Field service management

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Field service management (FSM) refers to the management of a company's resources employed at or en route to the property of clients, rather than on company property. Examples include locating vehicles, managing worker activity, scheduling and dispatching work, ensuring driver safety, and integrating the management of such activities with inventory, billing, accounting and other back-office systems. FSM most commonly refers to companies who need to manage installation, service, or repairs of systems or equipment. It can also refer to software and cloud-based platforms that aid in field service management.

Industry examples[edit]

Field service management is used to manage resources in several industries.

  • In telecommunications and cable industry, technicians who install cable or run phone lines into residences or business establishments.
  • In healthcare, mobile nurses who provide in-home care for elderly or disabled.
  • In gas utilities, engineers are dispatched to investigate and repair suspected leaks.
  • In heavy engineering, mining, industrial and manufacturing, technicians dispatched for preventative maintenance and repair.
  • In property maintenance, including landscaping, irrigation, and home and office cleaning.
  • In HVAC industry, technicians have the expertise and equipment to investigate units in residential, commercial, and industrial environments.
  • In the Postal and Packaging industry, technicians find out the exact locations of the customers and deliver/receive the packages.
  • In manufacturing industries, field agents can schedule maintenance tasks, track equipment performance, and manage service requests for machinery and production systems.
  • Companies in transportation and logistics can optimize the scheduling and routing of delivery vehicles, manage vehicle maintenance, and monitor the movement of goods in the field.

Requirements[edit]

Field service management must meet certain requirements:

  • Customer expectations: Customers expect that their service should not be disrupted, and should be immediately restored
  • Underutilized equipment: Expensive industrial equipment in mining or oil and gas can cost millions when sitting idle
  • Low employee productivity: Managers are unable to monitor field employees, which may reduce productivity
  • Safety: Safety of drivers and vehicles on the road and while on the job site is a concern both for individuals and their employers
  • Cost: Rising cost of fuel, vehicle maintenance, and parts inventory
  • Service to sales: Increasingly, companies expect their services department to generate revenues.
  • Dynamic environment: Continuously balancing between critical tickets, irate customers, productive employees, and optimized routes make scheduling, routing, and dispatching very challenging
  • Data and technology: Many times, the data for analytics is missing, stale, or inaccurate.

Software[edit]

FSM software has significantly evolved in the past 10 years, however, the market for FSM software remains fragmented. The software can be deployed both on-premises or as a hosted or cloud-based system. Typically, FSM software is integrated with backend systems such as service management, billing, accounting, parts inventory, and other HR systems.[citation needed]

The large majority of FSM companies are fee-for-service and offer different features and functionality that vary from one company to the next.[1] Whereas one company will provide most, if not all, of the desirable features in field service management, another will be missing one or up to several functions. Pricing is dependent on several factors: a company's size, business needs, number of users, carrier selection, and planned data usage.[citation needed] Some popular fee structures are pay-per-franchise, pay-per-use/administrators, and pay-per-field technician/employee.[citation needed] Costs can range from $20.00 per month for an unbundled solution that does not include carrier data charges to upwards of $200.00.[citation needed] It is not uncommon, although not always the case, for there to be other fees incurred with the use of the FSM platform; namely, fees for software, extra technical support, and additional training.[citation needed]

For the enterprise market, Gartner estimates that market penetration for field service applications has reached 25% of the addressable market. Software sales in the FSM market can only be approximated. Gartner's research puts the revenue for packaged field service dispatch and workforce management software applications, not including service revenue, at approximately $1.2 billion in 2012, with a compound annual growth rate of 12.7%.[2]

Mobility[edit]

Companies are using mobile computing to improve communication with the field, increase productivity, streamline work processes, and enhance customer service and loyalty.[3] Field service software can be used for scheduling and routing optimization, automated vehicle location, remote vehicle diagnostics, driver logs and hours-of-service tracking, inventory management, field worker management and driver safety. Mobile software may use databases containing details about customer-premises equipment, access requirements, and parts inventory. Some field service management software integrates with other software such as accounting programs.

Mobility can

  • Provide real-time analysis of mobile work status
  • Increase the first-time-fix rate
  • Reduce overhead or administration costs of paper-based field service management and data entry
  • Preserve e-audit trail for full regulatory compliance
  • Increase productivity
  • Shorten billing cycles

See also[edit]

References[edit]

  1. ^ "Top Field Service Management Software - 2016 Reviews".
  2. ^ "Gartner Login".[dead link]
  3. ^ Sadri, Golnaz; Tran, Hoa (April 2002). "Managing your diverse workforce through improved communication". Journal of Management Development. 21 (3): 227–237. doi:10.1108/02621710210420291.