Choosing preventive maintenance management software is a strategic decision for any SME or mid-market company seeking to control operating costs, reduce unexpected breakdowns, and ensure regulatory compliance of its equipment. Faced with the multitude of tools available on the market, how can you identify the solution truly suited to your industrial or technical context? This article presents the key selection criteria and essential features of modern CMMS software.
Why adopt preventive maintenance software?
The limitations of traditional approaches
Many companies still manage their maintenance through Excel spreadsheets or paper files. These approaches quickly reach their limits:
- Lack of centralized traceability of interventions
- Difficulties in meeting regulatory deadlines
- Time loss when searching for histories
- Inability to analyze performance indicators (MTBF, MTTR, availability rate)
- Risks of human errors in planning visits
Measurable benefits of CMMS
Industry studies show that a well-implemented CMMS enables:
- Reduction of unexpected breakdowns by 25 to 40%
- Decrease in maintenance costs by 10 to 20%
- Improvement in equipment availability rate by 5 to 15 points
- Guaranteed documentary compliance for audits and regulatory inspections
The 7 essential criteria for choosing your preventive maintenance software
1. Functional coverage adapted to your business
Good preventive maintenance software must cover at minimum:
- Asset management (equipment, installations, sites)
- Planning preventive interventions (by frequency, by counter, by condition)
- Work order management (WO)
- Spare parts inventory tracking
- Report generation and dashboards
For regulated sectors like lightning protection, management of regulatory controls (with automatic generation of verification reports) is a major differentiating criterion.
2. Ease of deployment and adoption
A CMMS only delivers value if it is truly used by your field teams. Evaluate:
- Interface ergonomics (mobile application for field technicians)
- Learning curve (initial training required?)
- Ability to work in offline mode (areas without network)
- Availability of responsive technical support in French
3. Scalability and customization capacity
Your equipment fleet will evolve, and so will your regulations. Verify that the software allows:
- Adding new equipment types and maintenance ranges
- Creation of customized intervention forms
- Adaptation to your sector’s specific standards
- Integration with your other tools (ERP, supervision system)
4. Regulatory compliance and document management
For companies subject to regulatory maintenance obligations (ICPE, ERP, lightning installations), the software must:
- Manage regulatory deadlines with automatic alerts
- Generate verification reports in standard formats
- Archive intervention history with electronic signatures
- Enable traceability of intervener qualifications
5. Deployment model (SaaS vs On-premise)
SaaS (cloud) mode is now the standard for SMEs and mid-market companies:
- SaaS advantages: no infrastructure to manage, automatic updates, multi-site access, low initial cost
- On-premise advantages: full data control, no internet dependency, suitable for sensitive environments
Also verify server location (hosting in Europe for GDPR compliance) and availability guarantees (SLA).
6. Quality-to-price ratio and return on investment
Evaluate the total cost of ownership (TCO) over 3 to 5 years:
- License cost or monthly subscription cost
- Implementation and data migration cost
- Training costs
- Software support and maintenance cost
Request references from customers comparable to your size and sector to validate expected ROI.
7. Multi-site and multi-user management
For mid-market companies with multiple locations, the ability to manage distinct perimeters with differentiated access rights (site technician A, regional manager, senior management) is essential to effectively deploy the solution.
Differentiating features to look for
Intelligent scheduling and route optimization
The most advanced tools offer maintenance route optimization algorithms, reducing travel and maximizing the number of interventions per day.
Predictive analysis and IoT
Integration with connected sensors (IoT) allows transition from calendar-based preventive maintenance to condition-based maintenance, based on the actual state of equipment. This approach is particularly relevant for critical systems like lightning protection installations.
Customer portal and communication
A customer portal allowing work orders to track intervention progress and access reports online is a strong sales argument for maintenance companies working for third parties.
LPS Manager: designed for lightning protection management
In the specific lightning protection sector, LPS Manager offers a dedicated solution that natively integrates IEC 62305 and NF C 17-102 standards. The platform enables management of the complete lifecycle of installations: risk assessment, design, periodic verification, maintenance and regulatory reports.
Conclusion: your selection checklist
Before making your decision, form a selection committee including end users (field technicians, maintenance managers, technical management) and imperatively test solutions in real conditions with your own data. The free trial period is your best ally to validate the fit between commercial promise and operational reality.
Do you manage lightning protection installations and looking for dedicated software? Discover LPS Manager and start for free today.