Episodes

Monday Oct 21, 2013
Safety Culture: So Much Controversy!
Monday Oct 21, 2013
Monday Oct 21, 2013
In my column in OH&S Magazine, an article of mine was
published March, 2013 titled, Stop Trying to Create a Safety Culture. - http://proactsafety.com/articles/stop-trying-to-create-a-safety-culture
It created a lot of buzz, which increased significantly when I posted it recently to the groups I belong to in LinkedIn. There is a word limit in the group comments, so to reply to some great feedback and discussion, I’ve organized my thoughts here.
Do I think we should stop creating safety culture? Yes. Safety Culture, or what we call it at least, already exists, good, bad, or indifferent. You only create the culture when you are first gathering people together from different backgrounds (e.g., experiences, employers, communities) and start aligning them to accomplish something. Only then (when the business opens the doors) are you focusing on the creation of a culture. Even that statement could be disagreed with, in that cultural influences were already imposed on people. Perhaps creation starts in the home? Perhaps culture of safety starts with the responsibility of the parents as their children enter the working world – that could be an interesting discussion!
The business culture is created after people have grown accustom to working together. Could the safety/production/quality/leadership elements be better? Sure, always. If someone thinks otherwise, they are breathing their own exhaust. The only way we advance is to believe there will always be a better way. I have yet to find a company that only and only improvement in “safety culture” would only benefit safety. (Safety culture: Just a term used to provide understanding and structure to, A. Bring focus and B. Provide bookends to manage within.) If there are opportunities for the aspects, characterizes and capabilities that shape safety to be improved, there are always opportunities for these to enhance all aspects of business performance.
What of multiple or subculture? I do believe there will be subcultures within cultures in mid to large size organizations and very disorganized smaller firms. I also believe that that a bit of autonomy is healthy, as long as it contributes to organizational vision and goals. However, I do not agree with the benefit of multiple safety cultures, unless the company-dictated safety culture is ineffective. I’d have to do research, there was a study I read about 5-7 years ago, that said every time you speak to your direct supervisor, your blood pressure increases. Now, how does that create alignment in all aspects of culture if there are medical reactions when an individual speaks with different levels of the business?
What I do think is counterproductive is to completely discount the term and how it is used as commonplace in today’s business. I hear and see people saying that it shouldn’t be used. In my opinion, these people are out of touch with today’s senior executive. Telling them they are wrong, will turn them off to a new way of thinking. Of course it will take new information and experiences to help those who own the overall culture to see the realities of safety culture. But, just nay-saying without a comprehensive alternative is just spreading pointless negativity. For example, there were several in the safety field (whom are Psychologists) that several years back, strongly discouraged and disliked the use of the term habit; It wasn’t scientific enough! Habit is a common term that provides great understanding and helps serve as a vehicle for important messages about safety.
Terry Mathis and I took a well, thought-out risk with our book published earlier this year by WILEY, when using the term Safety Culture in the title. The book is more about company culture and how to strengthen it overall (to improve safety), but we realize that if we want to influence those responsible for it (business execs), we have to provide it in a manner that might appeal to those that are serious about improving safety performance and culture. Keep in mind, it was not a self-published book so the goal was not to become a best-seller for profit. We were honored when it did on Amazon, and the best feedback we received from execs was they saw how it could be used in all aspects of business culture. – Exactly our goal: provide ideas for internally-led improvement.
If we are unwilling to accept new common terms and learn how to work with them to advance thinking, behavior, processes and results we are working against ourselves and the new generations, their habits, points of view and language. Heck, I’m still trying to understand twerking… (Side Note: I wrote this in MS Word as connectivity is limited where I am writing this from, and word didn’t recognize twerking!)
- Shawn M. Galloway
Shawn M. Galloway is the President of ProAct Safety and the coauthor of two
books, his latest published Feb 2013 by Wiley is STEPS to Safety Culture
Excellence. As an internationally recognized safety excellence expert, he has
helped hundreds of organizations within every major industry to achieve and
sustain excellence in performance and culture. He has been listed in this
year’s National Safety Council Top 40 Rising Stars, EHS Today Magazine’s 50
People Who Most Influenced EHS and ISHN Magazine’s POWER 101 – Leaders of the
EHS World and again in the recent, elite list of Up and Coming Thought Leaders.
In addition to the books, Shawn has authored over 300 podcasts, 100 articles
and 80 videos on the subject of safety excellence in culture and performance.

