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2 ++++++++++ How to Start a Fleet Safety Program Earn trust, get driver buy-in, and make safety stick

Programa sa Kaligtasan ng Fleet

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How to Start a Fleet
Programa sa Kaligtasan
Kumita ng tiwala, hikayatin ang mga drayber, at panatilihing ligtas ang mga ito

Gawin mo madali

1-877-732-4980 www.linxup.com 

Tungkol sa gabay na ito

Fleet managers know safety is important. According to our recent survey, 93% of fleet managers said their teams perform better when safety is a top priorityBut despite this, one-third of respondents don’t have a formal safety program.

The biggest barrier? Many fleet managers believe they don’t have the time,  budget, or buy-in to launch a program that works, and that they are able to  maintain.

Ngunit ang pagsisimula ay hindi nangangailangan ng isang perpekto at mahigpit na plano. Sa katunayan, maaari itong magdulot ng mas maraming pinsala kaysa sa kabutihan. Sa halip, ang paglikha ng isang programa sa kaligtasan na epektibo ay karaniwang nangangailangan lamang ng pagsisimula, at pagiging handang ayusin ang proseso sa proseso.

wattsmen logoWe partnered with Sam Watts, a longtime fleet safety expert and founder of Wattsmen Diesel Bahay to help you implement a safety program that works and is supported by everyone involved. Sam’s worked with fleets of all sizes to build safety programs that actually stick. He has been in the trenches with the day-to-day processes, performed safety audits, and created customized safety programs. With his help, we’ve pulled together the key questions you need to ask (and answer) to launch a program that drivers buy into, support staff can manage, and leadership can stand behind.

Tungkol sa gabay na ito

Pagsisimula

Ang matagumpay na pag-convert ng isang buong fleet patungo sa isang bagong programa sa kaligtasan ng sasakyan ay nangangailangan ng higit pa sa pagdaragdag lamang ng ilang makinang na bagong gadget. Nangangailangan ito ng malawak na paghahanda, pinong mga proseso, pagsang-ayon ng mga empleyado, at… pagkatapos ng lahat ng iyan, minsan ay nangangailangan pa rin ng isang makinang na bagong gadget, ngunit ang iba pang mga elemento ang talagang pundasyon.

In truth, a safety program can fail to take root even when equipped with  the ideal suite of tools and SOPs. Too often these programs are rolled out  in a single all-hands meeting with little notice and even less buy-in from  drivers, or they rely too much on data nobody knows how to interpret,  or they gain a reputation for being replaced every year anyway,  so why bother?  

Many of these plans are great on paper but never  make it past that kickoff meeting. And that’s too bad,  because a working safety program — defined here  as one that lowers incident rates and generally makes  organizations more pleasant to work for — is a priority  that 93% of fleet managers agree benefits their teams’  overall performance.

Nagsisimula ka man mula sa simula o nagpipino ng isang programa sa kaligtasan na gumagana na, tinatalakay ng gabay na ito kung paano:

93%
of fleet managers  agree a strong  safety program  improves team  performance.

Pagsisimula

mottoSino ang ating mga tagapagdesisyon?

Even the most expertly-crafted vehicle safety program is unlikely to make much of an impact if your safety director is the only one interested in professing its virtues.  

Your program (or any program, really) needs organizational buy-in before it can ever take shape.  

Karaniwang nangangailangan iyon ng mga sumusunod:

pagruruta

Huwag kalimutan ang iyong mga driver

Drivers know where the near misses happen.  They know which policies are followed and  which tend to be fudged a bit, or ignored  outright. They’ll be the ones whose habits and behaviors are being asked to change.  

If you’re planning on implementing new software, tools, or processes that directly affect how drivers do their jobs, one might find it prudent to ask them how they feel about that. Always allow drivers to review training plans, pilot tech, and give feedback on new policies. You’ll get better ideas and better adoption.

Ano ang ating mga pangunahing prayoridad sa kaligtasan?

