Nexus Global Blog

Investigation Management: Protecting Your Business from Hidden Failures

Written by Ken Tan | Aug 31, 2016

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Every business that relies on assets, operations, or complex systems faces the risk of failures that lurk beneath the surface. Investigation Management is the discipline that helps organizations uncover those hidden failure modes before they become serious problems—protecting quality, safety, and continuity of operations.

In the “What You Don’t Know Will Hurt Your Business” webinar, the focus is on strengthening Investigation Management processes so that failures are not only resolved, but understood, documented, and prevented. Listeners learn how to establish a system for capturing all incidents—no matter how small—and how to use that data to inform maintenance strategies, adjust work practices, and mitigate risks.

A robust investigation process starts with reliable data collection: everything from operator observations, equipment behavior, to near-miss events. Then, organizations must identify root causes—not just symptoms—so corrective actions are meaningful and long-lasting. This also means aligning leadership, operations, and maintenance teams around common investigation protocols and communication pathways.

On a global scale—across regions like North America, Europe, Asia, and more—investigation practices support regulatory compliance, boost trust among stakeholders, and improve reputation in regulated industries. They help turn incidents into learning opportunities. Preventive actions drawn from investigations serve as the bridge between reactive fixes and proactive reliability.

Interested in learning more? Listen to the webinar to gain insights into how an effective Investigation Management framework can safeguard your operations, improve safety outcomes, and strengthen your asset performance management (APM) strategy.

Frequently Asked Questions

Q: What is Investigation Management?
A: It’s the systematic process of investigating incidents—unexpected failures, near misses, or other issues—to uncover root causes and prevent recurrence.

Q: Why does this matter across different regions?
A: Because regulatory requirements, equipment standards, and safety expectations vary globally; strong investigation systems help maintain consistency and compliance everywhere operations happen.

Q: How can I begin improving my investigation process?
A: Start by collecting comprehensive incident data, engaging cross-functional teams, establishing clear root cause analysis practices, and ensuring leadership supports follow-through.

 

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