Monday Oct 21, 2013
312 – Who Really Owns Safety?
Monday Oct 21, 2013
Monday Oct 21, 2013
Greetings everyone, this podcast recorded while in Bethesda, MD. I’d like to share an article I wrote, published August 2013 in ISHN Magazine. The published article can either be found on the magazine’s website or under Insights at www.ProActSafety.com.
I hope you enjoy the podcast this week. If you would like to download or play on demand our other podcasts, please visit the ProAct Safety’s podcast website at: http://www.safetycultureexcellence.com. If you would like access to archived podcasts (older than 90 days – dating back to January 2008) please visit www.ProActSafety.com/Store. 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 - http://proactsafety.com/insights/steps-to-safety-culture-excellence
Have a great week!
Shawn M. Galloway
ProAct Safety

Wednesday Oct 16, 2013
Sticky Safety Cultures
Wednesday Oct 16, 2013
Wednesday Oct 16, 2013
A scholar once said that culture wasn’t so much what was in the heads of its members as what was between their heads. In other words, what they share in common. Leaders often ask how they can make safety cultural. The short answer is, get everyone on the same page. If every worker has the same definition of key safety concepts, the same vision of what safety excellence looks like, and can recite their roles, responsibilities and desired results, these concepts become cultural
An effective technique for culture building is to make communication and training more “sticky.” Sticky means that the message or training sticks in workers’ memory and can be brought to mind quickly. For example, if you want workers to remember a 3-or-4 step process, give each step a clever name and make them into an acronym. Repeat them in meetings and training often and ask trainees to repeat them back until they do so easily.
Just as every American school child learns the Pledge of Allegiance to the Flag, workers should be able to recite basic safety goals, objectives, definitions, and other concepts. Even if the words are not exactly the same the concepts should be. If the concept is not in the workers; memory, it will never be in their habits. Shared habits form common practice and common practice is a visible artifact of culture.
-Terry L. Mathis
Terry L. Mathis is the founder and CEO of ProAct Safety, an international safety and performance excellence firm. He is known for his dynamic presentations in the fields of behavioral and cultural safety, leadership, and operational performance, and is a regular speaker at ASSE, NSC, and numerous company and industry conferences. EHS Today listed Terry as a Safety Guru in ‘The 50 People Who Most Influenced EHS in 2010, 2011 and 2012-2013. He has been a frequent contributor to industry magazines for over 15 years and is the coauthor of STEPS to Safety Culture Excellence, 2013, WILEY.

Monday Oct 14, 2013
311 - Safety Strategy: Is your safety professional a grunt or guru?
Monday Oct 14, 2013
Monday Oct 14, 2013
Greetings everyone, this podcast recorded while in Nashville, TN. I’d like to share an article I wrote, published August 2013 in BIC Magazine. The published article can either be found on the magazine’s website or under Insights at www.ProActSafety.com.
I hope you enjoy the podcast this week. If you would like to download or play on demand our other podcasts, please visit the ProAct Safety’s podcast website at: http://www.safetycultureexcellence.com. If you would like access to archived podcasts (older than 90 days – dating back to January 2008) please visit www.ProActSafety.com/Store. 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 - http://proactsafety.com/insights/steps-to-safety-culture-excellence
Have a great week!
Shawn M. Galloway
ProAct Safety