If you’re constructing a safety program that aims to monitor every behavior and eliminate every conceivable risk by adopting every feature seen in every  vendor demo, we’re going to strongly recommend you think twice. It’s not feasible, scalable, and you’re going to meet resistance from your team.

Safety programs that aim to tackle everything at once risk overwhelming staff  and confusing drivers who’d much rather just keep doing things how they’ve always been done. Rather than spreading a program too thin to do anything  well, narrow the focus a bit.

Suriin ang mga kahinaan ng iyong organisasyon

Ang bawat fleet ay may iba't ibang panganibfileAng mga carrier na dalubhasa sa long-haul trucking ay malamang na mahaharap sa ibang mga hamon kumpara sa isang lokal na operasyon na nag-aalok ng mga huling milyang dry van deliveries o isang negosyo ng serbisyo na nakatuon sa pagkumpleto ng mga trabaho sa isang araw. Kailangan mong malaman kung aling mga partikular na hamon ang kailangang tugunan ng iyong programa, na nangangahulugang suriin ang mga sumusunod:

  • Your own incident and claims data
  • Near-misses and driver-reported hazards
  • DOT inspection results and CSA scores
  • Industry benchmarks (as a reference, not a template)

For any safety program to really move the needle, it has to account for risks that are a) frequent at b) preventable. Armed with data from the sources above, see  which of these common safety concerns best fit that bill for your organization:

  • Speeding and harsh acceleration
  • Distracted driving (phones, in-cab screens, fatigue)
  • Following distance and tailgating
  • Improper securement or load balance
  • Backing and low-speed maneuvering
  • Hours-of-Service compliance and fatigue management
  • Injury prevention on loading docks or warehouse yards

Kung 80% ng iyong mga insidente ay may kinalaman sa mga banggaan ng likuran sa mga yarda, huwag mong gugulin ang lahat ng iyong oras sa...asing harsh braking events. Focus on what’s hurting your people, your equipment, or your reputation the most. Picking 2–3 safety priorities help everyone stay aligned — and lets you prove quick wins that build momentum for bigger changes.

Ano ang ating mga pangunahing prayoridad sa kaligtasan?

Ano ang plano natin para sa pagsasanay sa mga empleyado tungkol sa mga bagong patakaran?

martilyoMalamang na ang iyong programa ay magbabago sa buong unang bahagi ng stagmga pagbabago sa pag-aampon nito, na ayos lang naman — masasabi naming walang programa sa kaligtasan ang makakagawa ng anumang tunay na epekto nang hindi muna humihingi ng direktang feedback mula sa mga drayber, kaya huwag mag-alala kung ang ilan sa mga mas detalyadong detalye ay teknikal na nasa beta pa rin.  

The important thing is to communicate any noticeable changes early on and give drivers and support staff a chance to be heard. Our recent safety survey revealed 84% of fleet managers believe their employees would openly embrace safety technology that works to protect them from harm — so long as they’re kept in the loop.

Don’t leave anyone wondering what procedures or tools are changing or (worse) questioning why these things need changing at all. Instead, make sure drivers and support staff understand the  goals of your program and feel confident using any of the tools required.

Mas madali ang buhay kapag nasa tabi mo ang mga support staff

Mapapansin mo na patuloy naming binibigyang-diin kung gaano kahalaga na makakuha ka ng suporta mula sa mga driver at support staff, at may mabuting dahilan ito.

Dispatchers and other frontline roles need to know how new tools work,  what kind of alerts or reports they’ll be dealing with, and how their conversations with drivers can better support safety goals (rather than  unknowingly undercutting them). If dispatch pressures a driver to ignore  safety guidelines or forgo using a new reporting tool, it’s doubtful drivers are going to put much faith in any proposed changes to safety SOPs.

For this reason, it can be helpful to designate someone on your team as the  go-to resource for any new technology or SOP you’re rolling out. It doesn’t  have to be an IT specialist, and it definitely doesn’t need to be a whole committee — just someone who communicates well and sees the  benefits of learning the system enough to help with questions.

Ano ang plano natin para sa pagsasanay sa mga empleyado tungkol sa mga bagong patakaran?

