Quarry Southern Africa May 2019 | Page 41

INSIGHT saying there is a problem. When management has gone to great lengths to formulate a vision, developed a way to implement it, started a laboratory, but they do not listen when lab staff report problems, they could just as well have saved the initial costs and time invested. Staff must feel free to report to management and to discuss with management when they identify a quality problem. More importantly, they must have the confidence that management will act on their communication. If this confidence does not exist, after a while the technicians and operators will just keep quiet and allow poor quality to go through because they believe management is not committed to quality. If for any reason at all you are going to allow substandard quality to go through, you must explain the reason to the staff. Otherwise they are going to reason that you are not serious about your commitment to quality. Interdepartmental communication There is an often- overlooked third channel of communication: between staff in various departments. Usually, interdepartmental communication takes place on management level only. This is a mistake. If staff from one department understand the challenges that staff in other departments face, they are often willing to make adjustments in their own actions to mitigate the other department’s challenges. This is where we come back to Maxwell’s “interaction fuels action”. Effective communication on this level solves problems quicker because they do not first have to go up the management chain, and back www.quarryonline.co.za  QUARRY SA | MAY/JUNE 2019_39