Tag Archives: productivity

START Faster and Smarter

I want to dedicate this article to a great concrete contractor and his many field Foremen and Supervisors up in Packer country.  In their desire to be better, they challenged me to raise my own efforts to create an easy to follow reminder for field leaders when beginning each new workday.  The bullet points presented below for each START activity is provided by these fine construction leaders.  Thanks guys for inspiring me to develop START, and may your efforts help other current and future construction leaders overcome their own challenges!

START Faster and SmarterOne expert in the construction industry has found that the least productive hour of the workday is the first hour.  In that first hour important decisions are often NOT made, there is failure to insure critical maintenance has been applied to equipment and tools, and field leaders, in a hurry to get going, fail to review critical project plans and documents.

Every contractor knows first hand the real action starts at the “front-lines,” where actual crews and leaders execute project plans.  Yet this is where we lose too much firepower, productivity, and precision after hard fought jobs have been estimated, won, and pre-planned.  Sure there are always surprises on projects, but the contractor who can prepare his or her crew leaders to consistently follow a sequence of preparation steps will empower their crew leader, and their crew members, to perform “No Bad Jobs!”

Ok, let’s consider a sequence, placed in an easy to remember order, which will raise your crew’s ability to hit their daily numbers.  Let’s jump START your workday! 

START is an acronym that you can teach your crews in fifteen minutes.  The secret isn’t the ease in which they learn START, it’s building it into a daily commitment for them to adapt and execute each new day.  Here we go…

Schedule Your Day

Sounds almost too simple but it’s sadly not completed every day, much less by the crew.  Sure, many contractors may have their crews meet in the “shop” each morning and the Supervisor may talk to the Foremen about their day’s efforts.  That’s good and needed.  Yet seldom does the actual Crew Foreman sit down and actually line out just what he intends to have his crew work on for the day, much less set any targets that need achieving. 

The Crew Foreman, hopefully working with a formal one or two week “look ahead,” should focus 15-20 minutes each morning working through his plans for that day specifically.  Enlisting his Lead Man or several members from his crew will bring even greater insights to the days needs and thus, improve performance.  This process allows the crew to leave the shop more confident about what they are doing, what they will need to complete their work, and how much work will need to be completed.  (Please read some of my previous articles about job site planning and use of a look ahead for more information.)

  • Look and Review the “Super” Schedule
  • Identify the “Times of Need” to Be On-site
  • Involve the Entire Crew/Team to Discuss That Day’s Plan
  • Crew Leader Prepare Their Decisions to Make That Day
  • Break the Day’s Plan into “4 Quarters” For Greater Attention & Faster Adjustment

Take Daily Inventory

This second action directs each Crew Leader to insure that their trucks, trailers, and workers have exactly what they need to complete their work.  Leaving the yard without every piece of equipment and tool secured and confirmed is a leading reason why workers fail to achieve needed production rates and targets.  Waiting for the company’s “hot truck” to bring something from the yard because the crew did not inventory the missing shovels, or oil cans for the equipment is simply a waste of time and drives profit margins south.

An inventory list should be created for work crews that list all of the equipment and tools, materials, safety equipment, etc., needed for each project.  For many contractors, this can a list that remains constant as their crews may perform the same type of work each day.  However, such consistency of work often breeds complacency among the crew members, each thinking someone else got the needed tool or component needed on the job.

There may other forms of needed inventory for field leaders to employ such as the requirements for a particular customer involving an inventory of what is needed to complete at the site, a list of contact information, and a list of what workers have been cleared to work on the project due to security requirements of the customer, i.e. Clearance documents needed to perform work on a military base. 

In short, any inventory list for any reason is too simple not to create.  Possessing an inventory list doesn’t guarantee your workers producing quality results but it sure makes it easier for them to achieve needed results by first insuring that they have the needed tools of their trade in their possession when leaving your company’s yard.

  • Use a Quality Audit Document that Lists Non-Negotiable Process to Follow
  • Implement a Daily Inventory of Trucks & Trailers AND Confirm Needed Items are Secured Before Leaving Yard
  • Push the “Star” Process: Assign Crew Members to Provide Extra Attention on Quality, Safety, Tool/Equipment Preventive Maintenance, etc.

Ask Questions Daily

In the rush to get going every morning there is usually little time to solicit questions.  Crew Leaders often feel the need to just get the crew out of the office and to the job site.  But more questions may need to be asked prior to leaving than after the crew has arrived at the job site.

Simple questions such as…

“Who is setting up the chalk lines today?”

