How To Improve Team Performance by 25%

How To Improve Team Performance by 25%

Twenty five percent is not a small number, definitely not a marginal gain! It’s a huge uplift, achieved through the application of a single team habit. The use of After Action Reviews.

?

After Action Reviews, (AAR), sometimes referred to as Retrospectives in the language of agile planning are a post-mortem review of team performance designed to generate feedback and aid collective learning.?With their roots in the military, AARs are increasingly being used in medicine, business and other organizational settings.

?

The 25% figure in the headline comes from a 2013 Meta-analysis of the performance benefits of using an AAR[1]. The research reviewed 46 studies, encompassing 546 teams, and found an average 25% performance effect compared with the control conditions. But despite the potential gains, AARs in reality are not widely used, even in the military and even when they are, there are significant challenges to getting them right.

?

The ability to adapt and to learn requires a feedback loop. This maybe instinctive to an individual but collectively, for a team, this is much harder. The truth is that most teams don’t learn how to evolve retrospective observations into improved future performance. Shared experience is no guarantee of shared wisdom. Plotted on a graph, an average team’s performance typically has peaks and troughs, which often represent key individuals moving on, taking their expertise with them and leaving the team struggling to fill a knowledge or skills gap.

?

From running and observing hundreds of AARs here are some of the challenges to reaping the (very significant) potential rewards of doing this well.

?

Too blind.?You have to notice and pay attention. Observation, equals the data in the system, if leaders and team members don’t notice you either have no data or poor-quality data. The power to notice is a leadership and team super-power that like any skill has to be developed.

?

Too late. The AAR needs to take place in near immediate proximity to the performance event. Aircrew and Special Forces teams return from the mission and immediately go into a de-brief. The mission is considered incomplete until this is done.

?

Too long. This is an acute challenge in business where the limiting resource is nearly always time. If an AAR takes too long, we simply won’t do it because we don’t feel we have time. In business it has to take place in minutes and it has to fit into the seams of a normal working day.

?

Too much. The point of the AAR is to identify lessons that we can apply to our performance. The problem is that identifying lessons and learning lessons are not the same thing. The former is easy, whereas learning lessons, the actual process of change and application is hard. The main barrier is focus. It’s not very useful to identify five things that could be better because we can’t focus on 5-things. The key is that you must define a single point of focus. There might be 5-things but you can only pay attention to one of them at a time.

?

Too disconnected. The end becomes the beginning. AARs work when the intention at the end of the AAR – a commitment next time to pay attention to the 1-thing is used pre-mortem to focus attention. This might be a 2-minute huddle, ‘we are about to do another of these things, last time we identified that to improve we should focus on x. What do we need to pay attention to now in order that x is done better?’


[1] Tannenbaum, S. I., & Cerasoli, C. P. (2013). Do team and individual debriefs enhance performance? A meta-analysis. Human Factors, 55,231–245



Andrew McInerney

NED and CEO / COO / SRO / Director

1 年

Brilliant pithy summary and calm to action. Thanks Dan.

回复
Dominic Whyte

Principal Consultant

1 年

great read - good to see Tannenbaum referenced. Getting the psychology of the AAR right is key to delivering a successful AAR.

回复
Euan Grant

Currently: Contributing Writer, United Kingdom Defence Forum and TV and radio broadcaster on geopolitical transnational organised crime; 2018 - Senior Fellow, Institute for Statecraft, London UK

1 年

It will be very interesting to see the organisations responding to and recognising this invaluable posting, Daniel. And perhaps more importantly, those who do NOT.

回复
James Cay

Procurement, Supply Chain, Operations

1 年

Good read thanks Dan ??

Dave Stewart

Helping chief execs build highly effective teams. From concern to collective competence. Team Effectiveness Accelerator programmes that help teams nail operations and give legs to strategic ambitions.

1 年

Great post, as always Daniel. We did work with an Ambulance Trust to help them conduct AARs. Whilst this was successful internally, the key issue that arose was the need to be able to do this across all agencies attending a major incident (e.g. multiple motorway pile up). And you guessed it. Police, Fire & Rescue, Ambulance, HART etc..are pretty much on constant call out to other incidents. And so the opportunity for collective learning, let alone their capability to facilitate this successfully and honestly across different cultures and professional pride barriers (regardless of the advancements made via JESIP, JDM etc..), is pretty slim short of a major public inquiry into when things go badly wrong. Too late of course.

回复

要查看或添加评论,请登录

Dan Simmons的更多文章

  • Letting Go Of A Useless Thing

    Letting Go Of A Useless Thing

    B Sqn 22 SAS have a long running game involving a large rock they call the ‘pill’. The object of the game is to smuggle…

    20 条评论
  • How to be a world class failure

    How to be a world class failure

    Are you good at failure? As a team or as an individual it’s likely you find this an odd question. It’s also likely that…

    3 条评论
  • An SAS Definition of Leadership

    An SAS Definition of Leadership

    David Gilbert-Smith was an exceptional Rugby player with caps for Scotland who went on to serve as an army Officer…

    17 条评论
  • The Best Leaders Spend More Time Developing than Judging

    The Best Leaders Spend More Time Developing than Judging

    We have been working with several groups of leaders recently who are in the midst of the annual cycle of performance…

    2 条评论
  • Accidental leadership – un-bundling the app

    Accidental leadership – un-bundling the app

    For most leaders the process of becoming a leader is accidental. You start a career and build technical competence.

    7 条评论
  • Lest we Forget - What?

    Lest we Forget - What?

    ‘Its not so much lest we forget, as lest we remember. Because you should realise the Cenotaph and the Last Post and all…

    11 条评论
  • Do You Know Any Good Stories?

    Do You Know Any Good Stories?

    Amos was an old Askari, a night watchman in the highlands of Kenya. He told me once how electricity had come to their…

    3 条评论
  • Good Teams Are More Than the Sum of The Parts

    Good Teams Are More Than the Sum of The Parts

    Have you ever wondered if your team is any good? Not just competent or functional but actually good, in the sense of…

    1 条评论
  • Face to Face = Better Teams

    Face to Face = Better Teams

    A good habit of British Army Regiments is the informal convening power of the Officers’ and Sergeants’ mess. Mid-…

    10 条评论
  • Call of Duty?

    Call of Duty?

    ‘We never fail when we try to do our duty, we always fail when we neglect to do it’. Baden-Powell 'Call of Duty' is a…

    2 条评论

社区洞察

其他会员也浏览了