Bigyan ang mga tao ng pagkakataong magtanong

Here’s a pro-tip for encouraging employee buy-in: when presenting an organization-wide vehicle safety program that will almost certainly impact the daily routines of most in attendance, allot for plenty of time for questions and alalahanin.

Field those questions. Hear their concerns. Give everyone time to digest. Explain how you’ll be providing support. Make it clear this isn’t just a passing fad, it’s a priority that benefits everyone in the company, regardless of their role.

And when it comes to support, make sure any processes or technology you  choose also provides onboarding support so you can hit the ground running.  There are going to be questions you can’t answer, but look for products like Linxup that offer help in a way that works best for you and your team and  have Suporta batay sa US — helping you get resolution faster. Whether it’s chat, phone, or email, make sure you have access to ways to get technical help, even in off hours because odds are, problems are going to pop up  when it’s most inconvenient for everyone.

Magbigay ng pagsasanay na "nakakapit"

Mas malamang na makisali ang mga tao sa isang programa sa kaligtasan kapag naiintindihan nila kung bakit kinakailangan ang mga pagbabago sa mga kasalukuyang SOP at kagamitan.

Magandang panahon ito para sa pagsasanay na “show don’t tell” kasama ang totoong dating kasintahan.amples.  Use your own incident footage when possible (with identifying details removed;  public shaming isn’t generally a winning coaching strategy), and tailor example  scenarios to challenges relevant to your fleet (city driving, mountain grades,  tight docks and so on).

Strive to keep trainings hyperfocused on one safety component at a time — it’s  easier to recall a focused 10-minute training than a broad-spectrum 60-minute  marathon.

Pagdating sa pagtatatag o pagbabagoamping safety policies, use plain language  (“No texting while driving” beats “Drivers shall abstain from mobile communica tions while operating a motor vehicle” every time) and be sure they’re easy to locate (printed copies in trucks, access via app).

Anong mga kagamitan ang kinakailangan upang suportahan ang programa?

Walang shortage of safety tech out there; dash cams, sensors, alerts, apps, dashboards, AI-this and machine-learning-that. But the best tools aren’t necessarily the ones with the most features — they’re the ones your team will actually use.  

Rather than wasting time and energy (and, you know, money) on tools and systems for which your team has zero need, let’s break down the main safety tech categories and how to find which one best suit your needs. Everybody needs good dash cams.

Mga karaniwang kagamitang pangkaligtasan (ayon sa kategorya)

You don’t necessarily need all of these right from the jump, but its worth knowing which categories align most closely with your program’s primary goal.

  • Dash cams (dual-facing or road-facing): Help reconstruct events, coach   behavior, and (this is a big one) protect against false claims. Our recent   safety survey found 88% of fleet managers say dash cams helped reduce   or defend against accident claims, yet only 72% of companies currently   utilize dash cameras in work vehicles. 
  • Driver behavior monitoring systems: Track speeding, harsh braking, lane deviation, tailgating, and other unsafe driving habits (often through   telematics or integrated platforms).
  • Real-time alerts and coaching software: In-cab feedback to help correct   issues in the moment (e.g., following too closely, not wearing a seatbelt). Consistent ongoing driver coaching also lets you use data to show real trends   and behaviors that are problematic for safety and savings.
  • Telematics & GPS fleet tracking: Useful for route review, identifying   unsafe areas and measuring idling or time in high-risk zones.
  • Mobile apps for drivers: Give drivers access to safety scores, videos, and feedback in real time.
  • Learning Management Systems (LMS): Deliver and track training   across your fleet (often in bite-sized formats).

Anong mga kagamitan ang kinakailangan upang suportahan ang programa?

Which gear most directly addresses your pressing needs?

Suriing mabuti ang iyong mga pangunahing prayoridad sa kaligtasan. Malaki ang posibilidad na ang mga aspeto kung saan kailangan mong mapabuti nang malaki ay natural na magagamit ang ilang kagamitang pangkaligtasan:

  • Backing collisions? Check out dual-facing cameras, proximity sensors, or training modules.
  • Distracted driving? Could be a job for AI-powered dash cams   with real-time alerts.
  • Driver fatigue? Time to explore hours-of-service monitoring systems.

