Operational Excellence Begins with Elimination, Not
Addition
Why Great Maritime Leaders Know What to Remove
Executive Subtitle
In shipping, success is often attributed to better
technology, more procedures, or additional resources. Yet many operational
failures arise not from a lack of systems, but from unnecessary complexity.
Great maritime leaders understand that operational excellence begins with
disciplined elimination.
A Vessel Rarely Fails Because It Did Too Little
Imagine a dry bulk vessel approaching a congested discharge
port.
The Master is coordinating with the pilot, the bridge team
is navigating heavy traffic, the engine department is preparing for
manoeuvring, and the operator ashore is responding to charterers, agents,
owners, and cargo receivers.
At the same time, emails continue to arrive, duplicate
reports are requested, phone calls interrupt critical planning, and everyone is
trying to satisfy every stakeholder.
Nothing appears seriously wrong.
Yet this unnecessary complexity gradually increases
workload, distracts attention, and raises operational risk.
In shipping, accidents and commercial losses are often
caused not by one major mistake, but by too many unnecessary demands competing
for limited attention.
The Hidden Cost of Saying "Yes" to Everything
Many maritime organizations believe improvement means
adding:
- More
procedures
- More
reports
- More
meetings
- More
approval layers
- More
checklists
- More
performance indicators
Each addition may appear reasonable on its own.
Collectively, however, they create operational friction.
Every additional requirement consumes one resource that can
never be replaced:
Attention.
Attention is one of the most valuable resources on board a
vessel and within an operations office.
When it becomes fragmented, judgement begins to suffer.
Operational excellence is therefore not simply about
introducing better systems.
It is equally about removing activities that no longer
create value.
Clarity Before Action
Experienced Masters never alter course without first knowing
the intended destination.
The same principle applies to leadership.
Before introducing a new procedure, report, or operational
initiative, leaders should ask:
What operational objective are we trying to achieve?
Without clear objectives, organizations continue adding
processes while losing sight of the outcome they were designed to improve.
Whether the objective is safer cargo operations, reduced
bunker consumption, improved schedule reliability, or fewer claims, every
decision should support that objective.
Clarity must always precede elimination.
Not Every Operational Request Deserves Immediate Action
Ship operators receive hundreds of emails every week.
Crew members respond to multiple inspections.
Superintendents manage technical issues across entire
fleets.
Charterers request additional updates.
Agents seek urgent confirmations.
Every request appears important.
However, experienced professionals recognise an important
distinction:
Urgent is not always important.
Every new request should be evaluated against one question:
Does this improve safety, operational performance,
commercial outcomes, or regulatory compliance?
If the answer is unclear, reconsider whether the activity
deserves immediate attention.
Protecting focus is itself an operational discipline.
Leadership Means Selecting Priorities
One of the greatest responsibilities of a Master,
Superintendent, or Fleet Manager is deciding what deserves the team's
attention.
Leadership is not about keeping everyone busy.
Leadership is about ensuring everyone is working on the
right priorities.
For example:
During cargo operations, unnecessary administrative requests
should never distract officers from cargo safety.
During pilotage, bridge teams should remain focused on
navigation rather than responding to routine communications.
During machinery troubleshooting, engineers should not be
overloaded with avoidable reporting requirements.
Good leaders remove unnecessary pressure before asking teams
to deliver exceptional performance.
Simplicity Is a Risk Management Strategy
Bridge Resource Management teaches us to minimise
distractions during critical operations.
Engine Room Resource Management follows the same principle.
Why?
Because human attention is limited.
The more unnecessary interruptions introduced into an
operation, the greater the probability of error.
This principle extends beyond navigation.
Simple communication reduces misunderstanding.
Clear reporting reduces mistakes.
Well-defined responsibilities reduce duplication.
Operational simplicity strengthens situational awareness and
supports better decision-making.
Removing unnecessary complexity is therefore not an
administrative exercise—it is an essential component of maritime risk
management.
Commercial Performance Also Depends on Elimination
Commercial success is not achieved solely through higher
freight rates or lower bunker prices.
It is also protected by disciplined operations.
Removing unnecessary delays improves voyage efficiency.
Eliminating duplicate reporting saves valuable operating
time.
Reducing communication gaps prevents disputes.
Standardising operational processes lowers the likelihood of
claims.
Protecting focused planning improves schedule reliability.
Every unnecessary activity removed creates additional
capacity for work that directly supports commercial performance.
Sometimes the most profitable decision is not introducing
another process.
It is removing one that no longer serves the business.
Practical Framework for Maritime Professionals
Masters
- Protect
bridge team focus during critical operations.
- Challenge
unnecessary interruptions.
- Prioritise
safe navigation before administrative tasks.
Ship Operators
- Ask
whether every report genuinely creates operational value.
- Reduce
duplicate communication between stakeholders.
- Protect
uninterrupted planning time for voyage execution.
Technical Teams
- Simplify
maintenance planning where possible.
- Remove
redundant approval steps that delay urgent decisions.
- Focus
documentation on safety and compliance rather than paperwork for its own
sake.
Chartering and Commercial Teams
- Share
only operational information that supports commercial decision-making.
- Avoid
unnecessary email chains.
- Maintain
clarity in voyage instructions and charter party communications.
Young Officers
- Learn
that professionalism is not measured by doing everything.
- It
is measured by consistently focusing on the highest-priority task while
maintaining safety and situational awareness.
Executive Insight
A sculptor does not create a masterpiece by adding stone.
He reveals it by removing everything that does not belong.
Maritime leadership follows the same principle.
Operational excellence is rarely achieved by adding more
procedures, more meetings, or more reports.
It is achieved by identifying what no longer contributes to
safety, commercial performance, or effective leadership—and having the
discipline to remove it.
The best shipping organisations are not necessarily those
that do the most.
They are those that have the clarity to focus only on what
matters most.
In maritime operations, simplicity is not the absence of
discipline. It is the highest form of operational discipline.