A Supervisor’s Time Horizon

Morgan was complaining. “You have been talking about checklists and schedules as the core tools for Project Managers and Supervisors. It just doesn’t seem that hard. Why don’t my PMs get it?”

“Morgan, it’s not just a matter of training. Supervising and Project Management are clearly Strata II roles. The role is different and the people are different.” I could see Morgan was struggling with this.

“But, if I take my lead technician, why can’t he seem to put a schedule together?” Morgan was pushing back.

“Morgan, I want you to think of these two roles in terms of time span. The time span required for a technician may be as short as one day. A person doing the work may only have to think about the work that needs to be done today.

“But the time span required for a supervisor is longer. And the story doesn’t end with just scheduling. Scheduling responsibilities may only require a two or three week time horizon, but there’s more. Supervisors must also think about building bench strength, recruiting technicians, training technicians, testing technical competence, cross-training. For a supervisor to be successful, I usually look for a minimum three month time horizon. The supervisor needs to be able to work into the future, without direction, using their own discretionary judgment, on tasks that may take as long as three months to complete.” -TF

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.