“Where are we going to park the trucks today?”

“What area of the site are we going to begin working today?”

“Do we need to bring any extra forms or anchor bolts today?”

…all seem to be innocent enough but are too often asked later rather than earlier.  Crew Leaders need to be asking their workers and company senior leaders questions before start-up and their employees need to be free to ask questions each morning to insure that we’re all on the same page.  A work culture that appreciates asking questions, sometimes the most important question at the right time, is a culture that will perform tasks better and do more things right the first time.

  • All Supervisors Ask Daily Questions of Their Foremen to Insure All Bases are Covered
  • Make Daily Use of the “Process Book” of SOPs for Every Major Work Process Company Executes; Get Sign-off from Users
  • Lead “Process Book” Questions, Especially with New Employees Or Employees Not Performing Well
  • Circle Back to Your “ADHD” Workers to Insure They Understand

Review Documentation Daily

There seems to be more documentation today required for the simplest of projects than ever.  Big or small, your Crew Leaders are often the holders of copies of blue prints, CAD renderings, OSHA and DOT documents, Weekly “Look-ahead,” city or county permits, customer requirements and contact information, location and contact information for local material plants and suppliers, and Standard Operating Procedures or “SOPs,” to name a few. 

For the contractor performing larger sized projects with the crew operating out of a job site trailer, the need and reasoning is still the same.  Important project documentation needs to be identified in terms of what is to be reviewed and completed daily, weekly, or monthly.  Our Crew Leaders can simply not omit reviewing needed documentation. 

  • Identify “Needy” Foremen and Lead Them to Review Their Daily Documents
  • Inspect Training Plans for Employees Needing Extra Training & Support
  • Crew Leaders to Engage Other Reliable Crew Members to Assist in Reviewing Documentation for Inventory, Tracking Crew Hours, Quality Audits, Safety Inspections, etc.
  • Regularly Assess What Crew Foreman Needs What Accountability and Support for Greater Performance & To Build Foreman Mental Retention

Train Your Workers…Daily

If there is one action every Crew Leader must be fast to start it is to increase the effort to train and educate their workers.  At no other time have we observed so many employees joining the construction industry with so few skills for their trade.  Thus, it will be incumbent on the Crew Leader, supported by their Supervisors, to make every day a “class room” of learning. 

Suddenly every start, stop, and restart has a teachable moment.  Rather than take the job back from the new employee, Crew Leaders must take that extra one to five minutes to explain the “Why?” behind a particular technique while demonstrating the “How to.”  If there is one daily effort that more Crew Leaders will employ it will be that of training and educating their workers.

  • Crew Foremen to Be Highly Active to Train…Even More Active than Performing the Work Personally
  • Supervisors to Redirect Crew Foreman When a Wrong Step Has Been Taken; Crew Foreman Redirecting Their Crew Members When a Wrong Step Has Bee Made
  • Engage Recently Taught Employees to Train Another Worker…ASAP!
  • Slowly Add Little Pieces of Responsibility to Workers
  • Drive the Non-Negotiable Importance of Safety & Job-Site Cleaning Along with Technical Training
  • Refuse Mediocrity… NO BAD JOBS!

Like my Crew Leaders from Packer-land have begun to do, initiate your own frontal assault on making your project teams and field crews more productive.  Gone are the days that we just hope that by pure badgering of our workers things will begin to get better.  It takes too long to wait out that method and it also risks losing potentially long-term employees who will give up too soon before a more organized approach is implemented.

Look, to START faster and smarter takes exactly those items shared above.  Why wait for the performance to improve when you can START right now!

May you have a great START to productivity records this year!

Tightening Up Job-Site Productivity…and Profitability!

John has a good pavement maintenance company in the big picture of things.   He’s a hard working contractor who has a normal mix of long term and short term workers.  However, he can’t quite seem to break through the profitability ceiling, or “PC.”  As much as he figures and refigures his estimating efforts he still is falling 3%, 5%, even 9% short of the gross profit that he should be realizing on most jobs.  His frustrations led to his asking me to come along side for the rest of this year to get him over the “PC” barrier.

Too many good contractors are struggling today with getting that next 3%-5% of gross profit.  Some contractors are literally approaching double figures in shortages from what they should be experiencing on their gross profit.  After reviewing John’s work processes that his field guys practiced I’m convinced that he can realize greater gross profit and tighten up his job-site productivity but it’s going to take some good planning, execution, and commitment.

