The shops that feel calm aren't the ones with no problems — they're the ones that catch problems at 7am instead of 4pm. A short daily huddle is how.
Firefighting is exhausting because problems show up late, when they're already on fire. A daily huddle flips that: ten minutes each morning where the team surfaces what's off before it blows up. Done right, it's the highest-leverage ten minutes in your day.
SQDIP is just a checklist of what to talk about, in priority order, so the huddle stays short and never skips what matters:
Same time, same spot, every day. Standing keeps it short. It's a status and surface-problems meeting, not a solve-everything meeting — anything that needs real work gets taken offline with the right people.
Green/red against each letter tells the whole story at a glance. Red isn't a punishment — it's the point. A board that's all green every day means people are hiding problems, not that you don't have any.
When something goes red, who owns it and by when? Write it down. Glance at it tomorrow. That follow-through is what turns a huddle from a ritual into a results engine.
Grab the free SQDIP daily board template and run your first huddle this week — or have me help you stand it up.