After Action Review (AAR) (Free PPT and PDF Download) (2024)

The After Action Review (AAR) is a simple and highly effective way to create a project report using action planning and issue analysis.

It's ideal when you need to unpick what really happened in a project and build learning to drive improvement.

After Action Review (AAR) (Free PPT and PDF Download) (1)

After Action Review (AAR) (Free PPT and PDF Download) (2)

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Objectives

  • To bring together the relevant people to understand what really happened.
  • To identify learning and use it, to continually improve.
  • To create a project report and develop an action plan with actions, owners and timescales to drive sustainable change.

When Would You Use It?

  • At the end meetings.
  • During and post change initiatives and projects.
  • To resolve complex customer complaints.
  • Can be completed in 5 minutes at the end of a team meeting or take up to 2 hours for complex topics – it’s the latter application that’s described here.
  • When you need to create a collaborative project report quickly.

Are There Any Rules?

  • Ensure ALL the right people in the room – these are those who played a key role in the project/change initiative/customer complaint.
  • Only disclose one question at a time.
  • A commitment to open discussion is needed – ‘the elephant in the room’ to encourage openness and honesty, may help!

Resources Required

  • A Facilitator – someone who can objectively and assertively lead the review, capture the key points and write them up on flip charts.
  • Flip chart paper, pens and something to stick them on the walls.
  • 1 sheet of flip chart paper for each question, using each question as a header – you’ll need lots more paper to capture all the input during the session.
  • A room with lots of wall space to stick up each flip chart as it’s written.

Ground Rules

  • Encourage a climate of openness and trust – based on the metaphor “there’s an elephant in the room” (a toy elephant in the room acts as a good prop for this).
  • Everyone is on equal footing i.e. no hierarchy.
  • Everyone freely participates.
  • There is no finger-pointing or blame apportioned.
  • What is shared in the AAR, is not attributed to a specific person, unless by agreement.
  • Focus on facts.

Roles & Responsibilities

Facilitator

Attendees

  • Does not provide any answers – complete objectivity is critical.
  • Ensures everyone’s view is heard.
  • Ensures no blame is brought to the process.
  • May be the team leader, a member of the team or depending on sensitivities, someone who has not been involved may be more appropriate.
  • Must ensure that the AAR addresses the ‘real’ issues by guiding the conversation to the ‘business in question’.
  • Those attending played a key role in the project/change initiative/customer complaint.
  • Drive the actions that result from the workshop.

Process

The discussion addresses 5 questions in sequence...

  • 1

    The Facilitator outlines the purpose of the activity – “to learn from and incorporate learning into future activities”.
  • 2

    The Facilitator outlines how the process will unfold, without sharing the questions and sets the Ground Rules (see separate slide).
  • 3

    The Facilitator asks the 1st question – “What was supposed to happen?” (i.e. what were the objectives). The Facilitator establishes how well the objective(s) were understood and capture all comments on flip chart. Place the flip chart/s where all can view.
  • 4

    The Facilitator repeats step 3 for four further questions:
  • “What actually happened?” to establish the facts about what happened in chronological order – the reality/ truth.
  • “Why were there differences?” to analyse and interpret the activities. Comparing the objectives to what actually happened is where the real learning begins. Successes and shortfalls are discussed.
  • “What can we learn?” to continue the analysis and interpretation.
  • “Who does what as a result?” to develop an action plan with owners, actions and timescales to sustain successes and improve upon the shortfalls.

Secret Sauce

  • In Question 2 strong facilitation is needed as participants are often keen to unwittingly deviate and provide answers to the questions that will follow.
  • Also be aware of reactions and emotions, as question 2 is where blame can start to appear.
  • Depending upon your business culture, be careful about mixing seniority of staff. It may prevent disclosure of information.
  • For an AAR to be successful, it’s ESSENTIAL that:
  • Everyone involved in the event freely participates.
  • Everyone is on equal footing i.e. no hierarchy.
  • There is a climate of openness and trust.
  • There is no finger-pointing or culprit blaming.

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About the Author

Fiona delivers a blend of soft and hard skills to accelerate performance improvement. Results include culture change, operational change, facilitation and executive coaching. Her company Valuing You can be found here.

  • After Action Review (AAR) (Free PPT and PDF Download) (5)Ginger Adams says:

    at

    Fiona, I reached your web site through a LinkedIn post in an Int’l Assn of Facilitators forum. Thanks very much for the AAR outline!

