Packaging the Pitch: Five Strategies to Secure Resources for Maintenance Teams

A VP of Customer Success from a CMMS platform and a Maintenance Planner from a beef manufacturer discuss strategies to help packaging and processing maintenance teams secure resources to maximize efficiency, compliance, and improve operations.

Packaging the Pitch Header Image
Kristin Drake (left), VIP of Customer Success at Limble, stands next to Dillon Cummings (right), Maintenance Planner at Riverbend Meats, during Pack EXPO Southeast 2025 Innovation Stage Session.
Christopher Smith via PMMI Media Group

Cloud-based maintenance management platforms help packaging and processing companies stay organized with workflows and manage daily operations. Limble is one such platform that focuses on helping in-house maintenance teams. Kristin Drake, VP of Customer Success at Limble, informed company representatives of five ways to secure additional resources for their operations at one of PACK EXPO Southeast 2025's Innovation Stage sessions on March 10.

1. Align needs with business goals

Drake says maintenance teams should strive to align their needs with business goals and can do so in two main ways. First, focus on leadership priorities such as savings, efficiency, and compliance, and second, translate maintenance needs into business impact.

Dillon Cummings, Maintenance Planner at Riverbend Meats, spoke on his company’s experience implementing this strategy.

“What we’ve done is went through and identified the key equipment to our operations and compared our ‘need to haves’ versus our ‘nice to haves,” Cummings said. “We walked through the plant and looked at what our process was going to be like, how we were set up. [We] just identified the equipment that needs to run in order for us to produce.”

2. Use data to drive decisions

Next, Drake states that leveraging computerized maintenance management system (CMMS) data to show return on investment (ROI) and identifying key metrics that influence leadership, such as overall equipment effectiveness (OEE) and downtime costs, are ways to use data to drive decisions.