Whether your plant has been idled for weeks or months due to market conditions, planned maintenance, or other business reasons, restarting smoothly is not as simple as flipping a switch. A structured approach will help you protect your people, your assets, and your customer commitments while you ramp back to full performance.
It will be a lot more complicated than giving your team a pep talk, flipping a switch and going back to business as usual, as seductive as that scenario feels.
A successful restart will require every department to work together, accept a higher level of uncertainty, and be ready to make adjustments as needed. The information being gathered to make decisions will be constantly evolving, which makes frequent conversations and updates between teams more critical.
What you need most right now are effective leaders across all of your business functions—demand, supply, operations, maintenance, and human capital—who can work quickly and collaboratively to determine how all the puzzle pieces fit together.
Key steps for each functional area to get your plants safely back up and running:
Prepare Your People and Workplace
Restart success starts with people’s readiness and a safe, organized workplace. A short “restart orientation” for returning employees can dramatically reduce confusion and help people re‑establish safe, productive habits on day one. HR and HSE leaders should:
- Confirm staffing plans and skills coverage for all critical roles, including supervisors, maintenance, and key operators.
- Communicate clearly what will be different during restart (new procedures, shift patterns, expectations for flexibility, training plans).
- Refresh basic safety training and reinforce site rules, PPE requirements, and reporting expectations for incidents and near misses.
- Review and update policies for fatigue management, overtime, and temporary labor so that restart pressure does not create new risks.
- Ensure work areas are clean, organized, and clearly marked, with visual standards for material flow, walkways, and ergonomic considerations.
Maintenance Checklist for Restarting Equipment
Extended downtime creates unique risks for equipment reliability and safety. Maintenance leaders should use a structured checklist before authorizing any production run.
Core steps include:
- Verify utilities and infrastructure: power quality, compressed air, water, ventilation, and critical building systems.
- Inspect assets before energizing: look for leaks, corrosion, damage, misalignment, or missing guards; verify all safety devices are in place and functional.
- Complete preventive maintenance that was deferred or made more difficult during operation, including lubrication, belt and chain checks, filter changes, and calibration.
- Conduct dry runs where possible: jog equipment without load, then under light load, while monitoring vibration, temperature, and unusual noise.
- Validate interlocks and emergency stops on high‑risk equipment before releasing it to production.
- Check spare parts, tools, and critical consumables so that minor issues do not turn into long unplanned outages during the first days of restart.
Build a Realistic Ramp‑Up Plan
The temptation after a long idle period is to pursue maximum output as fast as possible, but that is usually when quality spills, safety incidents, and equipment failures occur. Operations leaders should develop a phased ramp‑up that aligns demand, capacity, and capability.
Key practices:
- Start with a clear demand picture and prioritized customer list, then align line rates and shift patterns to that demand instead of aiming straight for historical maximums.
- Set explicit daily and weekly volume targets for the first 4–8 weeks, with planned “learning time” for problem‑solving and adjustments.
- Ensure cross‑functional coordination between operations, maintenance, quality, supply chain, and logistics so that constraints and risks are visible and managed proactively.
- Use layered daily management: brief stand‑up meetings at the start and end of each shift to review safety, performance, abnormalities, and immediate countermeasures.
- Track a small, focused set of KPIs—such as safety incidents, first‑pass yield, OEE, schedule adherence, and on‑time delivery—to understand whether the plant is stabilizing as it ramps.
Support Leaders and Front‑Line Teams
Restart periods are stressful, and leaders must be visible, engaged, and consistent. Investing in leadership presence and clear communication during the restart will pay off in stronger engagement and faster recovery of stable performance levels. Useful leadership behaviors include:
- Spending more time on the floor, observing work, asking questions, and removing obstacles for teams.
- Reinforcing standard work and problem‑solving routines rather than making ad‑hoc decisions that bypass processes.
- Recognizing early wins and improvements, which builds confidence and encourages employees to surface issues quickly.
- Providing coaching and feedback for supervisors and team leads who may be managing new team compositions or higher‑than‑normal variability.
Use Restart as an Improvement Opportunity
A shutdown followed by a restart creates a natural break in routines and a chance to reset expectations for performance and culture. With thoughtful planning and disciplined execution, your plant restart can be both safe and highly productive, setting the foundation for improved performance long after you are back to steady‑state operations.
Consider:
- Reviewing layout, material flow, changeover practices, and maintenance strategies to remove chronic waste before volumes fully return.
- Updating work instructions and visual standards so that “tribal knowledge” becomes documented, teachable best practice.
- Launching a focused set of improvement projects on your biggest constraints—bottleneck equipment, recurring quality issues, or chronic reliability problems—so that the plant comes back stronger than it was before.
With thoughtful planning and disciplined execution, your plant restart can be both safe and highly productive, setting the foundation for improved performance long after you are back to steady‑state operations.
What About Other Functional Areas?
Download our article, “Restarting Operations: What Leaders in Each Department Need to Do First”, for key steps that your customer-facing resources and your supply chain/procurement team can do now to paint a picture of the current situation and get your organization back up and running. The article includes a detailed checklist for each functional area.