Wednesday Oct 09, 2013
Technology and Safety Culture
Wednesday Oct 09, 2013
Wednesday Oct 09, 2013
Trucking companies are beginning to address driver behaviors with new technologies. Several companies make tracking devices that monitor drivers and photographically capture their behaviors and the road conditions in which they are operating. Post trip, these companies can know how many times drivers hit the brakes hard, changed lanes suddenly, exceeded speed limits, and exhibited other behaviors critical to driving safety. Many of these organizations are also monitoring driver cell phone calls and texting while driving.
All this information is supposedly designed to prevent accidents by changing driver behavior. But how these technologies impact organizational safety culture seems to be an afterthought. If used to coach drivers into better driving habits they can potentially create super safety cultures in which drivers strive for more excellent performance. If used as an advanced way to police and punish drivers for offenses previously undetectable, they could seriously destroy safety culture and create a police state in its place.
It is not technology that impacts safety culture, but the way in which organizations implement technology. We have NEVER seen a safety culture punished into excellence. We have seen many cultures coached into excellence. How you use technology is up to you, but consider the culture you will create as well as the behaviors you will identify. A degraded safety culture can quickly erase gains made through policing safety technologically.
-Terry L. Mathis
Terry L. Mathis is the founder and CEO of ProAct Safety, an international safety and performance excellence firm. He is known for his dynamic presentations in the fields of behavioral and cultural safety, leadership, and operational performance, and is a regular speaker at ASSE, NSC, and numerous company and industry conferences. EHS Today listed Terry as a Safety Guru in ‘The 50 People Who Most Influenced EHS in 2010, 2011 and 2012-2013. He has been a frequent contributor to industry magazines for over 15 years and is the coauthor of STEPS to Safety Culture Excellence, 2013, WILEY.

Wednesday Oct 02, 2013
Safety: Well, DUH!
Wednesday Oct 02, 2013
Wednesday Oct 02, 2013
When my kids were young and I said something they thought was obvious, they would say, “Well, duh!” I think this same attitude is prevalent today when we talk about safety strategy. Most organizational leaders and safety professionals seem to think that safety strategy is either extremely obvious or unnecessary. When we ask about an organization’s safety strategy we get a list of either safety objectives or safety activities. Neither of these are strategies.
Most organizations we work with are doing almost identical safety activities. They have a safety mission and/or vision statement, safety training, meetings, stand downs, rules, procedures, posters, JSAs, and safety supervision or oversight. Leaders try to say the right things about safety to demonstrate their commitment and safety professionals try to make a showing in the workplace to dispel the concept that they are paper pushers only.
But few organizations have thought about safety strategically as they would think about a new-product rollout or a merger or acquisition. Safety is not simply activities that limit risks. Safety performance is impacted by the organizational climate, chemistry, culture, management practices and a host of other influences. Strategy is creating a framework that guides decisions about activities and evaluates their contribution to the overall goals. Few organizations have a safety strategy and literally all of them need one.
-Terry L. Mathis
Terry L. Mathis is the founder and CEO of ProAct Safety, an international safety and performance excellence firm. He is known for his dynamic presentations in the fields of behavioral and cultural safety, leadership, and operational performance, and is a regular speaker at ASSE, NSC, and numerous company and industry conferences. EHS Today listed Terry as a Safety Guru in ‘The 50 People Who Most Influenced EHS in 2010, 2011 and 2012-2013. He has been a frequent contributor to industry magazines for over 15 years and is the coauthor of STEPS to Safety Culture Excellence, 2013, WILEY.

Monday Sep 23, 2013
308 - The Perceptions That Shape Safety Excellence
Monday Sep 23, 2013
Monday Sep 23, 2013
Greetings everyone, this podcast recorded while in Starkville, Mississippi. I’d like to share an article written by Terry Mathis, published June 2013 in EHS Today Magazine. It was titled, The Perceptions That Shape Safety Excellence. The published article can either be found on the magazine’s website or under Insights at www.ProActSafety.com. I hope you enjoy the podcast this week. If you would like to download or play on demand our other podcasts, please visit the ProAct Safety’s podcast website at: http://www.safetycultureexcellence.com. If you would like access to archived podcasts (older than 90 days – dating back to January 2008) please visit www.ProActSafety.com/Store. 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 - http://proactsafety.com/insights/steps-to-safety-culture-excellence Have a great week! Shawn M. Galloway ProAct Safety

