Operational excellence principles travel well. Implementation details do not. Many organizations copy “best practices” from other sectors and get disappointed—not because the ideas are wrong, but because the operating context is different.
INJARO’s approach is to keep principles consistent while adapting mechanisms: routines, KPIs, triggers, and governance.
The same principles, different realities
Across operations-heavy environments, the core goals are similar:
- stabilize execution
- reduce variance and hidden loss
- improve visibility and action closure
- strengthen reliability and quality control
But the sources of loss and the operating rhythm differ by sector.
Mining: variability and shift control
Mining performance is shaped by:
- variability (weather, equipment availability, grade, access)
- dispatch decisions and haul cycle efficiency
- critical equipment downtime and backlog health
Practical mechanisms often include:
- high-quality shift handovers with constraint visibility
- daily control routines tied to plan vs actual
- early-warning indicators for critical assets and bottleneck points
Marine logistics: gates, readiness, and turnaround control
Marine logistics is shaped by:
- tight time windows (turnaround discipline)
- compliance gates and documentation readiness
- complex handoffs across port, vessel, and support teams
Practical mechanisms include:
- clear gate criteria (what “ready” means)
- exception handling pathways for documentation and permit issues
- escalation rules aligned to turnaround risk
Logistics: flow, SLAs, and exception discipline
In logistics and warehousing, losses often come from:
- queue time and congestion
- picking/packing errors and rework loops
- exception volume that overwhelms teams
Mechanisms that work well:
- bottleneck and WIP control (release rules)
- SLA triggers with clear escalation paths
- automation-ready workflow definitions for high-volume exceptions
Construction/fabrication: rework and constraint coordination
Construction and fabrication losses often include:
- rework loops from late changes and unclear acceptance criteria
- constraint coordination across trades and suppliers
- QA gates that occur inconsistently or too late
Mechanisms to prioritize:
- readiness and handoff standards
- QA gates with explicit acceptance criteria
- weekly constraint review routines with strong action closure
A quick method to adapt (without overengineering)
To adapt OpEx across contexts, design four elements for each environment:
- the few routines that match the operating cadence (shift/daily/weekly)
- a small KPI set that directly drives decisions
- triggers and escalation rules for high-impact deviations
- standards that remove recurring operational friction
This is how you keep the system runnable and relevant.
Where INJARO helps
INJARO designs context-appropriate operational systems: routines, governance, KPI logic, and workflow definitions. We make them automation-ready so implementation can be supported later by internal IT or an implementation partner—without forcing a one-size-fits-all template.
Operational excellence travels when you respect context. The system must fit the work.

Leave a Reply