SMS design is the foundation of your safety program. It is the Safety Risk Management pillar portion of the 4 Pillars of SMS.
When building your safety program, establishing a thorough, encompassing design will be the first major milestone of your SMS.
The design of your SMS is broken into five parts, following the SRM process:
The design of your SMS is the structure in which all SMS activities and performance will occur.
Designing your SMS program is an extensive project that will take many years. It’s also a responsibility that many safety managers struggle with because:
Fortunately, we have seen many aviation service providers implement their SMS design and see patterns in successful implementation. Here are best practices for SMS design:
Implementation plan checklists will help ensure that your SMS design is implemented without missing important aspects of the SMS. Continuous design updating ensures that your SMS design will always be up to date.
SMS performance is the conglomeration of outcomes of safety mitigation that the SMS design describes. Safety outcomes can be measured by the initial risk assessments of reported safety issues. More specifically, you will measure safety performance in your SMS with:
In terms of performance, your priority is that your KPIs are being reached, as they represent whether or not your safety goals and objectives are being fulfilled.
Outcomes of reaching your safety objectives and other mitigation efforts should be largely influenced by the design of your SMS. When aviation SMS designs are “fully implemented” but the performance of the SMS is poor, it indicates a faulty design.
SMS design and performance should be fairly in sync. A fully designed and implemented SMS should result in at least a moderate safety culture and moderate performance. It’s not uncommon for performance and culture to lag behind SMS design for some time.
However, once the design is fully complete and implemented, you should see a steady increase in safety performance.
Best practices for safety performance depend on several factors:
Some general best practices are:
The interaction of design and performance is summarized in the graphic to the right. This is an important structure, as it guides the design vs performance problem.
Here’s what this graphic describes:
Performance lock is an extremely important concept to understand when discussing the design vs performance problem. Performance lock is when SMS performance plateaus, and cannot improve.
Why does this happen?
For all reasons, the result is poor design update. As SMS performance will always lag behind the SMS design, if the SMS design is not continuously updated then the SMS performance cannot continuously improve.
What is the quality of your SMS and SMS design? Take this free quiz to find out:
Last updated May 2024.