This is a Widget Section

This section is widgetized. If you would like to add content to this section, you may do so by using the Widgets panel from within your WordPress Admin Dashboard. This Widget Section is called "Feature Top Right"

Archive for Standards

May
02

The Speed of Standards

Posted by: | Comments 0 Comments

This is the continuation of a discussion that originated on the ISA88 and ISA95 lists. The issue at hand is how to improve the ISA standards development process, in particular increasing the speed of standards development. Truly, today the word speed should not be applied to standards development.

From my roles in ISA standards, committee member, co-chair, managing director, I can say that this is a known problem and some possible solutions have been identified. It is important to point out that ISA develops standards following the ANSI (American National Standards Institute) guidelines. Sometimes when people suggest an alternate way to do standards, the answer is that is not the process because that would not follow the guidelines. That may not be a very sympathetic answer. So if that is how you feel, I suggest you lean to accept what you cannot change.

In general I suggest we protect the identities of the committees and individuals. This is not the forum for calling individuals to task.

In my opinion, formed in only 8 years of ISA standards experience with 7 committees, there are 3 critical factors for success in standards; leadership, participation, and tools/processes.

Leadership

A standard committee, again from my admittedly limited experience, has natural motive force in almost all directions at once, being a committee. If you have N members of the committee present, the natural energy is focused in at least N+1 directions, with at least one person changing their mind. The leaders of the committee, usually the chairs, but not always, provide the path to channel this energy. In my experience as co-chair of ISA-X, when the co-chairs took a break for a few months, very little progress was made. ISA-Y struggle for years to make much progress, in my opinion, because of lack of leadership. When a new chair was appointed, things started to move.

But leading a committee is not easy, and the bigger the committee, the harder it gets. After co-chair Donald Dunn and I learned the ropes, I spent 20 hours a week on ISA-X, on average, for 3 years. That is not company paid time, that’s nights and weekends. (Let’s say standards are my hobby.) And my co-chair was spending quite a bit of time too. We talked almost every day. For 2 of every 3 months we led weekly conference calls. Well, you get the point, it takes a lot of work to clear the path to let the members of the committee create the standard.

Not everyone is willing or able to dedicate the time it takes to lead a committee. It’s a volunteer position. There is an upside when you get things done. Along the way there is a down side. Some of the people you wish you had never met will show up at your committee meetings. They will think it is perfectly acceptable to develop a list of your faults and share that with you on the committee distribution list, along with guidance on how you should live your life from that day forward. They will provide advice on how the standards process should be run instead of following the ANSI guidelines. You will need to have thick skin and patience to succeed as a committee chair. I developed patience along the way, but I still lost it a few times.

Where we have some opportunity for improvement is in selecting, training, and supporting committee leaders.

Selecting the leaders for committees can be tricky. I don’t know how to improve that, but there is an opportunity to improve the deselection process. Until recently we could not remove a committee chair. That has changed and now the managing director can remove a chair if they are not able to get the committee moving.

But that should come only after the coaching and support. That is the job of the managing director. Often they do not do that job. I know that I don’t do that job for a couple of committees, ISA-A and ISA-B. They have been in place for years, so I assume they don’t need me stepping in. Maybe that is not right. I do know that new chairs need help to understand the standards process and get things going. When we started on ISA-X, we got a copy of the ISA guidelines. Nothing more. We did get some advice from some members of ISA-C, some of which was good. It took 2.5 years to learn what we needed to learn. So if we improve that part, we can indeed cut years off the standards development process. We have developed some training for chairs and directors to help with this. Also, getting a better match between directors and committees would help. Sometimes director appointments are more political than practical.

To support the committee leaders we should put in place a means to expel committee members that cannot be trusted to be professional. So much drama and wasted effort goes into dealing with smart people that do not play well with others. It may possibly have some very small impact on the results, but I doubt it. The whiners and naysayers are part to the problem, though they always think they are part of the solution. Expulsion does have to be balanced with allowing technical disagreement. It is tough to make the distinction because a hallmark of these types of people is the personal attacks they make that turn technical issues into personal issues. But expelling the unprofessional would cut years off of the standards process and eliminate much of the unpleasantness.

Participation

Leaders still need the committee. The real work of standards is getting the words on paper and then editing them a dozen times. The speed of standards is a balance. You need the participation to move the process along, and you need time for the consensus to develop. The starting point is tricky. It needs to be open, but it needs to get done. A bad start, like a draft prepared in advance by one person, can be worse than a slow start. But if no one steps up to do the writing there will be no progress. In the end, there emerges a core group that does most of the work. If that group does not emerge, there will be no standard.

There are not that many companies that are willing to fund participation on standards, especially users. On ISA-X, that was the most common issue with physical meetings, lack of funding. I paid my own way on several occasions. On ISA-D, the manufacturers are doing most of the writing (and fighting) at more frequent meetings, and very few users can keep up. The physical meetings allow the consensus to develop at the dinners and lunches in a way that does not happen with virtual meetings.

