What to do when Employees are not following Instructions

T

TSCoord

First I will give you all some back history. Our organization is ISO/TS registered and has several well established procedures, forms and instructions in place for training.

However, my question is, how do you (as a quality professional) ensure that the employees are following the controlled documents and what do you do if you find that they skipped a step?

We currently issue CARs if they ignore a step, but the general response I get in those CARs is "I don't use the instructions anymore, now that I'm trained." The employees that made a recent oversight in our company are two senior engineers who know the process, but choose to not follow it.

Any thoughts on how you would handle this, would be greatly appreciated.

Thanks:confused:
 

John Broomfield

Leader
Super Moderator
Re: Not following instructions

First I will give you all some back history. Our organization is ISO/TS registered and has several well established procedures, forms and instructions in place for training.

However, my question is, how do you (as a quality professional) ensure that the employees are following the controlled documents and what do you do if you find that they skipped a step?

We currently issue CARs if they ignore a step, but the general response I get in those CARs is "I don't use the instructions anymore, now that I'm trained." The employees that made a recent oversight in our company are two senior engineers who know the process, but choose to not follow it.

Any thoughts on how you would handle this, would be greatly appreciated.

Thanks:confused:

nsymon,

You could ask the operators, team leaders and supervisors how they monitor and correct processes (per 8.2.3). You could capture that monitoring process in a documented procedure with the agreed rules for invoking corrective action.

Quality can then rebuild its independence for auditing the effectiveness of the monitoring process.

Best to get Quality out of the supervision role if possible.

You could work with the people concerned to mistake-proof the task instead.

John
 
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This usually happens when the procedure is not streamlined.
People , like water, will follow the path of least resistance.
Our goal is to make sure that the path of least resistance is the 'right way'.
Find out why the step was skipped and see if there is another way to incorporate it. Maybe later in the process where it 'fits better', or maybe there are redundant actions going on.
Asking these people to help redesign the process steps makes them invested in outcome, and more likely to produce a better and more efficient process.
 
W

Wilderness Woody

....
Asking these people to help redesign the process steps makes them invested in outcome, and more likely to produce a better and more efficient process.

Get some credit for process improvement when you can!

However, if the process is correct and the staff do not follow, then discipline actions need to go into effect as a last resort.

:2cents:
 

Wes Bucey

Prophet of Profit
First, it is impossible to discipline an employee if you don't have authority in the hierarchy to do so. Sending N/C (nonconformance reports) and requesting CAR (corrective action reports) from a guy who told you flatly he didn't do it on purpose is like putting lipstick on a pig - it ain't pretty and it irritates the pig.

The Deming way is to assess whether the missing step is actually necessary or just a holdover from another time. If it is REALLY necessary to assure conformance of the product or service and meet customer requirements, then someone in management slipped up in training the folks who omit the step. The slip up was either in not making its necessity part of the curriculum or in not assuring the students understood and would follow the necessity, thus certifying a student as "trained" when in fact he was not.

So if it is necessary, then you need to pick on the trainer who certified these guys as "trained."

If it is not necessary, then get rid of the step.
 
K

KnoKsuKaO

We have the same problem.
Our middle management is sometimes behaves in an uncontrolled (spontaneous).
We do not want to solve financially, but we still have not found out how else.
And we are a small company.
 
R

Rashmi001

Can the instructions/procedures be formatted into a very easy to read and visual process map- with critical steps highlighted?
Then it may be easier for most staff to follow.
 
K

kgott

First I will give you all some back history. Our organization is ISO/TS registered and has several well established procedures, forms and instructions in place for training.

However, my question is, how do you (as a quality professional) ensure that the employees are following the controlled documents and what do you do if you find that they skipped a step?

We currently issue CARs if they ignore a step, but the general response I get in those CARs is "I don't use the instructions anymore, now that I'm trained." The employees that made a recent oversight in our company are two senior engineers who know the process, but choose to not follow it.

Any thoughts on how you would handle this, would be greatly appreciated.

Thanks:confused:

The only thing I would add to the advice you have been given is to ask the question, 'were the employees concered involved in the planning and design?' of the correct or agreed way to do the work?

If not, perhaps you might like to consider inlcuding their participation in the design stage. People will support something they had a hand in creating.
 
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