Let your priorities guide your tools, not the other way around. Otherwise, you’ll  end up with gear that solves problems you don’t actually have (which…actually  kind of creates new problems, if you think about it).

Tandaan na maraming tool sa pag-uulat ang naglalayong maging all-in-one na sistema. Ang mga ulat sa gasolina, DVIR, pagsubaybay sa maintenance, mga marka ng CSA, at iba pa ay kadalasang maaaring pagsamahin sa dashboard ng iisang sistema, na nangangahulugang isang login lang ang dapat tandaan at isang interface ang dapat matutunan, na maganda at hindi gaanong nakakapagod para sa iyo at sa iyong koponan.

Isama ang mga driver sa proseso ng pagsusuri ng tool

May isang simpleng paraan para maiwasan ang isyu ng pagbili ng mga tool na walang sinuman ang talagang gusto o gagamit: hayaan muna ang iyong mga driver na mag-demo ng mga ito at magbigay ng feedback.

Maybe the tool you’ve identified is a perfect fit on paper — but if the interface  makes no sense, or if drivers are irritated by its alerts and feel a strong urge to  fling it out of the cab at 65mph after less than a week of use, then it’s not a good  fit, simple as that. Tech is only valuable to your safety program if it gets used.

Kapag namimili sa mga tindahan, tanungin ang mga sumusunod:

  • Will this integrate with our current systems?
  • Can you help us customize the reporting to align with our biggest problem areas?
  • What’s your average client adoption rate after 90 days?
  • What support do you provide for rollout and training?
  • How do you handle false alerts or disputed events?

Paano natin masisiguro na ang ating solusyon sa teknolohiya ay tumutugma sa ating mga layunin?

You’ve tested some cool new safety tech, and your drivers have reached a consensus on which tools they like best — excellent! It’s all installed and integrated and ready to go — great news! But really, you’re just getting started.

It turns out access to raw data doesn’t actually fix bad driving habits, at least not on its own. To get the most out of your safety initiatives (including both tools and your program’s SOPs), you’ve got to make sure your entire team knows what success on this front actually looks like.

Tukuyin ang iyong pinakamahalagang sukatan

You zeroed in on your top safety priorities; now, pick 1 –2 key metrics for each to measure how your program is impacting those areas.

  • If your priority is distracted driving, track alert frequency from in-cab cameras or phone usage violations.
  • If your priority is following distance, track how often tailgating   alerts are triggered.
  • If your priority is backing collisions, monitor incident counts or near-miss reports in tight spaces.

You get the idea — whatever the priority may be, find a KPI that is   both trackable and actionable.

Subaybayan ang mga sukatang iyon sa isang dashboard

Karamihan sa mga vendor ay magbibigay sa iyo ng dashboard kung saan makikita mo ang higit paview ng datos na sadyang idinisenyo para makuha ng iyong napiling kagamitan.

If your dashboard isn’t helping you see whether the metrics selected above are trending in the right direction or identifying which routes/terminals need some extra attention, or flagging drivers who are increasinsa mapanganib na aktibidad, kailangan mong i-customize ang iyong view o kumuha ng bagong dashboard.

Paano natin masisiguro na ang ating solusyon sa teknolohiya ay tumutugma sa ating mga layunin?

Bukod pa rito, karamihan sa mga platform na ito ay nagbibigay-daan sa iyong mag-filter ayon sa terminal, grupo ng driver, tagal ng panahon, at uri ng event — gamitin ang mga ito upang i-filter ang anumang data na hindi mo kailangan. Kadalasan, ang mga interface na ito ay maaaring maging lubhang detalyado, ngunit kung isasaalang-alang ang malinaw na mga layunin sa kaligtasan at 1-2 KPI na napili nang maaga, maaari itong maging mas madaling matunaw.

