Proactive risk management for safety managers involves risk management activities that are dedicated to recognizing potential concerns before those concerns actualize. Proactive risk management does this by:
The important point here is that such trends and effectiveness review identify potential problems before they have a negative impact on the SMS.
For example, consider a situation where management identifies a trend in a particular root cause. So far, this root cause has not caused any significant problems, and upon further investigation, management realizes that there are no risk controls assigned to that root cause.
This example demonstrates the power of charts for proactively identifying potential problems.
Not all charts work well for proactive risk management. Data displays like tables and pie charts often do not work well for proactive analysis, as such data is usually static. It does not indicate where performance is heading.
Data in the form of trending charts and line charts is usually better suited for proactive analysis. Why? Such data is dynamic. It offers a comparison and point of reference in order to understand where performance is heading. They help you answer three important questions:
Here are 4 charts for proactive risk management.
Issue responsiveness trending charts are great proactive tools for assessing the direction of performance for managing issues. What this chart shows is:
Newer safety programs will probably demonstrate greater time for closing issues, but, ideally, will see those average times drop year over year. Established safety programs need to monitor that safety issues don’t begin to have poor oversight. Poor oversight leads to longer issue closure times, which will negatively impact this trending chart.
Positive indications of trending are:
Negative indications of trending are:
If negative trends are identified, managers should investigate the cause and correct it before it leads to significant problems.
Similar to average days to close issues, manager on-time issue performance trending charts are a fantastic proactive tool to monitor safety performance at a very small level. This chart displays:
When issues are consistently closed late, it indicates either:
Any three of these points can lead to significant problems in your safety management system. This chart helps you monitor trends in managers’ performance, where you can identify negative trends and address them before they become significant problems.
While tables don’t generally work well for proactive charts, a key performance indicator (KPI) goal vs classification chart is a great proactive tool. This chart shows:
When a KPI’s classifications come close to your goal for that classification, it indicates that risk controls relevant to the KPI are not performing as well as they should. You can then proactively investigate the risk control before your KPI falls into non-performance.
Root cause classification trending charts are fairly straightforward charts. They show your top root cause classifications over a period of time. The idea here is that the more a root cause is being classified, the less performant the risk controls assigned to that root cause are.
Trending charts work well for monitoring root causes because as soon as a root cause begins to show indications of being inadequately controlled, you can investigate and implement changes needed to stop the negative trend before it leads to an incident.
Beyond charts, leading indicator metrics are fabulous proactive risk management tools. Aviation leading indicators are comparison metrics that indicate underlying reasons for safety performance. Leading indicators are:
For more information about leading indicators, see these free 40 leading indicator charts:
Last updated in March 2024.