Upgrading to IBM Maximo Application Suite (MAS) should be a step forward.
More capability. Better performance. A modern platform.

But for many organizations, it becomes something else entirely:

  • Delays
  • Rework
  • Unexpected issues at go-live

And in the worst cases—failed implementations

The Real Problem Isn’t the Upgrade

  • It’s not the platform.
  • It’s not the roadmap.
  • It’s not even the implementation approach.

It’s the data.

Where Things Break Down

Most organizations go into a Maximo upgrade thinking:

“We just need to move our data from A to B.”

But Maximo data isn’t simple. It is:

  • Highly structured
  • Deeply relational
  • Tied to business rules and operational workflows

And that’s exactly where traditional approaches fall apart.

1. Data Gets Moved — But Not Validated

Legacy tools and scripts focus on movement, not accuracy.

So what happens?

  • Data is migrated with hidden issues
  • Errors aren’t caught until testing — or worse, production
  • Teams scramble to fix problems under pressure

By the time issues are discovered, they’re expensive to resolve.

2. No Repeatable Process Across Environments

Most teams rebuild their approach for:

  • Dev
  • Test
  • Production

That leads to:

  • Inconsistency
  • More room for error
  • Slower timelines

What works in one environment doesn’t always translate to the next.

3. Over-Reliance on Scripts and Manual Effort

Many upgrades still depend on:

  • Custom scripts
  • Spreadsheets
  • One-off processes

This creates:

  • Lack of visibility
  • No auditability
  • Heavy reliance on specific individuals

If something breaks, it’s hard to trace — and even harder to fix.

4. Issues Surface Too Late

This is the biggest problem.
Without proper validation upfront:

  • Data issues aren’t caught early
  • Testing becomes reactive
  • Go-live becomes risky

Teams end up firefighting instead of executing a clean upgrade.

The Shift: From Data Movement → Data Operations

The organizations that succeed are doing something different. They’re not just moving data — they’re managing it as a structured, repeatable process.

That means:

  • Validating data before it’s loaded
  • Standardizing workflows across environments
  • Creating visibility into every step
  • Building once and reusing

Where MAS Data Hub Fits In

This is exactly the gap MAS Data Hub was built to solve.
Instead of relying on fragmented tools and manual effort, it provides:

✔ A structured approach to Maximo data
✔ Validation before data enters the system
✔ Repeatable pipelines across environments
✔ Full visibility and auditability

Most Maximo upgrades don’t fail because of the platform.
They fail because of uncontrolled, unvalidated, and inconsistent data processes. Fix the data strategy — and everything else becomes easier.