Gamitin ang iyong dashboard upang matukoy at matugunan ang mga pangunahing alalahanin

It’s one thing to say, “Driver X had six harsh braking events this week.” It’s another to ask why — was it traffic? Bad routing? Tailgating? Poor training? Until you understand the why, the number doesn’t help you improve anything.  Our recommendation is to allow data to guide the following steps:

  • Focus weekly reviews on just one or two common safety issues
  • Look at broader trends on a month-to-month basis
  • Discuss these trends as a team, both positive and negative
  • Give driver managers clarity on where to focus their coaching
  • Give drivers insight into how they can improve and how you plan to help them

Train each group on what the data means for their role. This makes the program  feel like a team effort — not just something the safety department nags them  about.

Ang Linxup Coaching Dashboard lets you see what’s trending, where you should focus your training, and even set up reports to monitor progress over time based on your priorities. You can customize your view and track communication, so everyone is on the same page, all of the time.

Ayos lang kung magbago ang iyong pangunahing alalahanin sa kaligtasan

Maybe you kick things off with a company-wide focus on backing incidents.  Six months in, if that issue pales in comparison to some new hazard (like harsh  cornering), that’s good! It means your program is working and ready to evolve.

Balikan ang iyong mga sukatan kada quarter o kada dalawang taon upang matiyak na naaayon pa rin ang mga ito sa iyong pinakamalaking panganib at ayusin ang mga bagay-bagay nang naaayon.

Paano natin maihahanda ang mga kawani ng suporta para sa pangmatagalang tagumpay?

Sa ngayon, naitatag na natin kung bakit hindi sapat na basta ibigay lang sa lahat ang isang policy packet (o isang binder, o isang PDF attachment na malapit nang mawala magpakailanman) at umasa na maintindihan lang nila ito.

Long-term success comes from helping every branch of your organization understand what your safety program is about, and how they might play a role  in its execution. Cliche though it may sound, your org’s commitment to safety is only as strong as its weakest link:

modelo

Get serious about providing regular driver feedback

Don’t assume everyone knows how to take all the data fueling your new safety dashboard and turn it into productive conversations just because they’ve been promoted. Coaching is a skill just like any other, it takes training and practice  to consistently deliver driver feedback in the right way (the way that motivates  rather than demoralizes).

Start each day with a quick reminder of your primary safety focus, include a  short KPI report in weekly scorecards or staff updates, and be sure to celebrate  any relevant wins publicly (e.g., a full week without camera alerts, positive  driver feedback, or even an incentive like gift cards). This goes a long way  toward a) telling your team you’re serious about all this safety business and b) showing them you recognize the effort they’re putting in.

13 Paano natin maihahanda ang mga kawani ng suporta para sa pangmatagalang tagumpay?

Magtakda ng malinaw na roadmap para sa coaching gamit ang mga simpleng SOP

If everyone has to reinvent the wheel every time there’s an incident, it’s unlikely your desired safety changes will take hold for long. Building clear SOPs for  the following will go a long way towards supporting drivers and driver managers:

  • Handling a camera event or unsafe behavior report
  • Scheduling follow-up training or coaching
  • Documenting incidents and corrective actions
  • Escalating repeated safety violations

These will keep expectations for your drivers clear and coaching from your  support staff more consistent. Plus, continuous training, feedback, and  recognition keeps everyone informed that this renewed focus on safety  isn’t just some passing phase.

Creating scorecards (like with Linxup reports) highlighting milestones (like alert-free days or increased improvement percentages) help you re-inforce  the purpose of a safety program and boost overall morale on why everyone’s cooperation is important.

Paano natin masusubukan ang kadalian ng paggamit ng ating programa sa kaligtasan?

