|
|
Hindsight is a wonderful thing. How often does that thought cross your mind? "If only we'd known...", "I wish we'd spotted that...", "If only we'd done things differently..."
After a project or event, there's usually some kind of post-implementation review. That's great: you explore what you've learned from hindsight, so that you can take these lessons through to your next project or event.
But, the question is this: Can you benefit from hindsight more immediately? And can you learn lessons now, rather than waiting until the end of the project?
"After Action Reviews" help you do this. With these, you conduct reviews along the way
(after completion of individual project actions or tasks), rather than waiting until the end of the project. This helps you incorporate learning, and improve continuously during the project. As a result, you produce a better end product, delivered by a team that is much better prepared to meet future challenges. Learn about the After Action Review process with today's featured article, published in full below.
Also new this week is our article on French and Raven's Five Forms of Power. This looks in detail at the good and bad forms of power that leaders can use, and helps you steer away from the "dark side" of leadership. Find out more by clicking
here!
Enjoy reading your Mind Tools newsletter – and why not pass it on to someone else who might enjoy it and benefit too? You can do so simply by clicking here for a pre-formatted email, ready for you to send.
Have an excellent, and continuously improving, day!
James & Rachel
James Manktelow and Rachel Thompson
MindTools.com
Mind Tools – Essential skills for an excellent career!
|
||||
A typical project review is done "post mortem" - after the fact, and well past any opportunity to change the outcome. You finish a project, and then you study it to determine what happened. From there, you decide which processes to keep and what you'll do differently next time.
That may help the next project - but it's too late for the project you've just finished. What's more, you may have already wasted too much time and too many resources in your current project, possibly even causing harmful effects.
Wouldn't it be better to evaluate along the way - so you can capture lessons learned after each milestone, and improve performance immediately?
Organizations of all types, across all industries, could benefit from an ongoing review process. The After Action Review (AAR) process was developed by the military as a way for everyone to learn quickly from soldiers' experiences in the field. With this system, critical lessons and knowledge are transferred immediately to get the most benefit. The "field unit" has an opportunity to talk about what happened, and other teams can then use this experience right away. In this way, the performance of the whole organization improves in a timely manner.
AARs provide an opportunity to assess what happened and why. They are learning-focused discussions that are designed to help the team and the organization's leaders discover what to do differently. For example, when conducting organization-wide training, you might complete an AAR after the first training session to analyze what to do better in the next session. Or if you're changing your manufacturing process, you could do an AAR after completing the first 100 units, instead of finishing the entire run.
|
Depending on the nature and size of a project, you may actually do the AAR after completion. The common factor is applying the AAR process to all recurring, or repeating, events and activities, as well as those that pose a challenge. The AAR approach supports a continuous learning culture - and the desire to find and use best practices and innovative approaches. |
It's important to note that AARs aren't limited just to large or formal projects. You can use them after staff meetings or regular operational functions, like month-end accounting. Also, when a safety incident occurs, an AAR can reveal important lessons.
An added benefit of the After Action Review process is improved communication and feedback within teams themselves. Because the focus is on learning instead of blaming, the process itself leads to improved understanding of team performance, and helps people think about how best to work together to produce better results.
|
The AAR process is related to the Deming Cycle, or Plan-Do-Check-Act (PDCA), and it's a great addition to any continuous improvement initiative. The Deming Cycle is a broader approach to solving problems and managing change. AAR is a useful tool that works with PDCA, but they're not substitutes for one another. |
An AAR is a structured meeting that does the following:
For the AAR process to be successful, the team needs to discover for itself the lessons provided by the experience. The more open and honest the discussion, the better. Here are some of the key elements of an effective AAR:
|
Start by getting participants to agree on what was supposed to happen. If the original objectives were unclear, then it's unlikely that the project or activity was very successful. Once you have agreement, you can discuss actual versus intended results. You may need to return to the objectives as you move on to what worked and what you would do differently. |
|
Sometimes it's helpful to have participants each write down their ideas, and then ask everyone to share. This helps you avoid groupthink, and it allows quieter individuals to contribute. |
|
Some great resources for AAR facilitators are Running Effective Meetings and Managing Conflict in Meetings. |
After Action Reviews provide an effective approach to capturing lessons learned from activities and projects.
Rather than waiting until the end of a long project to evaluate how well the team did, AARs incorporate continuous learning right from the start. They're also a great way of ensuring that the lessons learned from one project or team are shared with the rest of the organization, with a view to improving overall performance.
Continuous improvement helps us handle the changes that are happening around us. AARs help us keep open a steady dialogue about learning and improvement. They also allow organizations to learn and adapt so they can keep up with - and stay ahead of - change.
The After Action Review process is just one of many tools within the Mind Tools Career Excellence Club that help you learn continuously, and develop your skills - and improve your career - every day. Find out more about the Club by clicking here!
Continuously Improve Your Organization
|
In two week, we'll be back the next edition of the newsletter, with new articles on outsourcing, and looking at how to resolve ethical dilemmas. Until then, enjoy! And have a great two weeks!
James
James Manktelow
Click here to email
MindTools.com
Mind Tools – Essential skills for an excellent career!
Privacy Policy:
Mind Tools will treat your email address with complete respect and will not circulate it to any third party.
To unsubscribe, please click the unsubscribe link at the bottom of the email we sent you.
IIf you are not already a member and you would like to subscribe, please visit the mindtools.com site and subscribe using the form on the right hand side bar.
© Mind Tools Ltd, 2008.
If you have enjoyed this issue, please feel free to email it on to your friends and co-workers. If you think they would benefit from the skills we teach, please pass this newsletter on!
Also, you are very welcome to post this issue of the newsletter to your own web site. If you do, you must leave it completely intact, include copyright information, and include both the URL of the mindtools site (http://www.mindtools.com) and the subscription email address for the newsletter (http://www.mindtools.com/subscribe.htm).