Marty T Hawkins with Warehouse and Operations as a Career. I was asked again this week if becoming or
accepting a promotion to Supervisor was or would be a good move. It seems I’m asked that pretty regularly, so
I thought we’d talk about Supervision for a few minutes today. My answer is always unequivocally yes! I’m
probably wrong to say that but seriously, if that’s a part of our plan and
goals then we need to accept the position and enter into our new role with an
open mind and be willing to accept some corrective criticism and the all the experiences
of others. You’ll need to understand
that yes we understand the job and task we’ve been doing, probably can perform
it better than our previous boss but our new job may have very little to do
with that task and we’re going to be exposed to responsibilities and concerns
that we’ve never even imagined before.
Now management isn’t for everyone.
Just do to our life styles and our family responsibilities or maybe even
our present friendships with our peers.
I always suggest that we speak with our spouses and family before we
accept a role in management, their lives will be affected in some way as well,
maybe in small ways but I assure you they are going to feel that things have
changed. My experiences are in
Operations, Warehousing and Transportation, the distribution and production
environments. I’m not just talking about
the odd hours, or the many many emails and phone calls we may experience in our
new position either. We’re going to be
introduced to the logistics, planning and reason’s that things are done the way
they are. And we’ll now be responsible
for those outcomes. Be it expenses,
productivity, profit and loss, the safety of others and the growth of our
company and our employees. It sounds a
little overwhelming when I say it like that but honestly things are going to
change. And change for the good! If you’re a long time WAOC listener, you
already know that we’re all about advancement and our long term careers,
right? The front-line management
positions like Leads and supervisors are those first steps and they are, or I
feel that they are, the proper steps to advancing our careers. I hear from so many that are considering
taking those steps with questions like can you believe theirs a pay cut to get
a promotion, or something like I’ve been offered a promotion but they can’t
tell me exactly what the hours will be, or something like they expect me to be
basically on-call all the time. If you feel
this way I’d ask that you step back for a minute and think things through,
think about what your wanting down the road.
Remember, all those things are just what we’re use to, they’ve been a
part of our working lives since we’ve started working and that’s how we’ve
learned to think. Remember earlier I
spoke about entering our new role with an open mind? Rather think of it as what it is. Were accepting a new job, literally a new
job. Oh, it’s with the same company and
on the same floor, the same environment we go to everyday and around all the
same people we’re use to seeing but our job is different, and it comes with a
new pay program, new tasks and all new responsibilities. It’s as simple as that, we’re changing jobs
ladies and gentlemen. We’re very
fortunate though, it’s not like we have lost our old position and having to
seek employment though so we can keep doing what we’re doing and being very
successful at it. Or we can change jobs
and look at it as what it is, advancement and opportunity in a new field. We’ll be using the experiences we’ve learned
and applying them to our new Career.
pay is something we need to consider, that’s how we pay our bills and take care
of our families. A salaried position is
something we can’t break down into an hourly pay rate, don’t try to do it. I can almost assure you that your W2 at the
end of the year will reflect our promotion and additional earnings. Along with our salaried position may come
paid days off, maybe incentives or bonus programs or other small perks and
compensation. We’ve already learned that
we must enjoy our work, I use the word passion a lot, maybe passion is the
wrong word, but we do have to be enthusiastic about our job to be
successful. When we enjoy what were
doing those phone calls or additional odd hours won’t bother us at all. These kinds of things will affect our
families though. Being out to eat with them
and the cell phone goes off or with us needing to check our emails every couple
of hours. None of these things will
typically be required by our companies but you’ll want to stay in the loop, at
least to some degree so we’ll do it on our own.
