Episodes

Wednesday Jun 12, 2013
Is Your Safety Effort Surviving or Thriving
Wednesday Jun 12, 2013
Wednesday Jun 12, 2013
Maslow pointed out that we focus on immediate needs until they are met and then move on to higher goals. Is your safety program still focused on where the next meal is coming from or looking for enlightenment? There is no ideal answer to this question; only an honest one. If you are still struggling to get your workers into basic compliance (i.e. Knowing and following the rules and procedures), you are trying to survive. If you are well past that stage and looking for the next step change beyond your already good results, you are trying to thrive. There is no fault in either case. You probably inherited the current state and are challenged to take it to the next level. What is important is that you recognize your current state and respond accordingly. If you are in survival mode, it is imperative that your supervisors are respected and viewed by workers as friends and not foes. Position and authority don’t matter as much to workers trying to survive as the distinction between friend and foe. Friends are trying to help you survive; foes are trying to make you fail. Workers will follow their friends and not their foes. It is also critically important that you communicate accident data as stories from which you can learn lessons. Survivalists view risk taking as necessary to survival and don’t generalize well. Tell them the story of the accident and let them determine lessons learned from the story. In thrive mode, you need to focus on the passion and purpose of safety excellence. To be excellent, it is not enough to convince workers; you must convert them. Directives will get hands and feet moving. It takes passion to move hearts and minds. It is critically important to recognize the difference and to address it intelligently. Many safety professionals think that more of the same will get them to the next level. Unfortunately, that is seldom the case. The tools of excellence are different from the tools of pretty good. You can be the voice of reason and get the organization from bad to good. You have to be an inspirational leader to get from good to great. -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.