Image courtesy of Serge Bertasius Photography at FreeDigitalPhotos.net

Image courtesy of Serge Bertasius Photography at FreeDigitalPhotos.net

Pre-Planning For Job-Site Productivity

First, most pavement maintenance contractors, do a horrible job of pre-planning their projects. This is their first mistake.  Pre-planning, especially pre-construction, is a specialized effort among general construction companies and our industry could learn much from the same effort.

Pre-construction, with an emphasis on pre-planning, begins when a field leader takes all the collected information from the estimate and begins to review what he and his crew can do to maximize the production effort.  This means recognizing where trucks, equipment, materials, etc. should be delivered, unloaded, loaded, and stored.  This effort alone costs many contractors thousands of dollars a year in accidents and damaged materials when not done. 

Second, continuing the pre-planning effort, the contractor should then set out the next week schedule by each Friday for the next week of work.  I introduced many years ago the “Next Week Look Ahead” to our industry at our annual conferences.  The contractors who have embraced this tool confidently share that this process of planning will add 2%-4% almost immediately to their gross profit, often more.  The big objection I hear for not doing this is that “the schedule will always change.”  The scheduled does change periodically but by having the plan in place the alternative decisions can be made faster and with more foresight.  There is absolutely no excuse for not planning!

Third, there needs to be an organized process to unload, place, store, and load equipment, tools, materials, etc.  This can also be preplanned by creating something Japanese Management has called “5-S.”  There are five components involved with incorporate 5-S but one effort that is critical for us here is the development of a 5-S Map

Develop Your 5-S Map for Job-Site Productivity

A 5-S Map can be used for many purposes that will help to keep things organized and encourage a cleaner and safer job, job-site, more organized trucks, and especially yards and shops.  Consider an aerial drawing of your tool truck where you have most of your equipment and hand tools stored.  Once drawn, you then identify where each item is to be kept.  You can do this by drawing an arrow to the location on the truck where the item is to be kept and then writing what the item is such as rakes, blowers, buckets, etc.

You should have a 5-S Map done on your shop, yard, etc.  Also, I recommend drawing a 5-S Map for how you want to lay out your equipment and tools once you are at a job site.  Some contractors argue with me but soon realize how much they can save by having all the items that they will be using lined out or positioned on a job site for faster retrieval and better handling.

Fourth, the leadership to hold morning and afternoon “huddles” between a crew leader and the crew members is crucial for successful production each day.  This huddle I’m referring to is a short 3-5 minute meeting at the job site that first clarifies what the targets are for the day, confirming who is doing what on the job, and reminding all workers to important information about the job and safety reminders.  This morning huddle isn’t enough, there needs to be a “PM” huddle just before all the workers head home or back to the yard.  The afternoon huddle would review what happened during the day, what can be improved, and what can be done to organize the site, trucks, equipment, etc. to make the next day’s production go faster and smoother.

Finally, the most critical issue to busting through your profitability ceiling is to be a driver of the first four items.  We have enough to battle each day with inexperienced workers or negative attitudes reflected by many of our workers without you not driving, supporting, and enforcing the completion of the four items listed earlier.  

Raise Construction Worker Productivity with a Team Scoreboard

TCBF

This article originally appeared on ForConstructionPros.com.

 

Most employees want to know how they are doing and how they are performing. Likewise, crews and departments of people often have the same interest. Creating a “Team Scoreboard”suggests identifying the top three to five (or even as many as seven) performance measurements that best reflect how the group, team or crew is doing. No different than the dashboard in your vehicle that provides some measurements of how well your car or truck is performing, so too does the team scorecard provide such monitoring. The Team Scoreboard can be developed for construction crews, project teams, departments, companies and production lines.

Let’s discuss three important components to building the team scoreboard — and one component on gaining the employee’s interest.

  1. What performance indicators should be selected?
  2. How are selected performance indicators to be measured?
  3. How should the measurements be reflected or captured on the team scoreboard?
  4. How do you gain the employee’s interest to respond to the team scoreboard?

What performance indicators should be selected?

This first component is totally dependent on your area of work. If you are constructing a scoreboard for your crews what are the most important indicators of their success? Consider just a few measurements that might be critical to know, including:

  • Sales/revenue
  • Costs/expenses
  • Equipment operations
  • Amount of work completed by workers
  • Amount of material used
  • On-time completion
  • Bids created
  • Gross profit
  • Labor-hours for production

The list barely scratches the surface of the many indicators that could be measured and monitored to assure that our workers are focusing on the right performance. Quite honestly, there should be little mystery to determining the important indicators.

