Welcome to Manufacturing Greatness with Trevor Blondeel, where we work with organizations to manufacture greatness by leveraging resources you already have to achieve greater retention, productivity, and profits. To learn more, visit www.manufacturinggreatness.com and click here to subscribe to Trevor’s monthly newsletter.
Have you ever assumed your team should just know what you expected, and watched the project go sideways anyway? In manufacturing, the expectation gap between what leaders think is expected and what teams actually understand drives missed deadlines, rework, and six-figure mistakes. Most of the time, it comes back to communication skills.
In this solo episode, host Trevor Blondeel goes back to a Friday night on the floor of a Ford assembly plant, where a missed conversation shut down the line and changed how he thinks about plant leadership forever. After 25 years running plants and a decade of leadership development coaching, he walks through the communication skills every frontline supervisor, operations manager, and plant leader needs to stay aligned with their teams, protect production efficiency, and build a safety culture grounded in trust. Trevor shares three questions that close the expectation gap in any conversation, makes the case for curiosity over judgment, and shows how clear expectations head off performance management problems before they start.
This is part two of a three-part series on the Manufacturing Greatness framework, sitting between the Showing Up Gap and the upcoming Accountability Gap episode. Want 10 more questions to close the expectation gap on your team? Sign up for the newsletter for leadership development tools and resources we don’t share on the podcast, plus early access to Trevor’s book, Manufacturing Greatness, releasing May 11, 2027.
1:00 — The expectation gap quietly drives missed deadlines, rework, and six-figure mistakes, making communication skills the most overlooked tool in production management.
1.50 — A late-night production line shutdown reveals how a frontline supervisor going it alone left plant leadership powerless to respond.
3:30 — After 25 years in plant leadership, Trevor reframes unclear expectations as unkind, challenging leaders to swap judgment for curiosity in their leadership development.
05:00 — Three communication skills questions help any shift supervisor or frontline supervisor align on what “done” actually looks like across quality management and process optimization.
7:00 — Closing the expectation gap in just five minutes builds the trust, employee satisfaction, and production efficiency that drives Manufacturing Greatness at every level.
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