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werkorders

A werkorder, in English usually called a work order, is a document or digital record that authorizes and guides the execution of a specific task. It is used in maintenance, manufacturing, facilities management and service operations to specify what must be done, which resources are needed and who is responsible for carrying out and reporting on the work.

A typical werkorder includes several core elements: a unique identifier, reference to the asset or location,

Lifecycle and workflow usually follow a pattern: creation or receipt of a task, planning and scheduling, assignment,

Types commonly encountered include preventive maintenance (PM), corrective maintenance, predictive maintenance, service requests, calibration tasks and

Benefits of using werkorders include improved asset uptime, standardized work processes, enhanced visibility and cost control.

a
clear
description
of
the
required
work,
priority
and
planned
start
and
end
dates,
the
skills
or
trades
required,
the
person
or
team
assigned,
necessary
materials
and
tools,
estimated
effort
and
costs,
safety
and
compliance
requirements,
and
the
current
status
(for
example
open,
in
progress,
completed,
closed).
It
may
also
contain
approvals,
attachments
and
a
change
log
to
document
amendments
and
history.
execution,
time
and
material
recording,
inspection
or
testing,
and
closeout
with
documentation
and
archival.
Changes
are
logged
to
maintain
traceability
and
accountability.
project
work.
In
manufacturing,
production-related
work
orders
may
also
be
issued.
Werkorders
are
frequently
managed
in
CMMS
(computerized
maintenance
management
system)
or
ERP
systems,
which
link
to
asset
management,
inventory,
procurement
and
cost
reporting.
Challenges
can
involve
maintaining
data
quality,
accurate
labor
and
material
estimation,
and
user
adoption
and
change
management.
The
term
reflects
Dutch
usage,
where
the
concept
aligns
with
the
broader
notion
of
a
work
order
in
maintenance
and
operations.