
Key takeaways
Short answer: Multi-site OEE rollup is corporate operations comparing plants on OEE. Done naively (simple averaging) it misleads — different plants have different SKU mix, equipment, formulas, and operating conditions. Honest rollup uses standardized definitions, normalizes for context, reports per-plant alongside aggregate, and trends over time. Single-number corporate OEE without context creates wrong incentives. See also OEE vs Utilization.
Three plants reporting 65%, 72%, and 78% OEE look comparable. But:
The numbers are not comparable. Treating them as comparable rewards or punishes plants for context they did not choose.
Five preconditions:
Three things side-by-side:
The single number alone is dangerous; the three together are honest.
Common weighting:
Any choice has implications. Document and stick with it.
Without context, comparison is unfair to plants with harder operating environments.
Single-number corporate OEE creates rankings. Rankings create pressure. Pressure creates two responses:
The definitional gaming is corrosive. Plants game the definitions, the number rises, the customer experience does not change, the corporate metric becomes meaningless.
Multi-site rollup done well is not just measurement — it is learning. Best practices from the highest-performing plant get spread. Problems at the lowest-performing get diagnosed with comparative data.
This requires comparison framed as learning, not blame.
1. Single-number corporate OEE published widely. Drives gaming and creates wrong rankings.
2. No standardized definitions. Numbers are not comparable; conclusions are wrong.
3. No trend reporting. Snapshot comparisons hide direction of travel.
4. Treating high-performer as universally better. They may have easier conditions, not better operations.
A modern OEE platform standardizes formulas across sites, surfaces formula deviations, supports weighted aggregation, and reports trend alongside snapshot. Per-plant context is documented and visible.
Fabrico's OEE module supports multi-site rollup with ISO 22400 standardized formulas, documented context per plant, weighted aggregation with explicit weighting, and trend reporting alongside snapshots.
See how Fabrico captures this automatically — explore OEE for manufacturing or book a demo.
Only with explicit context. The single number alone misleads.
Planned production hours or revenue, depending on what corporate priorities are. Document the choice.
Strongly avoid. Centrally standardize, even if it means some sites change definitions.
Within a single corporate OEE, you mostly cannot. Compare against own trend and against peer plants of the same type.
Carefully. Trend-based incentives work better than snapshot-based. Snapshot drives gaming.
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