Using drills to test the procedure instead of simply rehearsing it
In Leduc, drills often become too easy to complete and too hard to learn from. That is a common problem across airport-adjacent logistics buildings, industrial parks, hotels, office properties, and training facilities, where the exercise has to respect busy operations while still exposing weak points the team can fix.
The aim is to make the drill informative enough that the next version of the procedure is stronger, not just better filed.
The follow-through a useful drill should create
- More useful debriefing instead of a quick signoff and no meaningful correction
- A stronger basis for refining roles, routes, and communication expectations
- Better documentation of what happened and what should change before the next drill
- Less risk of repeating the same exercise without learning anything new
If fire drills in Leduc are not giving your team enough usable feedback, contact Liberty Fire to discuss the site and what the exercise should be testing.