Isang aspeto ng isang programa sa kaligtasan sa pagtatrabaho na dapat banggitin sa modernong panahong ito ay ang kahalagahan nito na maging mobile-friendly; sa madaling salita, kung hindi mo mapapatakbo ang iyong mga kagamitang pangkaligtasan mula sa iyong telepono, mahuhuli ka. Ang tamang plataporma ay dapat magbigay-daan sa iyo na:

  • Review incidents and driver alerts in real time
  • Coach drivers from anywhere (even between stops)
  • Access video clips and GPS data on the fly
  • View safety scores and trends (without needing a desktop login)
  • Push training materials and updates out to drivers in seconds

Remember that all drivers come from an assortment of backgrounds. Some are  tech-savvy; others might use their smartphone primarily as a coaster. With that  in mind, your safety program and any of its associated tools, gadgets, or  software should be reasonably intuitive (that means no manual required).

This goes for your managers and dispatchers too; the more intuitive your  system is, the less training (and retraining) you’ll need. Before you buy any system, test it on your phone — or better yet, ask a less tech-confident  team member to do the same. If they can’t figure it out fast, move on.

Iwasan ang mga sistemang nag-aangkla sa iyo sa opisina

Legacy systems might have all the features in the world, but if they require local servers, desktop-only access, a VPN just to log in or (worse) a separate  app for every feature, you’re adding complexity where you need simplicity.

Modern fleets don’t operate from cubicles. Your safety tools should be cloud-based, mobile-ready, and built for a team that’s on the move. Plus, as a nice bonus perk, drivers tend to be more likely to engage with safety  programs and understand expectations when they can easily access their  own safety scores and complete training right from their phones.

Paano natin masusubukan ang kadalian ng paggamit ng ating programa sa kaligtasan?

How do we help drivers buy into a new program?

If drivers see your safety initiatives as little more than a surveillance system designed to micromanage or cut pay, those initiatives will fall flat pretty fast.

Let them give honest feedback and help shape the rollout. Explain how any new data will be used, and be upfront about what the tools do and why they’re needed.  

Transparency is the key — there should be no surprises when your safety program finally goes “live.”

Magbigay ng nakabubuo na pagtuturo There are right and wrong ways to give safety feedback. Public callouts, rushed conversations, and/or handing someone a printout with “coachable event” circled in red would be considered the wrong way.

Ang tamang paraan ay karaniwang kinabibilangan ng regular na naka-iskedyul na 1:1 na pagpupulong upang talakayin ang mga tagumpay at mga aspetong kailangang pagbutihin. Huwag basta mag-book ng 1:1 sa tuwing kailangan ng isang drayber ng kausap na kompanya, dahil mabilis nilang maiuugnay ang "coaching" sa pagiging nabibigatan. Sa halip, isaalang-alang ang mga sumusunod:

  • Shout out “incident-free” streaks or strong safety scores
  • Share positive stories from the road (e.g., a driver who avoided   a major collision thanks to textbook defensive driving)
  • Offer incentives for safe driving: paid time off, gift cards, company   swag, whatever you’ve got access to. Sure, this is getting a little close  to outright bribery, but when it comes to safety if it works it works

Gawing bahagi ng iyong gawain ang pagkilala, hindi lamang isang seremonya ng paggawad ng parangal minsan sa isang taon. Makinig ka May mga ideya, alalahanin, at pagkadismaya ang mga drayber, lalo na kapag ang kanilang mga nakasanayan at nakagawian ay naaapektuhan. Bigyan sila ng pagkakataong magbigay ng kanilang mga saloobin, maging ito man ay sa pamamagitan ng mga hindi nagpapakilalang survey o regular na pakikipag-usap sa mga kinatawan ng drayber at mga safety/ops.

If you want your safety program to take flight, here’s the key: act on what you hear.

Nothing erodes trust faster than asking for input only to ignore it. Keep your  coaching respectful and show genuine receptiveness to drivers’ concerns, and pretty soon drivers will start seeing the mutual benefits of a working safety program.

Paano natin matutulungan ang mga drayber na sumali sa isang bagong programa?

What are the most common safety program pitfalls?

Patibong #1: "Itigil na at kalimutan na"

You rolled out new training, installed cameras, sent out policy updates…  and then moved on to the next project. Programs that fizzle shortly after launch usually lack clear plans for ongoing coaching and follow-up, which inevitably  leads to an apathetic approach to any desired changes.

