I’m spending this week in Malmö in southern Sweden, participating in a course on Integrated Logistics Support (ILS). ILS, basically, is about planning for and supporting a product’s whole lifecycle, from its early planning stages and onwards to the deployment (called “employment plan”, a phrase that to me meant something very different until today), the product’s useful life, including maintenance and support, and the product’s eventual disposal. As always, the idea is to create a better and more cost-effective product, meaning more money to you. See, what’s really interesting is how the results of an ILS analysis, called LSA (don’t you just love acronyms?), can be put into the design of the product itself and how a proper analysis can help significantly reduce cost.
ILS is traditionally about military products, preferably state-of-the art helicopters or perhaps a large frigate but an ordinary rifle can benefit, too, and so is the course I’m attending, but it’s easy to see how ILS can be put into good use elsewhere. It’s fascinating stuff. Obviously it’s a bit early for me to comment on anything factually relevant, being a complete newbie in all things ILS, but I can see a relevance to document management and the systems I help build when I’m not in Malmö¶.
As I said, fascinating stuff.