Episodes
Monday Oct 30, 2023
782: Demotivate, Motivate, Reward and Recognize: Improving Performance
Monday Oct 30, 2023
Monday Oct 30, 2023
Monday Sep 18, 2023
776: Observing Conditions and Behaviors
Monday Sep 18, 2023
Monday Sep 18, 2023
Monday Apr 26, 2021
687: Safety for New Hires
Monday Apr 26, 2021
Monday Apr 26, 2021
Hello, welcome to the Safety Culture Excellence podcast, brought to you by ProAct Safety, the world leader of safety excellence.
Monday Mar 29, 2021
684: Industry-Specific Safety
Monday Mar 29, 2021
Monday Mar 29, 2021
Hello, welcome to the Safety Culture Excellence podcast, brought to you by ProAct Safety, the world leader of safety excellence.
Monday Oct 26, 2020
662: Is Behavior-Based Safety Dead?
Monday Oct 26, 2020
Monday Oct 26, 2020
Hello, welcome to the Safety Culture Excellence podcast, brought to you by ProAct Safety, the world leader of safety excellence.
Tuesday Dec 23, 2014
Merry Christmas and Happy Holidays!
Tuesday Dec 23, 2014
Tuesday Dec 23, 2014
Monday Jun 09, 2014
340 - STEPS to Safety Culture Excellence Workshop
Monday Jun 09, 2014
Monday Jun 09, 2014
A workshop about developing and executing against a comprehensive strategy to significantly enhance injury prevention efforts and measurably evolve the culture, by the thought-leaders at ProAct Safety
Based on the recent book, STEPS to Safety Culture Excellence, the authors will lead this workshop and provide a detailed roadmap on how to develop a three to five year safety excellence business plan. This two-day workshop is limited to ten participants. It would be helpful if each attendee read the book prior to the event to escalate the discovery process.
For more information visit: http://proactsafety.com/events/steps-to-safety-culture-excellence-workshop
Shawn M. Galloway
ProAct Safety
www.ProActSafety.com
www.SafetyCultureExcellence.com
Monday May 26, 2014
Shawn Galloway Returning to Speak at 2014 NSC Congress and Expo
Monday May 26, 2014
Monday May 26, 2014
Shawn M. Galloway of ProAct Safety will be returning to speak at the National Safety Council (NSC) Congress and Expo in September 2014 in San Diego, California. The title of his talk is: Becoming a Rising Star - The Ideal Safety Career Path. Along with Terry Mathis, he will be leading a preconference on: Taking Behavior-Based Safety (BBS) to the Next Level. Make sure you also attend Terry's talk titled, Should the Safety Department Manage Safety?
If you are looking to improve your safety performance and culture, join me at this important event. For a few lucky attendees at my talk, I'll have a special gift for you. See you there!
To view all upcoming events, visit: www.ProActSafety.com/events
Shawn M. Galloway
ProAct Safety
www.ProActSafety.com
Monday Mar 04, 2013
279 - Incentives Rewards and Recognition - A ProAct Safety Workshop
Monday Mar 04, 2013
Monday Mar 04, 2013
Many efforts for improving safety performance include rewards or incentives. While the theory of incentivizing safety is well intentioned, the practice varies from effective, to ineffective, to harmful. Additionally, there are many new discoveries about how incentives and rewards really work and new thinking on how to best use them. If you already have a program of rewards or incentives for safety in place, don't suddenly stop it. This can do more damage than good. The best approach is to transition your existing program into a more effective program over time. The correct use of motivational strategies for safety is critical to the accomplishment of safety excellence in any organization. If you are like many companies, you have probably experienced widely differing results with many of the off-the-shelf programs available. Consolidating these various strategies into a coherent and effective set of best practices is becoming increasingly important because of the tendency of incentive programs to either fail or go horribly wrong. Some incentive programs have simply become a waste of resources because they have not improved motivation or performance. Others have done serious harm to the safety culture, to safety results, and to relationships with represented workforces. Avoiding these problems is possible by following some basic guidelines which is well worth the effort in terms of results. Improvements in the effectiveness of safety motivational programs is possible regardless of whether you have existing programs, past attempts, or have never tried. The guidelines shared in the workshop are designed to help make the best use of safety motivational strategies. For more information contact ProAct Safety at 936.273.8700 or info (at) ProActSafety.com For more detailed strategies to achieve and sustain excellence in performance and culture, pick up a copy of our book, STEPS to Safety Culture Excellence, available through WILEY (publisher), Amazon or Barnes and Noble. Shawn M. Galloway ProAct Safety www.ProActSafety.com
Monday Jan 21, 2013
273 - Developing A Custom Perception Survey - A ProAct Safety Workshop
Monday Jan 21, 2013
Monday Jan 21, 2013
The fact that perceptions affect safety cultures is undeniable, yet the best intending organizations often pay little attention to perceptions and the conditioning affect they have on new employees or the company. Whether accurate or not, perceptions become culturally-norming beliefs. When these common beliefs are combined with unclear values, potentially negative attitudes, and hypercompetitive priorities, a dangerous mixture of influences is placed on individuals attempting to solve problems in day-to-day operations. The need to understand perceptions and what drives them is critical.
Many organizations measure perceptions, but few effectively manage them. There are two types of perceptions: accurate and inaccurate. Which ones are you responding to? Perceptions are influenced by multiple sources, both internal and external. Unmanaged perceptions negatively affect safety communication. Even worse, they have been identified as contributing factors in multiple catastrophic incidents.
Culture is made up of common practices, attitudes, and perceptions of risks that influence behavioral choices at work and away from work. Culture is also influenced by management, leadership, supervision, workplace conditions, and logistics. Measuring a culture involves a complex metric of perceptions, workplace realities, past accident history, and inter-connectivity of the people.
Perceptions are an important consideration when determining methods to improve safety or other aspects of performance. Perceptions affect behaviors, and they should be measured to determine a starting place for cultural modification efforts. Perception surveys can help identify areas for improvement and can serve as a baseline for measuring the effectiveness of improvement efforts.
The workshop focuses on how to measure, understand, and manage the perceptions that either facilitate or impede achieving and sustaining safety excellence. Attendees will be provided with extensive examples of perception survey report templates and detailed examples of different reporting styles.
During this workshop you will learn how to:
- Build Support
- Define the scope
- Determine the goals
- Define the users and audience
- Define terminology
- Determine categories and appropriate statement
- Tools to analyze and categorize findings
- How to administer electronically and manually
- How to maintain trust in the survey process and hidden pitfalls to avoid
- Categorize the results by focusing on internally-implementable action plans
For more information contact ProAct Safety at 936.273.8700 or info (at) ProActSafety.com
Shawn M. Galloway
ProAct Safety
www.ProActSafety.com
www.SafetyCultureExcellence.com