Paano ito ayusin: Build recurring safety check-ins into your regular operations,  including weekly huddles, coaching sessions, and driver feedback reviews.  Make it a habit, not a campaign

Patibong #2: “Ilalagay ko na lang sa teknolohiya ang problemang ito”

Technology helps, sure — but without the requisite buy-in from team members and a thorough exploration of the “why” discussed above, your safety program  risks resembling a surveillance system for drivers to resent. Introducing a new  

tool without a plan for training and adoption is also a really a good way to end up  with a mess of dashboards serving very little purpose.

Paano ito ayusin: Make sure your people are engaged from the start as you locate  which tools are worth investing in, and do your best to consolidate your tech  needs into as few logins as possible.

Pitfall #3: “I will only follow up on these safety changes  some of the time”

One driver gets coached for speeding; another does the same but no one follows  up. One fleet manager is strict, another doesn’t bother. This kind of inconsistency  makes any program feel arbitrary.

Paano ito ayusin: Use standard processes for flagging, coaching and documenting  events. Train managers across fleets and locations to respond the same way.  Safety programs should make enforcement of the rules fair and predictable.

Pitfall #4: “I’ll just assume everyone understands  and is on board with this”

Ang mga programa sa kaligtasan ay kadalasang dumaranas ng magkahalong mensahe, o pangkalahatang kakulangan ng komunikasyon. Hindi sinasabi sa mga drayber kung bakit may bagong patakaran, hindi naiintindihan ng mga kawani ng suporta kung paano gumagana ang mga kagamitan, naririnig lamang ng mga pamunuan ang tungkol sa kaligtasan kapag may nagkamali — lahat ng ito ay mga senyales ng pagkasira ng komunikasyon, na maaaring makamatay sa anumang inisyatibo na nais mong ilunsad.

Paano ito ayusin: Communicate constantly, in plain language and through multiple  channels — including meetings, text alerts, emails and app updates when  applicable. Make it clear that everyone is in the loop.

Patibong #5: Pagbalewala sa pananaw ng isang drayber

Ang paglulunsad ng mga kagamitan o patakaran nang hindi isinasangkot ang mga drayber ay halos palaging humahantong sa pagtutol. Sila ang mga nagmamaneho — kung hindi sila naniniwala, mabibigo ang iyong programa.

Paano ito ayusin: Involve drivers in demos, training design and policy development.  Let them help shape the program and reward their input.

Patibong #6: Pagsukat ng maling bagay

This bears repeating: if your program is built around collecting data no one understands or uses, it won’t help anyone (in fact, access to data you don’t use can even hurt you in  some cases). Make sure whichever measurement tools you use (including in-the-cab  hardware, software systems and your dashboard) align with your primary  safety objectives.

Paano ito ayusin: Limit your tracked KPIs to those few that matter most. Share them with  the team. Track progress on your dashboard and filter out all the other noise. Adjust  as needed.

Patibong #7: Pagtumbas ng coaching sa mga pasalitang pagsaway

Survey data reveals 73% of fleet managers believe drivers overestimate their own safety performance. That leaves a lot of room for improvement via smart coaching,  which drivers should (theoretically) look forward to since it helps them level up their  

skillset and improves their odds of returning home from every trip safely. However,  if “coaching” leads drivers to dread training or 1:1s, they’ll stop engaging.

Paano ito ayusin: Coach consistently, respectfully and privately. Be quick to recognize and commend improvement. Focus on problem-solving, not blame.

Tandaan na ang kaligtasan ay isang mahabang laro. Ang tagumpay o pagkabigo ay hindi nakasalalay sa pag-iwas sa bawat pagkakamali. Ang trabaho ng isang programa sa kaligtasan ng sasakyan ay tuklasin ang mga blind spot na talagang mahalaga, pagkatapos ay magbigay ng mga paraan upang ayusin ang mga ito at patuloy na sumulong.

How should the program’s success  be determined?

