in moving up and following a chain of command. That plays well for the kind of ambition you want at all levels of your maintenance team.  

Look at people who have been through technical schools, especially aviation; that work has dried up, so many are available now. If you can work on a jet engine, you can work on a conveyor belt mechanism.

The first job after technical school is big. It shows you what candidates learned that wasn’t taught in school. Then, look at how many jobs they’ve had in the interim. If they’ve had a bunch, that’s not a great sign. It means they’ve had little time to ramp up a knowledge base. Consider Ramsey Exams as a screening mechanism to get a sense of their problem-solving chops.

And keep an eye out for education, even if it’s unfinished. If you look around the country, you’ll see mechatronics bachelors springing up. Even if they didn’t finish, those are a huge boost to a résumé. 

Take a Tiered Approach 

While it’s certainly possible to assemble a smaller maintenance crew composed exclusively of upper-echelon leaders or one made up of many practitioners with relatively little experience, the best approach is to layer levels of expertise in a way that fits your company’s needs.

When you start to build a crew, high-level talent is important, but there need to be midlevel workers and less experienced laborers to control costs. Otherwise, maintenance can easily become an afterthought.

It’s key for each team member to understand what his or her balance point is among technical ability, leadership, and apprenticeship. A good team must have hungry entry-level workers, managers, and experts who can answer questions. 

High-level technicians are harder to find, and it’s even more difficult to find candidates with leadership skills. Many high-level employees balk at the idea of sharing information and nurturing people because they’re in demand. You must seek out people willing to do that, and it’s good to evaluate that drive to be a leader throughout the team. 

Clear a Path 

When building out a maintenance team, employers need to shore up their training and development programs. This is the key differentiator that top maintenance talent cares most about and represents a major competitive advantage in talent attraction and retention.

At all three levels, employees have concerns about transparency on how to be mentored for their next role. People shouldn’t have to wonder or ask how their career progresses—there should be a road map. It should be easy for someone to learn how to get from tech 1 to tech 3. 

Training is essential. You can expect degrees and certifications for incoming people, but training is an ongoing process. It needs a structure, and it needs to be documented. People will stick around if they believe in the program.

This transparency extends to safety, as well. These people work with serious machines. That transparency is an existential question for the workers—if they can trust leaders to train them, they can trust them to ensure their safety.

A talented and motivated maintenance team can add enormous value to capital investments in automation. Assembling the best-possible team means finding the ideal balance point of expertise and experience, screening for the right blend of hard and soft skills, and understanding how the local job market meshes with ramps and production cycles.

Michael Stollsteimer is Project Manager at Aerotek.

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