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How to Design a Shift Handover Board That Actually Prevents Repeat Problems

How to Design a Shift Handover Board That Actually Prevents Repeat Problems

Most handover boards are a stale whiteboard nobody reads. A good one transfers the few things the next shift must know — and creates accountability.
How to Design a Shift Handover Board That Actually Prevents Repeat Problems
How to Design a Shift Handover Board That Actually Prevents Repeat Problems

Key takeaways

  • A handover board transfers the critical few facts the incoming shift must know to run safely and well.
  • Most boards fail because they capture everything, get stale, and nobody reads them.
  • A good board is structured, short, and tied to open actions with owners.
  • Digital handover linked to the CMMS turns verbal memory into a searchable record.

Short answer: A shift handover board exists to move the few things the next shift must know — open issues, running risks, in-progress work — across the boundary without loss. Most fail by trying to capture everything and going stale. Design it short, structured, action-owned, and ideally digital and linked to the CMMS. See also maintenance engineer vs reliability engineer.

What a handover board must carry

  • Open faults and workarounds in effect.
  • In-progress maintenance and its state.
  • Quality or safety risks to watch.
  • Anything abnormal about today’s run.

Why most boards fail

They become a dumping ground. When everything is on the board, nothing stands out, it goes stale, and the incoming team stops trusting it. Less is more.

Design principles

  • Structured sections, not free text.
  • Every item has an owner and a state.
  • Closed items come off the board.
  • Two minutes to read, not twenty.

Going digital

A digital handover linked to the CMMS means open faults reference real work orders, history is searchable, and "we told the next shift" stops being a verbal claim. Patterns of repeat problems become visible.

How this protects uptime

Most repeat failures and missed follow-ups happen at the shift boundary. A disciplined handover is a cheap, high-leverage reliability control.

See how Fabrico captures this automatically on your lines — explore OEE for manufacturing or book a demo.

Related reading

Frequently asked questions

Whiteboard or digital?

Start simple; digital wins once you want history and CMMS links.

How long should handover take?

A couple of minutes to read; a short verbal confirm.

Who owns the board?

The outgoing team leader, with the incoming leader confirming.

What kills a board fastest?

Clutter and stale items nobody removes.

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