THE VALUE OF PLANT SIMULATOR
Plant Simulator is a tool designed to help operators and companies reach their highest potential, maximizing overall profits and reliability. While the use of computers and technology in the process industry has risen substantially in the last ten years, no computer has the ability to make the accurate, reliable, and confident decisions a human can make while in the operating control room. Therefore operators can be seen as the most important asset of a process plant.
Maximize your Investment in Human Capital
For the operator, our software has many benefits to increase his or her knowledge and experience, thus increasing thier asset value to the process industry.
- Gain on-the-job experience without affecting normal plant operations.
- Reduce your anxiety and stress by becoming more confident in your ability.
- Refresh your skills and knowledge not used on a day-to-day basis.
- Play and learn at your own pace, in your free time, and without a supervisor.
Increase your efficiency and prevent dangerous or costly mistakes.
For the company, our simulation software is a cost-effective tool that can provide your operators the extra edge. To obtain excellent worker performance, make an investment in your human capital and contribute value to the company.
- Customize the learning experience to train only what your plant needs.
- Reduce travel expenses with web-based training.
- Prevent unnecessary plant downtime due to human error.
- Increase the awareness and reliability of your employees.
- Utilize the data already available within your organization to eliminate unnecessary costs.
Don’t let us tell you all the facts, examine our resource page for further information and look at the hard facts listed below.
- One manufacturing IT analyst estimated, “human error leading to abnormal situations costs the UK process industry $1.4 billion a year”.
- In the last 25 years, “the largest 100 accidents in the hydrocarbon-chemical processing industry cost $7.52 billion in losses; Operator error accounted for 21% of these events at an average of $75 million per loss”.
