Free live session: why your CMMS and OEE need to be in the same conversation

Many manufacturers can see downtime, but struggle to connect it to the right asset, work order or maintenance priority. In this live session, an expert will show you how working with the same data can move teams from signal to action, faster.

Why downtime keeps repeating when maintenance and performance data sit apart

Free Live Session: Reserve your Seat

Operations teams can see the downtime. Maintenance teams can see the work order. But when OEE and CMMS sit in separate systems, the connection between failure, loss and action is weak. That creates familiar plant-level problems: the wrong priorities, repeated stoppages that are never properly attributed, and too much time spent debating issues instead of fixing them.

This is the gap many plants are still living with. Maintenance knows what was done. Operations knows what output was lost. What is missing is a shared view of which assets are driving the biggest losses, which failures keep coming back, and whether maintenance effort is reducing the problems that matter most. Without that link, prioritisation becomes reactive and repeat issues stay open longer than they should.

That is the focus of Maintmaster’s upcoming webinar on CMMS and OEE integration.

In this free 45-minute session, Thomas McAlindon will explain what changes when maintenance and performance data connect. The session is aimed at maintenance, reliability and operations leaders who want to link asset failures to production loss, prioritise work by impact and reduce recurring downtime. Maintmaster positions it as a practical session rather than a product tour, focused on how connected data helps teams act faster and with more confidence.

The webinar will cover four practical areas. First, how OEE downtime events can automatically create jobs in CMMS, removing the manual handoff between teams. Second, how production losses can be linked to the assets and maintenance history behind them, so both teams are working from the same event and equipment context. Third, how integration rules can be set to reflect the plant’s maintenance strategy, whether preventive, predictive or mixed. Finally, it will show how shared data improves daily decisions across shift handovers, morning meetings and response planning.

For manufacturers already running both CMMS and OEE, the real question is rarely whether both systems have value. It is whether they are connected in a way that helps people decide what to fix first. When production and maintenance teams work from the same facts, it becomes easier to move from signal to action and from repeated downtime to meaningful improvement.

Register for the webinar to see what practical CMMS and OEE integration looks like in a manufacturing environment. Or contact hello@maintmaster.com

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