Wednesday Sep 18, 2013
More is Not Better: Only Better is Better
Wednesday Sep 18, 2013
Wednesday Sep 18, 2013
When safety results are unsatisfactory, managers tend to say, “We are not doing enough for safety.” There is an assumption that more effort will produce better results. In the short term this often seems true. When leaders focus on one priority over others, followers tend to direct their efforts accordingly. Leaders assume that their additional activities produced the desired results. Often, it was not the effort but simply the priority that drove the improvement. However, such knee-jerk reactions rarely work long term. Sustainable results depend more on the quality rather than the quantity of effort.
One organization increased the hours workers spent in classroom training because they discovered knowledge deficits had contributed to accidents. Accident rates reduced in the short-term, but knowledge levels did not rise. The emphasis on reducing accidents had focused worker efforts, but the training had not been effective in improving knowledge. Leaders realized after some investigation that the problem was the quality of the training. The training did not address the most critical knowledge needed. Increasing the quantity of the poorly designed training had simply subjected workers to more meaningless and ineffective activity. When the quality of the training was improved, more quantity was not needed.
Many organizations purchase the latest fads in safety training and programs in hopes of improving results. Again, there is this assumption that more is better. Rather than improving existing programs and training and aligning them with a better safety strategy, let’s simply do more. Unfortunately,” more” doesn’t fix ”poor.”
Very few organizations are failing to dedicate enough effort to safety, but many are not using that effort to its maximum effectiveness. The answer is not more effort; but better effort.
-Terry L. Mathis
Terry L. Mathis is the founder and CEO of ProAct Safety, an international safety and performance excellence firm. He is known for his dynamic presentations in the fields of behavioral and cultural safety, leadership, and operational performance, and is a regular speaker at ASSE, NSC, and numerous company and industry conferences. EHS Today listed Terry as a Safety Guru in ‘The 50 People Who Most Influenced EHS in 2010, 2011 and 2012-2013. He has been a frequent contributor to industry magazines for over 15 years and is the coauthor of STEPS to Safety Culture Excellence, 2013, WILEY.

Monday Sep 16, 2013
307 - You Need to Manage Strategically
Monday Sep 16, 2013
Monday Sep 16, 2013
Greetings everyone, this podcast recorded while in Orange, Texas. I’d like to share an article I wrote, published June 2013 in ISHN Magazine. It was titled, You Need to Manage Strategically. The published article can either be found on the magazine’s website or under Insights at www.ProActSafety.com. I hope you enjoy the podcast this week. If you would like to download or play on demand our other podcasts, please visit the ProAct Safety’s podcast website at: http://www.safetycultureexcellence.com. If you would like access to archived podcasts (older than 90 days – dating back to January 2008) please visit www.ProActSafety.com/Store. 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 - http://proactsafety.com/insights/steps-to-safety-culture-excellence Have a great week! Shawn M. Galloway ProAct Safety, Inc

Monday Sep 09, 2013
306 - Overcoming invulnerability to strengthen safety culture
Monday Sep 09, 2013
Monday Sep 09, 2013
Greetings everyone, this podcast recorded while in Bethesda, Maryland. I’d like to share an article I wrote, published June 2013 in BIC Magazine. It was titled, Overcoming invulnerability to strengthen safety culture. The published article can either be found on the magazine’s website or under Insights at www.ProActSafety.com.
I hope you enjoy the podcast this week. If you would like to download or play on demand our other podcasts, please visit the ProAct Safety’s podcast website at: http://www.safetycultureexcellence.com. If you would like access to archived podcasts (older than 90 days – dating back to January 2008) please visit www.ProActSafety.com/Store. 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 - http://proactsafety.com/insights/steps-to-safety-culture-excellence
Have a great week!
Shawn M. Galloway
ProAct Safety, Inc