Safety leadership at the top

Safety leadership at the top

Safety leadership efforts generally focus on managers and supervisors with very little attention placed on the role of the most senior leaders in business. So what can safety leadership look like in the boardroom? 

In the aftermath of health and safety tragedies there is often a focus on the actions of the board and senior executive team in the lead up to the event. Yet more often than not very little focus is given to this group of senior leaders to help them develop their safety leadership skills. In recent research, I identified four key criteria of safety leadership for board members and senior executives.

Vision 

Vision is the ability to publicly articulate shared safety goals that resonate across all levels of an organisation. Senior leaders demonstrating vision inspire others, set high standards for safety behaviours and solicit commitments to safety. In a practical sense, this may involve the CEO regularly reinforcing the existing company safety vision; the board authentically engaging with employees in safety issues while on site visits; or the board understanding the importance of, and actively supporting, the CEO and other senior executives in their day-to-day safety leadership activities.

Personal commitment

Personal commitment is a sincere, visible and genuine dedication to workplace safety that demonstrates care for the safety and welfare of others. Senior leaders with a personal commitment to safety exemplify a positive attitude to safety, role model safe behaviours and help solve safety issues on behalf of employees. For example, boards may ensure a commitment to safety is included in the board charter; ensure a company safety vision exists; and ensure the board and senior executives accept, promote and communicate the concept of ‘safe production’.

Decision-making

In the context of safety leadership, senior leaders promoting decision-making ensure safety concerns are heard and employees are included in the safety planning process. Practically, this may include such things as establishing a board committee focused on safety; ensuring regular, robust and meaningful safety reporting of company safety performance; and encouraging senior executives to think strategically about safety and not just as a source of statistical analysis.

Transparency

Transparency focuses on the need for senior executives and board members to ensure open, transparent communications regarding safety performance to encourage a culture of continuous improvement. This can be done through formal and informal communications and may involve ensuring a consistent and comparable range of lag and lean indicators are reported and disclosed to stakeholders. It may also involve developing open communications with other companies to develop best practices in safety, and including team safety performance within an executive remuneration system.

Workplace health and safety continues to be a challenge in modern organisations, despite the significant engineering and technological advances of the past century. While lives continue to be lost and injured at work, senior leaders will attempt to consider ways to reduce the level of harm on employees. Knowledge of the importance of safety leadership at all levels of an organisation will assist senior leaders to understand the role that their attention to workplace health and safety will have on safety outcomes and the impact their own personal commitment will have on others.


Dr Kirstin Ferguson is a professional company director on public, private and government boards; and an international expert in safety governance and safety leadership for boards and senior executives. Dr Ferguson can be reached via www.orbitasgroup.com, you can follow her on Twitter (@kirstinferguson) or connect on Linked In.

John Green

Senior Director HSW @ NEOM | Delivering innovative world-class construction program

8 年

Perhaps we should think less about safety being "led" by organizational leaders and more about the organisation "hosting" safety. That is creating the conditions where relationships are allowed to develop that support safety efforts. Although the traditional view of leadership is seductive I worry that it supports the normal view of power in organisations

Drewie (Dionne Drew) AKA Hard Hat Mentor

Fearless Facilitator/Coach for Impactful Influence , Podcaster "What Boots" One half of Steel Cap Sisters

8 年

Thanks for your insights Dr. Ferguson, High trust low fear cultures start at the top. For corporate to open up minds to the fact that 'indicators' may not reflect the true reporting stats would be a huge leap. Holding a mirror to the organisational culture and safety performance with transparency in its true form is the only way forward in my humble opinion. Keep up the great work. We need it badly. :)

Michael Kwaaitaal

The Psychic CFO | Spiritual Transformation Professional | Wayshower ????♂?

8 年

Great post however it is a pity the research does not clearly articulate the emerging crisis in the workplace about the safety risk that is long term spiritual cardio vascular disease which is a silent killer in society, much like asbestos. All too often, safety is merely of 'management's' concern for what we can see and touch in the here and now, but many employees at all levels under-estimate the negative long term health risks associated with 'our greatest assets' being subjected to prolonged periods of fake-stress in the workplace. Medical research leaves no doubt about the long term health risks of work related stress, both in terms of mental disorders as well as physical concerns of stroke, premature heart failure and possibly cancer. In too many workplaces I visit on a daily basis, there appears to be an increasing gaping void of any semblance of congruence between the platitudes spruiked by executives on behalf of their faceless dinosaur boards, and the emotions felt by people on the work floor. Leadership on this topic is largely MIA, but perhaps this inspires for another post on the topic?

回复
Chris McQuade

Building organisational leadership capability through HSE and Risk

8 年

Having worked for an array of different companies with changing leadership, I have concluded that leadership is fundamental to quality outcomes - safety is just one. It is challenging to find leadership with the skills to build across all aspects of a business

回复

要查看或添加评论,请登录

社区洞察

其他会员也浏览了