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Watching crews treat the daily huddle like a waste of time drives me nuts

I've been running sites for about eight years now, and I keep seeing the same mistake. Supervisors skip the morning huddle or rush through it in two minutes, thinking it's just box-ticking. On a project in Tempe last year, a foreman said, 'We all know what we're doing, let's just get to work.' Two days later, we had a crane swing conflict with a concrete pour because the left hand didn't know what the right was doing. That ten-minute talk isn't about reading a schedule everyone has. It's about spotting the pinch points for that specific day, like a shared utility trench or a special inspection. When you do it right, you catch the small stuff before it becomes a two-day delay. How do you get your teams to actually see the value in it instead of just going through the motions?
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2 Comments
susan488
susan48829d agoTop Commenter
That Tempe story hits way too close to home for me.
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brookes37
brookes3729d ago
Ugh, yes! My crew did that and we had a total forklift fiasco, just like @susan488 said.
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