Chasing improvements in an enterprise comes down to doing the small things well, every time, and continuously improving, generating a compounding effect.

The best way to achieve this is for everyone involved to be engaged in the process, have a stake in outcomes, and understand how they impact on others.

At every level, this is achieved, not by memo, or strategic planning, but by consistent, focussed verbal communication backed by facts.

Best way to do this is to communicate often.

Not a lot at one time, but small bite-sized chunks regularly.

Daily, weekly, monthly, and so on.

At the ‘coalface’, it should be daily, which leads us to the daily stand-up, huddle, group chat, or as one of my clients call it, ‘toolbox’. Whatever you choose to call it in your workplace, it plays a crucial role in performance management.

This is a daily meeting at the beginning of a day, shift, or whatever the work cycle is, that reviews the day to come, in the light of what happened yesterday, with some acknowledgement of what will be coming tomorrow, and perhaps the next day.

Why it works

  • Daily communication keeps everyone on the same page, enables problems to be surfaced and addressed before they really hurt, escalated as necessary, and contributes enormously to a culture of communication and collaboration.
  • They replace the one-to-one conversations that need to happen many times, with a one-to-many conversation. This saves time and energy, while ensuring the communication is the same to all parties.
  • It enables focus on the priority activities, removing some of the day-to-day firefighting and craziness that always occurs.
  • It also enables quick updates to larger objectives and relevant projects to be delivered, which removes the always present rumour mill. This works equally well for the positive things as it does for the negative.
  • They lead to significantly engaged employees, as not only are they heard, but they can see the outcomes of their ideas and suggestions.

In these days of increasingly remote workforces, this daily get together takes on a much wider role, in reminding everyone that they are a part of a team, and others are relying on them.

What makes them work

  • Same time, same place. Having the huddle, stand-up, whatever you choose to call it at the same time, in the same place, every day creates a cadence that drives activity. Start on time, finish on time.
  • Sitting down will elongate the meeting, so stand. It might be in the workplace, often it is just outside the workplace, which adds credibility to the process.
  • As short as possible, no more than 15 minutes should be an iron rule.
  • Everyone gets a say. Engagement comes with being heard, and the chairman must ensure everyone is explicitly given the chance to have a say.
  • This can take many forms and will vary with the level of the huddle. At the coal face, a whiteboard is usually sufficient, with perhaps a photo or copy taken and kept for reference for a short time. At higher levels, the recording will vary.
  • Be on time, do not ramble when it is your turn to speak. Take any follow up or extended conversation offline, the huddle is to identify problems, address the molehills, but the mountains are for another place.
  • Be respectful of time, others and the process. Be attentive, with no side conversations, or banter.
  • Meeting chair. Someone must lead the meeting, have control of the conversations and agenda. That may be the same person every day, or it might rotate, which in my experience is the better way.

Usually very quickly there is a sense of team effort, and even the small wins become evident and can be celebrated. It is an incremental process, which once the ball is rolling, picks up momentum that is very hard to stop, even if you wanted to.