Risk, according to one dictionary definition, is
So, how can the rail industry benefit from Qualitin’s experience?
“The possibility of suffering harm or loss”.
Failing to manage risk hits the bottom
line; contrary to widely held opinion there is no conflict between managing
safety and quality and maintaining profitability. Relying on regulation, supervision
and box ticking is extremely expensive and is not wholly effective; it is the
decisions that people take “at the coal face” that affect results, and
corporate culture and management behaviours influence those decisions. As Aristotle
succinctly observed in 300BC,
“We are what we repeatedly do. Excellence, then, is
not an act, but a habit”
Challenging
the approach
Quality, Safety, finance, HR; different disciplines
will each have their own perspectives on risk. What each aspect of risk has in
common is that non-conformance impacts the bottom line. Working for 20 years in
the rail industry made me aware of how a disjointed approach to managing
different aspects of risk causes confusion, frustration and waste; managing compliance
becomes a cost driver.
Over-regulation is expensive and
ineffective; excessive documentation and disjointed approaches cause confusion
at the “sharp end”. Collaborative working presents additional challenges; where
several contracting organisations work together on large projects the problems
escalate, different cultures and systems must be aligned. Clear, easily
understood and simple to manage processes and systems are therefore essential.
I worked for 15 years for an American
organisation. Observing the different approaches to managing safety in the UK
and in the USA was enlightening; it was a simple matter of economics. In the
USA we had contracting teams; each team had output targets to meet but they all
understood that they could not meet those targets if they had accidents or
quality defects to deal with. Furthermore, in the USA there is no National
Health Service; employers buy health insurance for their employees and insurance
premiums are affected by preceding years’ claims. In other words, the link
between safety and the bottom line was immediately visible and measurable.
Keeping
it simple
A significant factor in safety performance
in the USA was the way in which work teams were organised. Everyone in each
team worked together all of the time; everyone knew their role and what was
expected. They developed work practices together and they addressed and
eliminated problems and looked out for each other as a team. That familiarity
was a key factor in ensuring productivity and safety.
TQM and the EFQM Business Excellence model
principles develop similar understandings of each team members’ needs; they are
the fundamentals of Qualitin’s methodology and it is the reason I joined them
as an enthusiastic partner. Qualitin is a global enterprise that specialises in strategy execution.
What differentiates it from other ‘solution
providers’ is its simple, practical approach to embedding TQM principles into
organisational cultures. It engages managers at all levels and enables them to
execute strategy in a clearly demonstrable way. It provides them each month
with opportunities to make and be recognised for improving processes that deliver
continuously improving results.
Established for 18 years, and with its
origins in the steel processing industry, Qualitin has successfully helped
organisations ranging from fewer than 10 to more than 17,000 employees in
sectors including utilities, food manufacturing, retail, not-for-profit social
enterprises and charities.
Serasa Experian in Brazil is a notable
example of Qualitin’s added value. Over a four year period Qualitin helped
Serasa to grow sales by almost 300% and to improve EBIT by over 400%. Current
UK clients include a large further education college, a legal services company
and a food manufacturing organisation.
So, how can the rail industry benefit from Qualitin’s experience?
Taking
action on causes
Organisations are often very good at
dealing with the effects of problems but not necessarily so good at addressing
and fixing their causes. Focusing on causes is however absolutely essential in
order to prevent reoccurrences. Whilst root cause analysis is well embedded at
operational safety level it is not always adopted at senior management level.
Qualitin’s approach focuses on identifying and fixing causes at all levels; it
addresses the systemic and process issues that affect performance in all areas.
Qualitin’s ICG methodology ensures that strategic
objectives are clearly defined and quantified and that all key business metrics
are aligned to support them. It typically results in individual managers having
fewer, but more useful kpi’s and that enables them to focus on what really
delivers improvements. By using kpi’s to enable managers to demonstrate
success, rather than as a stick with which to beat them, ICG therefore develops
the kind of cultural and behavioural change that is much more effective and
sustainable than over regulation.
Focus
on processes, not people
So, what makes Qualitin’s ICG methodology
so different? Deming said
“A bad process will beat a good person every time”
In many organisations the blame for under
performance is focused on individuals. This is demotivating and encourages the
concealment of problems. ICG focuses on the capabilities of processes, it is
managers’ responsibility to identify and correct root causes; this approach
provides managers with opportunities to demonstrate successes.
Waste
less time debating history
By focussing on process performance and
debating only those results that are abnormal, and by using results to identify
improvement opportunities rather than to apportion blame, it is possible to
focus more effort on ensuring a better future. Site meetings can be made
shorter and more effective and performance can be readily monitored against
project and corporate objectives.
It
is innovative
Innovation and learning from other sectors
is a key objective for the rail industry. Such innovations need not be confined
to products and services; worldwide, using Qualitin’s approach, thousands of
managers in hundreds of organisations have achieved the kind of step change
business improvements that the UK rail industry seeks.
Tony Withers is Implementation Director at Qualitin Global
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