Virtual meetings have greatly reduced the cost and time for standards development. With the right work processes in place, you can address many things in conference calls and save the big items for the meetings. The virtual meetings allow more people to participate. But the real participation needed is the writing and the commenting, and not just calling in. If we made better use of virtual meetings we could improve the speed of standards.

Tool and Processes

Today there is no standard in a box kit for committees. Start from scratch and use the IEC format. There are style guides and comment forms. In ISA-X, it took us awhile to find a good work process and develop tool that supported that process. We had a 3 month cycle; one month for comments, two months for resolution. Rinse, repeat. The comment spreadsheet was out tool for assigning work, tracking status, and developing schedules. It supported the work process of the core group that emerged, that group of active participants. It help the chairs run the process. If we had that at the start, and some coaching on how to make the path, we would have cut years off the process.

An opportunity is to find the tools developed by different committees and have generic versions ready to support committees. The same for the work processes. From my limited experience each committee has their own tools and processes. Some may not want to change, but at least they should have the choice.

So there are definitely opportunities. I’m sure there are some great ideas out there. What suggestions do you have?


Popularity: 8%

Share
No tags for this post.
Categories : Standards, Uncategorized
Comments 0 Comments

I was invited to attend and speak at the District 13 Leadership Council on 1-May and came away impressed.  Despite reduced financial support, Mike Bovenkamp and the rest of the District 13 Sections put together first class event.  They are all to be commended, particularly the Montreal Section who sponsored the event.

The Unknown ComicDuring some of the discussion a gentleman relayed a story about ISA’s image.  He is currently a professor at a junior college, but previous to that was in the automation field.  He said that he used ISA standards for six years (a whole other topic/issue) under the mistaken impression that ISA was some quasi-governmental organization in the USA.  He had no idea what ISA was or even that it was a membership organization until a vendor set him straight.  Upon learning this, he immediately became a member and is today a valuable contributor and leader.

This got me thinking.  Perhaps we are squandering a marketing opportunity with our standards.  Although we eventually hooked this particular member, it was purely by a chance encounter with another member.  I wonder how many more of him there have been over the years and around the world.  Hundreds?  Thousands?  Tens of thousands?

To wit, I thought I would have a look at a randomly selected standard.  After a few failures (again, another horse to be beaten to death on another day) I was able to view SP-93, “Standard Method for the Evaluation of External Leakage of Manual and Automated On-Off Valves.”  I thought I would look at it from a marketing perspective and see what happened.

The first and most obvious thing to hit me was the old name.  No doubt it’s on the “to do” list but here you have it.  Brand confusion.  The first sentence of the Preface reads, “This document has been prepared as part of the service of ISA, the international society for measurement and control, toward a goal of uniformity in the field of instrumentation.”  Notwithstanding the second misappropriation of the Society’s name, this sentence is as close as it gets anywhere in this document to marketing ISA.

ISA93 Standard

Suggestions

Obviously, it’s inappropriate to fill a standard with marketing propaganda.  However, the cover page and preface are perfectly reasonable places to do some marketing:

  • The ISA logo and tag line should be more prominent than the threat of civil and criminal penalties.  It goes without saying that it should also be accurate.
  • The preface should contain a full page advertisement for ISA, including our mission, web address, and call to membership.
  • Every page footer should contain “International Society of Automation” and “isa.org”

Using our standards as a marketing tool costs us absolutely nothing and could bring substantial benefits.

Popularity: 8%

Share
No tags for this post.
Categories : Marketing, Standards
Comments 0 Comments
Jan
13

Associations – a role for ISA?

Posted by: | Comments 0 Comments

Andrew Bond is a respected commentator on matters automation through his monthly and independent publication (he takes no adverts), Industrial Automation Insider. If you don’t receive it already then perhaps it is time you did. It will help give an European perspective albeit in an inimitable English way.


Andrew Bond and his publication Industrial Automation Insider (IAI)

However that is not what I wanted to share with OURISA afficianados. No! He has a very interesting item about the various multi-vendor organisations (e.g. Foundation Fieldbus, ProfiBus, HART, etc). This is what he says:

“One potentially significant source of editorial copy is that made up of the multi- vendor industry associations and pressure groups and the professional societies. After all, their whole raison d’être should be to promote the interests of their members and spread the word. The reality doesn’t always fit that image.

Why for example, does Profibus (PNO) have three times as many stories published as either the HART or Fieldbus Foundations? At least in part because a significant proportion of the latter’s output relates to past events or internal organizational appointments of little or no interest to independent publications. Perhaps such organizations have relied too heavily in the past on member companies such as Emerson and Honeywell to provide the bulk of their promotional material so that, when the their focus shifts from, say, fieldbus to wireless, the organization’s own presence is correspondingly downgraded. The same is even more true of the smaller multivendor organizations such as AF and WINA. Most of the case studies on the WINA website seem to originate from Honeywell and, to a lesser extent, Emerson, while Emerson own site offers a more comprehensive database of wireless applications, webinars and videos.

Maybe there’s a role for ISA in driving these fledgling organizations forward with a bit of independent muscle?”

A thought provoking question. What do you think?

Popularity: 9%

Share
No tags for this post.
Categories : Standards
Comments 0 Comments