Root Cause Analysis to Behavior Level

Contracting businesses and projects always have problems.

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What’s important is that a team develops the skills and routine habit for continuously improving (PDCA).  When troubleshooting a problem it’s important to do Root Cause Analysis (RCA) so that you aren’t just putting a band-aid on it.

Leadership Tools: Root Cause Analysis down to Behaviors. Taking troubleshooting down to behaviors and focus on developing a culture of behaviors.

Root Cause Analysis; also called “5 Why’s” dives into

  1. What happened?  The undesirable outcome.
  2. How did it happen?  Process, controls, etc.
  3. Why did it happen?  Contributing factors including culture, competency, behaviors, etc.

There are lots of elements to RCA as NASA outlines.

RCA is a major element of the Last Planner System and the Rapid Learning after evaluating the PPC on the weekly work plan.

As you are doing your own Root Cause Analysis look at the underlying behaviors that allowed the problem to happen or heavily contributed to it.  

If you do this a half-dozen times looking back at project or company problems you will start to see recurring themes in behaviors that contributed to an undesirable outcome.  

After you get there do a few things:

  • Look at your values.  Are they defined as behaviors - “I will…” type of statements?  
  • Are they the opposites of the bad behaviors that contributed to the problems?
  • Do you have a good method of identifying these desired behaviors in your hiring process?
  • Do you have a good feedback system to reinforce the right behaviors?  
  • Are you leading by example?



Aligning Career and Company Trajectories
Alignment of the people and job roles within a contracting business is what creates the synergies (1+1=3). Alignment of career and business trajectories is what makes both sustainable.
Lean Principle - People First (Then Process and Tools)
To optimize productivity, a contractor must focus on their people first, then processes and tools including technology as an integrated management system with a hierarchy. This is not a linear process: S.M.A.R.T. Experiments + Continuous Improvement.
Who Holds What Risks in CMAR Project Delivery?
Construction is risky for all parties. Effective contracting for construction work is about assigning risks to those who are most capable of mitigating those risks. Compensation for the risks assumed must be appropriate.