May 25, 2026

3 Ways To Drive Performance in Remote Facility Operations

Unexpected downtime can cost money. Sometimes even $38 million annually in the case of offshore facilities. In remote facility operations, that cost escalates fast. It can stall production, compromise safety, and send teams into reactive mode for days.  

And it doesn’t stop there. Crews become frustrated when systems fail repeatedly. Leaders lose confidence in asset reliability. And FM teams spend more time resolving issues than improving performance. 
 
That’s why the question matters: how do remote facility operations achieve reliable, high performance when failure isn’t an option?

What are the Common Challenges in Remote Facility Operations Management? 

Remote facilities operations and management face a unique set of challenges, which are usually amplified by distance, isolation, and environments that leave almost no room for error. Some of these challenges include:  

  1. Workforce Shortages 
  1. Harsh Climate Conditions 
  1. Extended Response Times 
  1. Stretched and Fragile Supply Chains 
  1. Health, Safety, and Isolation Risks
Remote facility operations

How To Improve Operational Performance in Remote Facilities?

1. Build Operational Discipline Through Process Development 

Efficiency in remote operations comes from disciplined, repeatable processes that teams can execute consistently, regardless of location or crew rotation. This means standardizing workflows for maintenance, safety checks, housekeeping, and asset management.  
 
The same applies to documentation. Research shows that 48% of companies report losing institutional knowledge with every departure. In remote settings, where onboarding timelines are compressed and crew turnover is frequent, that gap hits even harder. Documenting procedures ensure critical know-how stays with the operation. 

2. Use Real-Time Visibility to Centralize Decision-Making

One of the biggest shifts in remote facility operations is moving from reactive to proactive decision-making. When FM technologies like IoT sensors, building automation systems, and cloud-based platforms feed live data into centralized dashboards, errors get detected before they become emergencies.  
 
Multidisciplinary teams like iLab accelerate this shift by bringing technical insight, operational expertise, and standardized approaches under one roof. They assess new tools, use analytics to optimize remote building performance, and guide complex mobilizations with proven frameworks. This ensures every improvement is practical and evidence based. 

As a result, remote facilities managers can modernize workforce platforms, streamline work‑order systems, and centralize data to drive smarter decisions and deliver more consistent, high‑quality service from anywhere.

3. Invest in Your Workforce and Safety Culture

Technology and systems can only go so far. At its core, remote facility management is powered by people, and efficiency depends on how well you support, train, and protect them. 

Programs that encourage frontline teams to proactively address potential hazards, recognize positive performance, and take shared accountability for safety outcomes help reduce incidents and keep operations running smoothly.  

As conditions get tougher and the margin for error shrinks, being ahead matters. At Dexterra, we anticipate risk, build resilience, and continuously improve by being ISO certified that keeps health, safety, and quality front and centre. 

Reach out to learn how we deliver consistent performance in even the most challenging environments.