Organization’s with successful aviation safety management systems (SMS) training strategies universally have very well performing aviation SMS. End of story.
Training can make or break a company.
And let’s be honest, 99% of all training courses you or I have ever attended were dreadfully boring, uninspiring, and (worst of all) forgettable.
There are really only two main goals for training to change. The first goal of aviation SMS training is preparing individuals for how to act safely in all situations, be it
The second reason for aviation SMS training is in response to changes in the operating environment. Aviation service providers' environments - i.e., procedures, technologies, policies, etc. – are always changing, and training is an attempt to “keep up.”
Lack of safety training always results in a lack of preparedness. Incorrect actions because of unpreparedness can have devastating safety and financial repercussions. Getting the following areas of safety training to stick in employees' minds is difficult:
To make sure your employees don’t forget 90% of their training after 1 week (which is, by the way, the average), here are 6 tips.
Talk about setting up a safety training session for failure: employees feel like they are only doing the training because they have to.
While initial and recurrent SMS training does require employees to participate because they have to, that doesn’t mean employees can’t feel that they have some reason to be there.
Incentives are powerful in aviation SMS just as they had been effective in traditional safety programs. During SMS training, here are some incentives we have personally seen that proved to be extremely effective:
Many aviation SMS implementations, in general, don’t perform well simply because their employees don’t have safety incentives. Incentives don't have to cost much money to be effective. Ideas to motivate employee participation in SMS training may include:
Certificates of completion as an incentive may work, but not in all cultures. In the United States, certificates are not as valued as highly as in:
There are cultures where employees collect certificates for a sense of personal accomplishment. Other cultures may see certificates as nothing more than:
You have to be careful about choosing incentives that actually have some value to employees. If certificates are handed out like Halloween candy at your company, I wouldn't use certificates to motivate employees to either attend or actively participate in the required SMS training.
Aviation SMS are ultimately systems that depend on community and involvement. I firmly believe that training courses should be modeled after this fact. Too often safety training courses involve
Interactivity in aviation safety training means incorporating
Simply put, interactivity is about teaching safety training materials by having employees do something other than “just sit and listen.”
Of course, the reason why more SMS training courses aren’t interactive is that:
Safety training that is interactive will be memorable, and for aviation SMS implementations that choose to go the extra mile, it will make a big difference in proactive hazard identification activity levels and subsequent risk management efforts. If there were any part of SMS training that should be repeatedly stressed and made interactive, I would recommend that you make the hazard identification training sections interactive.
Hazard identification training should be included in the SMS. There is the boring training routine of simply throwing up a few slides about hazard identifications and pictures of aircraft accidents. How many of you have seen this until your eyes glaze over? There are some very good opportunities to engage employees in the hazard identification sections of your training. After all, this is what you want employees to focus on when they are interacting with operational "systems."
Employees are the eyes and ears of operational safety assurance. They need to be well-versed in:
Furthermore, is there any better "low-hanging fruit" for making training interactive than hazard identification training?
The time required to finish a mandatory SMS training course may be overwhelmingly long, and by the end, most people will cut any corner to be finished with it. SMS training courses don't have to be long and boring. Successful industry practices that we have seen are safety managers who condense their training materials in several ways:
Making training segments smaller, more spread out, and easier to digest will ensure that completing safety training is much less of a headache for employees. Furthermore, short, meaningful training will positively affect safety cultures, while the boring type of safety training I've sat through time and again makes me very lukewarm about the company's safety program.
Creating custom training content that is tailored to specific safety roles in your aviation SMS is superb for addressing some of the other tips, namely:
Basically, the main point here is to make training material relatable and familiar. As in, relating material to scenarios that are familiar to each role’s
We could also call this tip “Scenario training.”
The safety reality of the work environment is often messier and requires a much greater interpretation than would be indicated in most
Employees who are only trained on what the material is and not what it looks like in real-life practice will be under-prepared for using the training material in real-life situations.
Training materials should use real-life stories and scenarios to illustrate training points because:
Sometimes training can seem pointless – as in, “I’ll never need that.” Using real-life scenarios shows with examples the reason for any particular piece of training.
Recurrent training is a mainstay for any aviation SMS implementations. Seasoned employees will have been through many of the same aviation SMS training courses as years pass by. That becomes tedious very quickly.
A very good idea is to periodically make changes to the training materials so that employees don’t tune them out. These changes can be simple but effective alterations to:
Doing all three changes to training materials takes little time, but can make the material look and feel entirely different.
Aviation SMS managers may put tremendous effort and time into creating training materials for employees. But that doesn’t make the material good. Ultimately, it’s what employees think of their training courses that count. Figuring out what works and what doesn’t work for your aviation SMS training is about:
The best SMS training for safety managers is automated training given to all employees. This holds true for especially the required initial and recurring reactive risk management training for Phase 2 SMS implementations.
If you cannot automate it, here is the next best thing. Start with a template so you don't have to recreate the wheel.
Last updated April 2024.