    Reply

    • at

      My pleasure Ginger, give it a go and do let me know how it works 🙂 Warmest wishes Fiona

      Reply

  • After Action Review (AAR) (Free PPT and PDF Download) (2024)

    FAQs

    What are the 5 AAR questions? ›

    After Action Review
    • What was our mission?
    • What went well?
    • What could have gone better?
    • What might we have differently?
    • Who needs to know?

    How do you format an after action review? ›

    Although after-action reports may vary, here are the main components you need to be sure to include:
    1. Incident overview​. What happened, when did it happen, how did it happen, etc.
    2. Analysis. What was observed? ...
    3. Recommendations. ...
    4. Improvement/action plan. ...
    5. Conclusion.
    Mar 5, 2021

    What is the AAR after action report? ›

    An After Action Review (AAR) is a professional discussion of an event, focused on performance standards, that enables firefighters to discover for themselves what happened, why it happened, and how to sustain strengths and improve on weaknesses.

    What are the 4 questions of the after-action review? ›

    Beginning—The AAR will seek to answer five key questions: 1) what was supposed to happen, 2) what was the reality, 3) what went well, 4) what did not go well, and 5) what should be changed for next time. Begin an AAR by creating a bulleted list of topics that will be covered.

    What are the four steps of the after-action review? ›

    The After Action Review has four main parts

    The planning phase, the preparation, the actual conduct with the AAR and in my personal opinion the most important, number four is follow through on the results.

    How to lead an after-action review? ›

    Here are the key steps to conducting AARs:
    1. Communicate the review to your team. ...
    2. Explain what you expected to happen. ...
    3. Discuss what actually happened. ...
    4. Outline what went well and explain why. ...
    5. Explain what failed and why. ...
    6. Share your conclusion and learning materials.
    Sep 30, 2022

    What is a formal AAR format? ›

    In a formal AAR, the OPFOR commander explains his plan and actions. He uses the same training aids as the friendly force commander, so that participants can understand the relationship between both plans. The leader facilitator guides the review using a logical sequence of events to describe and discuss what happened.

    What is the main focus of the after action report? ›

    The purpose of an After Action Report (AAR) is to analyze the management or response to an incident, exercise, or event by identifying strengths to be maintained and built upon, as well as identifying potential areas of improvement.

    What are the two types of after action reviews? ›

    THE AFTER-ACTION REVIEW PLAN

    Each training event is evaluated during training execution. Evaluations can be informal or formal and internal or external. Key points for each type of evaluation follow.

    What is another name for After Action Review? ›

    Some call an After-Action Review a Hot Wash, an After-Action Debriefing, a Look Back, or a Postmortem, among others.

    What are the ground rules for After Action Review? ›

    Establish clear ground rules: encourage candor and openness, all participants have equal ownership, focus on improving performance, and keep all discussions confidential. End the AAR on a positive note.

    How do you structure an AAR? ›

    Here are some of the key elements of an effective AAR:
    1. Discuss the purpose and rules – The AAR does not seek to criticize negatively, or find fault. ...
    2. Encourage active participation – When setting the rules, talk about trust. ...
    3. Use a facilitator – A neutral party helps focus the discussion.

    What is the first step in the AAR? ›

    Objectives Review Every project starts with a goal or a set of objectives. The first step in an AAR is revisiting these goals to assess if they have been met. This gives a clear-cut measure of success or failure and serves as a benchmark for future initiatives.

    What information is not included in an after action report? ›

    Area for Improvement 1: [Observation statement. This should clearly state the problem or gap; it should not include a recommendation or corrective action, as those will be documented in the Improvement Plan.]

    What are the elements of AAR? ›

    Here are some of the key elements of an effective AAR:
    • Discuss the purpose and rules – The AAR does not seek to criticize negatively, or find fault. ...
    • Encourage active participation – When setting the rules, talk about trust. ...
    • Use a facilitator – A neutral party helps focus the discussion.

    What questions are asked in the Army after-action review? ›

    The process itself is an active discussion centered around four key questions:
    • What did we intend to accomplish (what was our strategy)?
    • What did we do (how did we execute relative to our strategy)?
    • Why did it happen that way (why was there a difference between strategy and execution)?

    What is the AAR method? ›

    An AAR is a professional discussion of an event. The objective is to identify successes and failures. It is a tool that leaders, teams, crews, and units can use to get maximum learning benefit from every incident or project.

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