Practical HRO: Optimizing Operational Risk Management using High Reliability Organizing

Practical HRO: Optimizing Operational Risk Management using High Reliability Organizing

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Practical implementation for leaders of progressive companies looking to drive a culture of high reliability and high performance

Episode List

Teaching "An Introduction To HRO": Part 1 of 3

Jan 29th, 2021 10:00 PM

I was fortunate to have the opportunity to teach a class of Healthcare graduate students about HRO. I'm excited to bring this to the podcast. To make it manageable I divided this 90 minute introductory class up into a 3 Part Series.This Episode is Part 1. I take the class through a bit of history about HRO, as this gives important context as to why it's important an what it's about. From there the class learns the definition of HRO and we break that down to focus on the various aspects of HRO.Part 2 Takes the 5 Habits of HRO and defines them and looks at some practical aspects of them. Part 3 introduces some of the human-centric aspects of HRO and what is important in implementing  HRO concepts.

Happy Holidays! How HRO helps Santa and the Elves Deliver Joy

Dec 19th, 2020 5:00 PM

Every year, Santa is called upon to deliver the goods. This gripping expose' gives insight into the behind the scenes at the North Pole. In a slight tongue-in-check episode, we offer a collection of different HRO changes to consider, using Santa and his workshop to get you thinking outside of the toy box.Practically speaking, HRO is hard.  There is so much to consider and the  challenge of knowing what effort makes the most sense first can seem as daunting as the mall the day before Christmas. Well, sit back, grab a hot cocoa and some cookies and listen to how Jolly Ole Santa Claus has built a High Reliability holiday juggernaut and give some thought to what to ask Santa for Christmas.This is the season finale for this year. Many of you might be looking at some form of High Reliability implementation in the New Year and like many leaders are having a hard time identifying what’s your next (or first) step. I hope you enjoy today's season finale and all of this years episodes. Thanks to all the listeners and followers for helping grow our podcast this year. Next year is already taking shape.  Happy Holidays and Happy New Year!

There Is No Difference Between HRO and Failure

Nov 3rd, 2020 5:00 PM

Jeff Bezos may have coined the phrase "failure and innovation are inseparable twins", but Charlie d'Estries brings it full circle with his perspective that there is no difference between HRO and failure. In other words, Innovation and HRO both require failure.Charlie, scientist, businessman, entrepreneur and author, brings his renaissance perspective to HRO. He offers a fresh take on how failure makes people, and companies, better at managing risk.

HRO In Action - How Nursing Can Leverage HRO For Improved Outcomes

Aug 14th, 2020 8:00 PM

Nurses touch so many lives. They are the very front line on healthcare. They are the point at which hospital operations, risk management, and care giving come together. Their actions can literally be life or death, and certainly they are highly committed to the job they do and the folks they take care of (namely you and me).This episode discusses the 5 principles of HRO in the daily setting of an oncology hospital. The conversation focuses on the daily operational efforts of nurses and concludes with an example of how HRO can be applied to a nurses daily responsibilities.Thanks to Jacque Henry for her time and awesome stories.

HRO & Corona 1 Small Thing - Recognition

May 22nd, 2020 12:00 AM

Recognize: Recognize your people. Recognition positively impacts engagement. And right now, more than ever, an engaged workforce is your greatest asset and your best defense during this crisis.In the frenzy and the disconnect between how we are used to working versus how we are working, leaders are not devoting enough time to consistently recognizing their people that pulled together to reinvent and sustain operations under tremendous duress.We aren't talking about a strategic approach to managing a transactional rewards program that spits out trinkets and gift cards. We are talking about the real deal; the human act of personally singing the praises and acknowledging the invaluable contributions of individuals and teams that made the impossible, possible.  Let’s take a second to fundamentally make the hard-line connection between recognition and engagement through the lens of HRO. The down and dirty purpose of High Reliability Organizing is to avoid known and unknown catastrophic threats that could compromise operations and outcomes in complex, high stakes, fast-paced industries…healthcare, aerospace, and nuclear energy. Recognizing the power of engaged employees to protect the systems and processes that affect outcomes is at the heart of HRO. These are simple equations.Recognized employees are energized and engaged employees.Appreciative leaders are appreciated leaders. If you lead from your heart and your head through this crisis, you’ll emerge with an aligned and energized organization that is better prepared for whatever is coming next.  It doesn’t get any simpler than that.The question is “What do you want more of?” An old friend used to say that “more is better” and when it comes to “improving the function of your organization”, you set the expectation and tone for what you will get more of…Do you want more innovation, recognize it.Do you want more expertise, acknowledge the power of it.Do want a culture of engagement and proactivity, highlight it every time you see it. Great leaders speak the language of more.If you want your working culture to adopt an aptitude for continuous improvement, you have to cultivate, recognize and reward it. Challenge the entire leadership team to recognize and elevate your people, privately and publicly, in real and meaningful ways.Use your positions to raise others up. In doing so, you’ll improve the function of your organization. So, what you and your leadership team need to do is start is to schedule time to pop in to see every team and department across the organization, across all shifts. Come in early, stay late over as long as it takes. And when you get through every team and department, do it again. The goal is to recognize the expert contributions that teams or departments made throughout the transition that sustained operations or protected outcomes. Be specific. Plan to spend 30 minutes with the group. Find out what they need to succeed. Listen to them, support them, and thank them. Go into the experience with the intention of making a meaningful connection with the contributors, despite it being a group pow-wow.Here’s the moral of the story…High reliability organization’s develop repeatable systems, formal and informal, that reinforce operational excellence. Developing a culture of support and gratitude for one another starts with you popping in consistently to thank people for hard work and credible expertise that you can count on.In closing…Pull your leadership team together. Let them know that you expect praise to be free flowing across every layer of the organization. Together commit to promoting a recognition-rich culture.  

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