Task management in every aviation safety management system (SMS) is extremely important. After all, the accountable executive will be monitoring SMS performance regularly and will be alert for substandard safety performance.
How quickly are safety tasks completed?
How many safety tasks are overdue? And for how many days? And why are these safety tasks overdue?
Every employee needs to stay on top of corrective actions and preventive actions to ensure that nothing “falls through the cracks.”
When you are not actively monitoring items that are assigned to you, it’s all too easy to simply overlook them. To quote Orwell, “To see what is in front of one’s nose needs a constant struggle.”
The most important tasks in the aviation SMS are:
The other reality about task management in aviation SMS is that employees, department heads, and safety managers have many other duties and responsibilities besides the above points. Task management is the ability to successfully prioritize these items with all of the other required duties. This is the purpose of this SMS dashboard chart at the right.
Many people aren’t adept at task management. For many of us, it is a real struggle. For people who do struggle with it, using a list that includes only the most pressing concerns is an extremely useful aid in keeping them on track.
For example, consider a front-line employee whose day-to-day activities involve manual labor such as baggage handling. Safety tasks might seem like negligible pieces of extra work to do on top of the rigor of their daily responsibilities. Having a safety task list that does the following will help keep those safety tasks at the forefront of such employees' minds:
Showing assigned dates gives employees a reference point for how long an item has been sitting on their “to take care of” list. Seeing due dates gives safety incentives for employees to take care of items on time.
Moreover, seeing the type of task helps you mentally organize items into your daily work routine.
Aviation risk management isn’t simply practiced by safety management personnel. Risk management is an employee’s ability to manage risk within the limits of their assigned duties and responsibilities. For front-line employees, risk management will largely involve hazard identification and issue reporting.
However, front-line employees are also responsible for task-oriented items, such as attending meetings and completing assigned corrective actions and preventive actions required to mitigate reported safety concerns. Safety managers' risk management responsibilities will largely be task-based.
Through this safety chart, any employee can learn how well they are taking care of their assigned risk management responsibilities that are logged in your organization's SMS database. Three likely scenarios look like this:
Each of the points demonstrates a range of risk management efficiency. The more trouble you have with task management, the more resolutely you should pay attention to this safety chart that is visible in the SMS performance monitoring dashboard.
This safety chart is created through the use of an aviation safety database. It is most likely you arrived at this article from your SMS performance monitoring dashboard in SMS Pro. Most dashboard charts in SMS Pro have a link from the chart to the respective article that describes the business logic behind the performance monitoring chart.
While some safety charts can be created easily with programs that use manual spreadsheets or point solutions (different aviation safety databases for different activities), creating this is simply impossible without one of the following:
This chart/list is created by retrieving from the SMS database all of a user's assigned safety tasks in the SMS, including
Each aviation SMS is tasked with having an operational SMS, and not simply an SMS on paper. Having safety charts like this, which tracks:
An aviation SMS that is non-functional, and only exists as a showpiece, will feature assigned items charts that are mostly blank. In most cases, these shoddy SMS implementations will not even have the capability to easily track one's assigned tasks.
The accountable executive is responsible for ensuring the aviation SMS is properly implemented and performing in all areas of the organization. In order to determine the level of SMS performance, SMS documentation from the organization's risk management activities will be collected and presented to the accountable executive.
The accountable executive is responsible for reviewing organizational safety performance on a regular basis. SMS performance is usually measured by certain milestones and by reviewing organizational safety goals and objectives. Whenever safety goals and objectives are not being met, the accountable executive is in charge of directing necessary actions to mitigate the substandard safety performance.
Assigned task charts like the one presented at the right allow individual employees to monitor their own performance. The SMS database will then aggregate individual safety performance to generate reports of organizational safety performance. This chart serves as a reminder for employees of their assigned tasks.
A couple of similar charts that provide further aviation risk management insights are:
For more resources about improving aviation risk management efficiency, you will find these workflows helpful.
Workflows are important to document your SMS program.
Last updated November 2024.