← ccPlanning Academy · Real-time track
The intraday cycle
Slides done? Here’s the same idea in a bit more depth — the part worth keeping.
In depth: the loop that runs all day
Good real-time management isn’t a series of panicked firefights — it’s a steady, repeating cycle: take in what’s happening, decide whether it matters, act if it does, then check the action worked. Monitor, decide, act, review, round and round all day. Running a deliberate loop rather than lurching from fire to fire is the single thing that separates a controller who manages the day from one the day manages.
The four steps
Monitor the few signals that predict trouble — queue, service level, forecast versus actual volume, adherence — on a rhythm that suits your volatility. Decide whether what you’re seeing is signal or noise: not every wobble needs a response, and acting on noise is as damaging as ignoring signal, so the question is whether this is a real, sustained deviation or normal variation that will self-correct. Act with the smallest lever that fixes it, matched to the size and duration of the gap — re-time a break for a short dip, reach for overtime only for a sustained shortfall, and don’t use a sledgehammer on a twenty-minute blip. Review by watching the signal again: did the queue come down, did service recover? If not, escalate. The review step is what turns guessing into managing, and it feeds straight back into the next monitor.
Cadence and the log
The loop speed should track the risk. A quiet, stable line can run the cycle every thirty to sixty minutes; a peak hour, a major incident or a tight SLA demands a much faster loop. The skill is dialling cadence up and down with the day rather than running flat-out the whole time and exhausting yourself before the peak. And keep a simple intraday log — time, what happened, what you did, the result — which turns a chaotic day into something you can learn from, and protects you too, because pressured decisions look very different in hindsight without the context.
The principle to remember: monitor, decide, act, review — on repeat. Watch the right signals, filter noise from signal, act proportionately, always check the result, and speed the loop up when risk is high.
Quick quiz
Five questions. Pick an answer to each, then check your score.
1. What are the four steps of the intraday cycle?
Monitor, decide, act, review — a repeating loop, not a one-off reaction.
2. What is the ‘decide’ step really asking?
Acting on noise is as damaging as ignoring signal — decide which it is first.
3. How should you choose the size of your response?
Don’t reach for overtime to fix a 20-minute blip — match the lever to the problem.
4. Why is the ‘review’ step essential?
Watch the signal again after acting; if it didn’t recover, escalate. That closes the loop.
5. How fast should the cycle run?
Dial cadence up and down with the day rather than running at one speed.