Your program doesn’t need to check every box on day one. In fact, you can still  expect some early hiccups in adopting and integrating these changes into your  org’s day-to-day, but with a solid plan in place you should see reductions in  speeding, harsh events, preventable incidents or other areas you’ve chosen to  emphasize within 30–90 days.

Perhaps the clearest proof of program success is whether those positive trends  endure. You’ve achieved success if, say one year from now, these changes are  no longer considered part of a “safety initiative” — they’re just a reflection of  how your team handles its business.

Buod ng paglulunsad ng programang pangkaligtasan:

  • You’ve identified your decision makers
  • You know your top safety priorities
  • You’ve built a plan for training and policy
  • You’ve chosen the right tools
  • You’ve aligned your tools with real goals
  • Your support staff is trained and ready
  • Your drivers are bought in
  • You’ve avoided the common pitfalls
  • You’ve defined what success looks like and how to prove it

Kapag nagtatrabaho ka gamit ang teknolohiyang iyon viewKung ikaw ay isang kasosyo, hindi lamang isa pang customer na kanilang tinitingnan paminsan-minsan, makakakuha ka ng tunay na halaga at mapapalaki ang mga benepisyo (at mga nadagdag sa kahusayan) na iyong makikita. Magkakaroon ka rin ng mga kagamitan upang mapanatili ang momentum, kahit matagal na matapos ang iyong unang paglulunsad.

Paano dapat matukoy ang tagumpay ng programa?

Improving vehicle safety with Linxup coaching sessions

Though building a safety program is no easy task, keeping it running is where fleets tend to need the most support. That’s why we built the Linxup coaching  dashboard — a simple, powerful way to help commercial fleets identify risky  driving behavior, track performance over time, recognize improvements and  reduce repeat incidents.

Our Linxup coaching sessions will also work directly with your safety team to:

  • Review your current setup
  • Identify and prioritize reducing your most urgent risks
  • Customize your dashboard
  • Build a plan that fits your fleet

Whether you’re rolling out a brand-new safety program or revampKung nawalan na ng sigla ang isang iyon, narito kami para siguraduhing didikit ito. 

Sino si Sam Watts?

Born and raised in the trucking industry, Sam Watts knows firsthand  what it takes to keep fleets safe, compliant, and running strong. As a fleet  safety expert and founder of Wattsmen Diesel House, he and his team provide  hands-on safety and compliance training for fleets of all sizes. Wattsmen Diesel  House helps fleets stay DOT and FMCSA compliant through safety policy  development and implementation, driver coaching, and scheduled safety  audits and inspections.  

Tinutulungan man niya ang mga fleet na magtatag ng isang bagong programa sa kaligtasan, binubuhay muli ang kasalukuyan, o pinalawak ang saklaw dahil sa paglago, ang misyon ni Sam ay lumikha ng matibay na pundasyon para sa isang kultura ng kaligtasan na mananatili.

Sino si Sam Watts?

Tungkol sa Linxup

Pinapadali ng Linxup para sa mga negosyong nakabase sa larangan na masulit ang kanilang mga sasakyan, kagamitan, at mga manggagawa sa larangan.

Linxup solutions connect through one easy-to-use app that centralizes  vehicle tracking, dash cam monitoring, equipment tracking, and tool tracking.  That means quick access to critical information to improve the safety, security,  productivity, and efficiency of every vehicle, asset, tool, and employee. Linxup’s  ease of use, fast onboarding, reliability, flexible terms, and U.S. based customer  support make our solutions ideal for small and medium-sized businesses, while  delivering the reliability and powerful insights required by larger enterprises.  

Based in St. Louis, Missouri, since its founding in 2004, Linxup is dedicated  to delivering useful innovation and personalized, US based coaching  and support to empower our customers’ success.  

Tungkol sa Linxup

Gawin mo madali

Mga Dokumento / Mga Mapagkukunan

Programa sa Kaligtasan ng Fleet ng linxup [pdf] Gabay sa Gumagamit
Programa sa Kaligtasan ng Fleet, Programa sa Kaligtasan, Programa

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