How to Build Trust and Expertise with After Action Reviews (AARs)
Jake Mazulewicz, Ph.D.
I help technical experts prevent dangerous & expensive errors ? Human Performance / HOP ? Workshops ? Keynotes ? Event Reviews
Does your team learn primarily from successes or from failures?
Many leaders argue that their teams are just too busy to spend time discussing why a successful project went well. They just wrap up fast, then dive into the next project.
So, the unspoken insights and unwritten lessons learned from that project rarely ever get shared or discussed. Often, they just get forgotten in the frenzy of working project after project.
Would you hire an engineer to build you a bridge if all that engineer ever studied was how bridges collapse? Would you hire a recruiter to find you a job if all that recruiter ever studied was how people get fired?
The best leaders help their teams learn regularly from their successes, not just occasionally from their failures.
But learning from success happens automatically… doesn’t it?
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After Action Review (AAR)
Soldiers perform complex, dynamic, often dangerous missions. And they want to learn as much as they can from each one. In the 1980s, leaders in the US Army realized that they needed a practical way to help soldiers share the unspoken insights and unwritten lessons they learned from their missions. They realized that sharing tribal knowledge and applying tacit skill were key to winning wars. And since it was the Army, they developed a process -- a non-punitive, semi-structured, post job team debrief called an After Action Review (AAR).
After Action Reviews have proven so wildly effective that every branch of the military now uses them. And for some units like flight crews and Special Operations Forces, AARs are almost a religion. They’ve been called, “one of the most successful organizational learning methods yet devised.”
The process of leading a basic AAR is simple. Soon after your team completes a project, gather them in a private space for about 30 minutes, and ask these four questions:
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Why use these questions?
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Three Common Mistakes and How to Avoid Them
1. Successes vs. Failures
Some leaders do AARs only for accidents or errors. If you do that, your team will quickly associate AARs with failure. And they’ll give short, vague answers to get it over with as fast as possible. So, lead about 80% or more of your AARs for successful projects. That way, your team will learn to trust the process and value the results.
2. Now vs. Later
Unspoken insights and lessons learned are the most valuable things a team can discuss in an After Action Review. Those unspoken ideas have a half-life of hours or less. So, if you wait a day or more to lead your AAR, much of the priceless, unspoken wisdom will already have been lost, perhaps forever. So, lead the AAR as soon as the project wraps.
3. Leader vs. Facilitator
Most leaders like to answer questions. Usually that’s a good thing. But not in an After Action Review. If you give in to the temptation to answer the questions, you’ll shut your team down until the only person talking is you. So, in an After Action Review, remember that the leader is the person who talks the least. Choose your AAR leaders accordingly.
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If you want a low-cost, low-risk way to build trust and expertise on your team, you will likely never find a more practical method than leading After Action Reviews. If the US Army has used them for 40+ years, just imagine what kind of value they could create for your team.
Would your team benefit from using After Action Reviews?
~ Jake Mazulewicz, Ph.D.
Internationally experienced Human and Organisational Performance Specialist, Safety Culture, Safety Management for Resilience, Reliability, Organisational Learning and Human and Organizational Performance.
1 年The Pre-job brief gets you to discuss what you think you know and what you know you don't know, the post-job debrief will allow you to confirm or otherwise what you thought you knew, better understand what you knew you didn't know and if you are fortunate also teach you things you didn't know you didn't know. The wise words of Donald Rumsfeld. Thanks for the article Jake!
Dir. of Human Resources & Safety at Keane Thummel Trucking Inc.
1 年Always a good read Jake. Being successful takes practice.
Professional Mariner | USCG Master Unlimited Tonnage on Oceans | NI Dynamic Positioning Operator Offshore Unlimited
1 年Jake Mazulewicz, Ph.D.thanks for a great article. Like your early experience, my first exposure to After Action Reviews was in the fire service. As a newly trained firefighter, my department used AAR's after any structure fire or other significant event. (Although we called them "critiques", the purpose was the same.) One valuable aspect was that in a department of 25 or 30 members, maybe only 5 or 6 of us actually went to a structure fire. But, the AAR was shared and discussed with all members of the department. Everyone learned, not just those actively involved in the call.
I help technical experts prevent dangerous & expensive errors ? Human Performance / HOP ? Workshops ? Keynotes ? Event Reviews
1 年Hey Brian Fielkow, Ashley Waddey, Cara Johnson, Joe Estey, Bora ?ktem, Robert (Bob) Latino, James Junkin, CSP, MSP, SMS, ASP, CSHO, Jeff Dalto, Erick Rheam, John L. Sims Jr., MSN, RN, CNL, CMSRN, Phillip Harris, Eric Dick thanks for reposting! ??
I help technical experts prevent dangerous & expensive errors ? Human Performance / HOP ? Workshops ? Keynotes ? Event Reviews
1 年Thanks for reposting this Joe Estey. ??