Rank: Forum user
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Each month I put together a set of kpis for the directors for health and safety for the whole company. My director now wants a seperate one for our main distribution warehouse.
Can anyone give me ideas of what to include so that I can add to what I've already got in mind.
I'd be grateful for any help here x
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Rank: Super forum user
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I'd start by asking what are the main things in the warehouse that you are concerned about or want to improve and then construct indicators to measure those.
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Rank: Super forum user
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Hi Lisar
Lost time accidents inc number of days etc; other accidents; riddors; near misses; internal and external audit reports (number of N/C's) and findings etc; sickness/absence; training carried out; stop call waits; risk assessment reviews due and done; PPE audits; vehicle safety/driver safety audits; any other stuff such as LOLER inspections, Legionella, fixed wiring, any interventions by HSE etc.
HTH
Stuart
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Rank: Super forum user
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As above +
Possibly something around training ie planned training v actual training.
Chris
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Rank: Super forum user
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http://www.stepchangeins...ion.cfm/publicationid/26
This might help as the back pages give you a bit of a pick list...
There are lots of things to go at in the warehouse environment if you have site walkrounds by managers that can be tracked, racking inspections/failures, MHE pre-use inspections...to name but a few as well as other usual H&S. You will be aware of HSG 76 perhaps using the basics from there as a guide might help.
Have a good weekend...
Steve
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Rank: Super forum user
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Reporting on KPI's, Lost day cases, accidents, training needs, any H & S issues improvements, PPE, internal audits etc
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Rank: Super forum user
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lisar, if KPIs are a measure of performance it would be quite useful for your Director to articulate what performance standards are expected from the warehouse. What you (and all of us here) think is important may be different to that which your Board wants to know.
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Rank: Super forum user
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Thanks for the link Steve
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Rank: Super forum user
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David Bannister wrote:lisar, if KPIs are a measure of performance it would be quite useful for your Director to articulate what performance standards are expected from the warehouse. What you (and all of us here) think is important may be different to that which your Board wants to know.
I'm in agreement with David - it's nonsense management asking you to pick the KPIs - that requires you to define what matters to them - it's like you deciding what he wants for lunch. Management needs to define what matters, and then you need to figure out a way to measure it. To do otherwise is liable to result in measuring what's easy to count, rather than what is important.
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Rank: Super forum user
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achrn wrote:David Bannister wrote:lisar, if KPIs are a measure of performance it would be quite useful for your Director to articulate what performance standards are expected from the warehouse. What you (and all of us here) think is important may be different to that which your Board wants to know.
I'm in agreement with David - it's nonsense management asking you to pick the KPIs - that requires you to define what matters to them - it's like you deciding what he wants for lunch. Management needs to define what matters, and then you need to figure out a way to measure it. To do otherwise is liable to result in measuring what's easy to count, rather than what is important.
Would you expect management to have an in-depth knowledge of the myriad HSSE performance measurement information that could be useful to them? I wouldn't. We are the experts in our field, so we should be able to advise what metrics will help them better understand their business.
Management can set the tone, but I wouldn't expect them to necessarily explicitly detail which leading and lagging indicators they want to review!
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Rank: Super forum user
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Jake wrote:
Would you expect management to have an in-depth knowledge of the myriad HSSE performance measurement information that could be useful to them?
Err, no. Which would maybe be why I said "Management needs to define what matters, and then you need to figure out a way to measure it." I didn't say management should define precisely the indicator to be recorded. They should know enough to be able to define what matters, sufficient that someone can identify a way to measure that.
Jake wrote:
Management can set the tone, but I wouldn't expect them to necessarily explicitly detail which leading and lagging indicators they want to review!
Yes. Perhaps that's why I said "Management needs to define what matters, and then you need to figure out a way to measure it." I say again, management needs to define what matters. Picking the KPIs without management saying what they want is seriously backwards.
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Rank: Forum user
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Main problem is the term itself. What IS a 'key' 'performance' indicator exactly?
Most of the indicators suggested are either reactive and too random to assist in indicating anything (RIDDOR), or are actually measurements of activity (inputs) not performance (results). For example training.
I don't think you can get away from RIDDOR as we all use that, but it tends to only have relevance in larger populations - ie company wide not departmental (unless you have a lot).
I would be careful about providing or encouraging a long list from al those suggested, unless the production of these is not going to create a 'monster'. So what would be useful?
For example, the % of safety checks (lets keep it broad) carried out in the last . . . by the team leaders of the department. This implies that there is an allocation for which these supervisors are already held accountable. ('percentage of what' being the point.) This may be the opportunity to start something not yet in existence methinks? They could report back to the director individually or collectively at a management meeting. This also gives the director some evidence of their own involvement in safety monitoring and improvement should the HSE come knocking.
Whilst still measuring input activity, (their own) it could be turned towards the more proactive objectives of upholding safety standards, improving competency and culture and ownership of, and by, managers.
It does require a more qualitative approach - not just the metrics, but what did these checks uncover? What changes have been made or may be indicated?
This puts ownership within the department. Your role would be to help get this going, by guiding the setting of clear accountabilities (relating to objectives) and then working with managers to get their checks clarified, coaching them on what to look for or what to ask.
See the recent articles by Neil Budworth on measuring performance in SHP.
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Rank: Forum user
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Some very interesting posts on this subject and I have to agree with Jake's take on it.
I would set a very basic KPI for the board such as management/leadership engagement.
Get them out talking to the workers and hearing what they have to say regarding safety concerns and what they think is working well.
Lets say talk to at least five people during their safety tour and write up a short summary to share with the entire warehouse workforce.
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