2.6 WRITING THE REPORTfficeffice" />
ffice:smarttags" />2.6.1 The last stage of LOSA is a written report that
presents the overall findings of the project. With a large
database like the one generated from a LOSA, it is easy to
fall into the trap of trying to present too much information.
The author needs to be concise and present only the most
significant trends from the data. If the report does not
provide a clear diagnosis of the weaknesses within the
system for management to act upon, the objective of the
LOSA will be unfulfilled.
2.6.2 Writing the report is where “data smarts” enters
into the process. Although certain types of comparisons will
seem obvious, many analyses will be based upon the
“hunches” or “theories” of the writer. The usefulness of the
result has to be the guiding principle of this effort. If the
writer knows how fleets and operations are managed,
comparisons that reflect this structure can be made. If the
author knows the kinds of information that might be useful
to training, safety or domestic/international flight operations,
results can be tailored to these particular aspects of
the operation. Feedback from various airline stakeholders is
critical during this stage of writing the report. Authors
should not hesitate to distribute early drafts to key people
familiar with LOSA to verify the results. This not only helps
validate derived trends, but it gives other airline personnel,
besides the author, ownership of the report. |