After all this is just one part of our plan, a stepping stone to our
instructing a class next week on just these very subjects. It’ll be geared towards unloading Supervisors
and what some of their duties or responsibilities are and how they can prepare
themselves for those new positions. A
few of the more general thoughts will be on:
Manpower – In our new positions it’ll be our responsibility to schedule enough
employees to unload the freight, trailers, containers or loads each day. We’ll want to have all of our employees’
names and phone numbers on a roster sheet and be sure to keep that sheet with
us all the time. We’ll need that not
only for our Corp offices use but possibly for regulatory reasons too. We can use it for our evacuation plan or
headcount sheet if we ever have to go to our staging areas for fire, emergency
planning or weather concerns.
regulatory we’ll need to have and communicate that evacuation plan to our
employees. Any equipment certifications
too, we’ll need those filed within easy reach too incase of inspections or
this is a tough one for us, especially for young sup’s. We’re learning how to do our jobs, learning
how to manage cases, doors, dock flow and managing people. Its all to easy to just think our reporting
is a waste of time, I mean its just pieces of paper with numbers, is anyone
really looking at it anyway? Yes,
someone is, I assure you. Reporting can
be regulated by some agency, our companies’ accountants, our vendors or
customers even. Besides our management
and bosses have asked us to record it, it’ll probably give us some information
we can use and probably should be using.
I mean if its important to someone maybe we can learn something from it,
it’ll help us advance personally even.
this is a big one. We should always take
our start-up shift meetings seriously.
Not only for cost and loss reasons, but to protect our associates, we’re
responsible for their livelihoods now too.
If we see someone acting in an unsafe manner, even if it’s an old
friend, we have to intervein and put a stop to it. If a piece of equipment is not functioning properly,
we need to lock it out. Even if it’s
going to hurt our productivity, and who knows, maybe it’d be ok to use it for
the rest of the shift, it’s our responsibility not to take the risk. Lock it out and figure out a plan B ladies
and gentlemen, don’t risk an accident to your employees. Develop or enforce your companies Near Miss
program, if theirs not one, learn it and incorporate one of your own. Build a strong Safety Culture within your
shift. I’m a big advocate of a Safety
Committee too, it’ll help your employees understand they play a part in the reporting
and decision-making process when it comes to safety in their workplace!
– All so important. It’s important to
record it properly and notate any and all adjustments with your employee. It’s the law and honestly, it’s only
right. Be an employee advocate when it
comes to a person pay. Make sure they
understand their pay program and it’s our responsibility to ensure they receive
every penny they’ve earned.
Investigation – Learn and follow your companies’ procedures and processes. Its going to take time, you’ll need to stop
what your doing and properly fill out any supervisor sheets, make sure to get
the employees statement and any witness statements too. Take pictures, draw diagrams if needed. Give as much information as you can to help
health providers, your company officials and your employee. Know the phone number and address of your
emergency care provider and keep it with you at all times!
on for hours about the duties and responsibilities we’ll be learning once we
take that next step towards our goal of retirement, but I’ll just say that YES,
take that next step when the opportunity knocks. We’re in this game of life for the long
haul. If your enjoying your job in
operations now and like challenges and want more, seizes every opportunity your
presented with. And please share your success stories or even concerns with us
here at WAOC, just send us an email to
[email protected], we’d love hearing from you!
long time listener ask about our recording studio, and asked why our voices
changed sometimes. We’ll first off, we
don’t have a studio of any kind. We
typically record each episode at home but we’re on the road quite a bit
too. We’ve had to record from hotel
rooms, hotel lobbies, we’ve even recorded from a couple of convention
floors. I do try and make each show as
easy to listen too as possible. We do as
much with the background as possible but remember we’re all just a bunch of
Op’s guys sharing our experiences, not sound engineers or radio people. You may occasionally hear rain, garbage
trucks or lawn mowers in the background or even large crowds from festivals or
conventions. We try and give you the
information that’ll help you with your transportation and warehousing
careers. As long as your enjoying the
programs and we keep growing as a group we’ll keep trying to share that
information. All our guest volunteer
their time and we don’t accept any advertisements or affiliate links from
vendors either. We want to say what we
think and feel about things and not say what they’d request we talk about.
that being said I hope you enjoyed todays show and I want to wish you a Safe,
productive and prosperous week ahead!