HOWE Q. WALLACE BLOG

10 Commitments

One of the questions you are asked each year in our annual plant survey is whether you are clear about what is expected of you.

Years ago, when I was an HR Pro, I worked with supervisors and managers to find a way to summarize what we look for from our employees.  We came up with a list of 10 Commitments that we would like each team member to embrace. You may have seen them printed up somewhere in your facility.

We have had many people join our team since I last shared these.

10 COMMITMENTS

  1. No Shortcuts

We will teach you the safe way, provide you safe equipment, fix it when it breaks. Do it right and safe.

We need to look at each commitment as a contract between the company and the team member.

We will teach you the safe way says the company is committed to a good safety orientation and meaningful training as the team member comes into the job.  It should be a given.

So, before we can expect no shortcuts, local management has to accept the accountability to make sure everyone starts work with the right training and understanding.

In the midst of the training, we are assuming our equipment is safe.  When it is not, we are committed to changing the unsafe condition as quickly as possible.

So, we provide a safe environment and the knowledge necessary to operate safely within it.  What is left is the team member’s commitment to do things the way they have been taught.

Our two major sources of injury are new people who don’t know what to do and get injured before experience teaches them the risks and experienced people who trusted their abilities more than safe procedures and are injured as a result.

When it comes to safety, no shortcuts should be a demand, not a desire.

  1. Safety Freeze.

Watch out for others, guide and teach “rookies,” hold others accountable for safe practices.

  1. On-time and Quick Start

Be there, start timely.

  1. Work Smart-Technique and Consistency

Learn the right techniques and work at a consistent pace.

  1. Work Hard-Strength and Speed

Build endurance and push for faster production

  1. Teamwork

Teammates support, co-operate, encourage and motivate each other. Be a good team member.

  1. “Customer Quality”

Know your customer and exceed their expectations.

  1. 100% Uptime

Learn to understand your tools and machines. Maintain them. Report little things before they become big.

  1. Lean and Clean.

To run lean, we must have good housekeeping. Keep your area clean.

  1. Better or worse?

If you are not moving toward excellence, you are drifting toward mediocrity.