Definition
The deliberate use of all available resources — people, equipment, information, and time — to achieve safe and efficient flight operations. CRM applies to both multi-crew flight decks and single-pilot operations, and it covers task management, situational awareness, decision-making, communication, workload management, and use of automation.
Plain English
Using everything and everyone available to you — other pilots, controllers, checklists, instruments, autopilot, and your own time — to manage the flight safely instead of trying to do it all in your head.
Context Anchor
Seen in discussions of inadvertent IMC, where a pilot or crew unexpectedly enters clouds or low visibility and must use communication, task sharing, and available help to regain a safe situation.
Derivation
Originally introduced as Cockpit Resource Management after airline accident investigations in the 1970s showed that crews had the information needed to avoid the accident but failed to use it well. The word 'cockpit' was later changed to 'crew' to include flight attendants, dispatchers, and controllers, and the same principles were extended to single-pilot operations.
Why Pilots Care
Effective use of crew resources reduces errors and supports better decisions during high-workload situations like unexpected weather.
Intuition Check
CRM is not only for large airline crews. Even in a small aircraft, CRM means using every available person, tool, and source of help instead of handling the whole problem alone.
Example Sentence 1
After entering unexpected cloud, the pilot used good CRM by engaging the autopilot, declaring the situation to ATC, and asking for vectors to clear air.
Example Sentence 2
Strong CRM helped the pilots cross-check instruments and maintain control.