Jerry Dolinsky is the CEO of Dozuki, a leading connected worker solution for enterprise-level manufacturing companies.gettyI’ve spent my career in and out of heavy manufacturing facilities, and I’ve seen dozens of leaders fall into the same trap: They try to dictate operational excellence from a desk.They believe if they hire the right engineers and buy the right document management system, "best practices" will simply manifest across their global facilities.In my experience, true transformation only happens when you reverse the flow of knowledge. When you stop treating documentation as a corporate requirement and start treating it as a global language of work, you create a gravitational pull that can align 3,000 employees across multiple sites.I recently watched a facility move from "SOP chaos" to becoming a global benchmark, and the lessons learned there should be the blueprint for any executive facing a retiring workforce.The Friction: The High Cost Of 'Carl Knows It'The biggest risk to a global operation isn't a supply chain break; it’s tribal knowledge. I’ve walked into plants where the entire production schedule was held hostage by a single veteran operator. If "Carl" is the only one who knows the specific tension required for a changeover, you don’t have a process; you have a single point of failure.In one facility I worked with, the leadership thought they had 1,000 documented procedures ready for a new project. When they actually audited the floor, they found that only 200 were accurate. The other 800 were stalled in approval purgatory or were paper copies that had literally blown away. This creates a massive blind spot for global engineering teams who are designing processes for plants they’ve never visited. They are flying blind, and the cost shows up in the scrap rate and the three-day-long audit marathons.The Scar Tissue: My Biggest MistakeThe lesson I learned the hard way? Pilot with your skeptics, not your fans. Seek out the most tech-averse, "We've always done it this way," veteran on the floor. If you can build a system that they find easier than their old notebook, you know you’ve won. If they can’t use it, the system is broken, not the worker.The Implementation: The 'Digital Pull'To fix this, you have to change who owns the knowledge. One facility I visited moved authoring away from the front office and gave it to the Value Team Leaders on the floor. They stopped "training" and started "collaborating." Operators would walk through a process, realize a step was clunky and update the visual guide in real time using portable digital displays.This facility implemented a hard policy: Any new process must be reviewed, approved and live within 60 days, or it’s flagged as a safety risk. By enforcing this time-bound policy, they slashed their approval backlog by 90% in just eight weeks.How To Build A Global BenchmarkIf you are currently managing a facility where "tribal knowledge" is your primary operating system, here is the step-by-step guidance I recommend for shifting to a digital standard:Audit Your ‘Actual' Knowledge BaseDo not trust your document repository. Go to the floor and ask five different operators how to perform a critical changeover. If you get three different answers, your "standard" doesn't exist.Deploy The 'Mother/Grandmother' Test Instruct your authors that every guide must be understood by someone with zero context. If a grandmother can't follow the images and short sentences to build the sub-assembly, the guide is too complex.Eliminate 'Pilot Purgatory' Pick one cell, nail the digital rollout and move on. Do not wait for perfection. We found that moving from prototype CAD captures to real-world photos during the first week of production is the fastest way to gain shop-floor trust.Incentivize Peer Coaching Identify "Internal Advocates"—the shop-floor employees who adopted the digital system early. Let them be the ones to train the next shift. Credibility on the floor is earned in grease, not in PowerPoint.Weaponize Your Analytics Use your dashboard to see which SOPs aren't being opened. If an instruction is ignored, it's either because the workers are overtrained or the instruction is poorly written. Both are risks you need to address.Standardize The ‘Troubleshooter' RoleCreate a specific position focused on new electronics or complex repairs. Give this group the highest level of digital access so they can document "edge case" repairs that normally get lost when the shift ends.Enforce The 60-Day Kill Switch Documentation backlogs are where productivity goes to die. If a manager hasn't signed off on an SOP in two months, their access should be escalated. Speed is a safety requirement.Bridge The Engineering Gap Give your global design engineers "view-only" access to your floor's digital standards. When they can see exactly how a part is being fitted on the line, they will stop designing parts that are impossible to assemble.The Result: The Internal AdvocateWhen you get this right, the flow of information reverses. In the facility I mentioned, the documentation became so visual and accurate that global engineering teams (people three levels up in the corporate hierarchy) began reaching out to the plant floor. They weren't checking for compliance; they were asking for help. They used the plant's digital guides as a blueprint for global design.By empowering the front line to own the standards, you stop managing documents and start managing a self-sustaining flywheel of improvement. The infrastructure you choose matters, but the culture of "bottom-up" knowledge capture is what defines an industry leader. The end result? SOP authoring time drops by an order of magnitude, and your "audit readiness" goes from a three-day headache to a three-minute dashboard check. That is the power of a global language of standard work.Forbes Technology Council is an invitation-only community for world-class CIOs, CTOs and technology executives. Do I qualify?
How To Create A Global Language Of Standard Work
If you can build a system that they find easier than their old notebook, you know you’ve won.