Remember, it is critical to consider those indicators that truly reflect most closely how our company (i.e. crews, department, etc.) is performing. For most of the indicators, the measurement will be a comparison against “hours” or what percentage against our budget or estimate was realized.

How should selected indicators be measured?

Now we get to sink our teeth into the actual numbers. First, consider a few of the possible measurements that are often embraced and tracked by construction companies worldwide.

  • Square feet/labor hour (formwork)
  • Cubic yards poured/labor hour
  • Linear feet/labor hour
  • Number of block/labor hour (masonry)
  • Safety incidents/week
  • On-time job completion/schedule
  • Equipment “uptime”
  • $ average/call-back

There is a host of means to measure our productivity, but the key is again to measure what is truly reflective of our performance and in such a way that our workers can understand what the measurements mean to them.

Here’s a brief example outlining the importance of measuring the right productivity for your workers:

Let’s say that you need to have a formwork crew complete the first floor of a parking garage in one week’s time so that concrete can be poured. Such general direction is much different than informing the crew that we need to average 16 square feet per labor hour worked in order to complete the first floor within one work week. The “16 square foot per labor hour” becomes a measurement that can be calculated, measured and monitored.

While the first approach certainly provides the workers with a general overview that the first floor is to be completed in one week, the more specific target of “16 square feet per labor hour” provides a clearer goal for the crew to work toward achieving or beating.

When measuring it is sometimes useful to measure the actual performance achieved against what was estimated. This comparison is sometimes reflected as a percentage. For example, you might reflect how much linear feet of pipe was laid, or linear feet of striping applied, per labor-hour, compared against what the estimate was for.

So, a crew that produced 93% of linear pipe/labor hour would indicate that the crew placed 93% of what the estimate called out to place. (This is why capturing accurate production numbers is very important to the honesty and helpfulness of the Team Scoreboard.)

How should the measurements be reflected on the scoreboard?

Most of the successful approaches that I’ve witnessed and assisted companies embrace use one of several forms of graphs, include:

  • Run charts
  • Pie graphs
  • “X & Y” graphs

The use of graphs can be easily developed, and even the least educated worker can be taught to consider trends of productivity. “Line moving up represents improvement; line moving down represents declining performance. A larger piece of the pie represents good performance while a smaller ‘slice’ might represent less performance.”

As the old saying goes, “A picture is worth a thousand words.” Ideally I would suggest that you use a graph, of your choice, for each performance indicator to be measured. Placing three, five, even seven such graphs on one copy of paper or perhaps enlarged to be placed on a poster-sized board will bring greater visibility and interest from your workers.

A key point here as well is to keep the monitoring updated. For example, if you are tracking any indicator on a weekly basis, update and change out the graph reflecting the performance of the previous week. Leave such updates posted for at least one week, allowing the employees most associated with impacting the indicators a chance to review and reflect. It is common for the direct supervisor to engage in discussion about the graphs’ story and how the crew can improve their performance or to maintain the great effort reflected by the graphs.

How do you gain the employee’s interest in the Team Scoreboard?

To gain more interest by those workers who are impacting the numbers you’ll need to communicate the information quickly and often.

It is important that if you are measuring daily and reflecting weekly then ensure that your Team Scoreboard is updated with each new week. This effort alone will attract viewers at the posting of each new graph.

You must communicate with your workers about the graphs, the story that they tell, and most importantly, what can we learn from the results that are displayed. In the big picture of things, construction really is an industry focused on installing materials in a way that a finished product is achieved. Measuring our ability to do such installations provides us with a “how well are we doing?” at our craft.

Use the Team Scoreboard to praise your workers together. You have more than enough opportunity to recognize individual performance when it requires it, but using the Team Scoreboard to address “team” items can go a long way toward building greater team thinking and building.

Finally, to gain the employee’s interest in the Team Scoreboard you must also be very interested. If you post the regular updates but seldom address positive trends you will leave your workers wondering what they have to do to get a “thank you team.” As a leader, if you will not even address the team when their weekly performance is “sliding south and fast” then they are left to believe that perhaps what they are doing is not that important.

Developing the Team Scoreboard is another great communication tool that effective leaders use to raise their workers “Performance IQ” toward working smart and safe. Look for a space on a wall that is regularly passed by workers coming and leaving the office or the yard and begin to post the graphs representing the performance of the recent week.

The Team Scoreboard can raise worker productivity, lead to more effective and timely problem solving, raise the amount of respect your workers begin to have for you and their teammates, grow the pride within the workers to achieve high marks of performance.