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May 30, 2017

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The key to enriching safety culture?

Geoff is the founder and Managing Director of PCL, a business psychology consultancy that specialises in personality and human factor risk assessments. Geoff set up PCL in 1992 and has overseen its continuous growth to establish its current global presence.  He is a Chartered Psychologist, a Fellow of the Royal Society of Arts and an Associate Fellow of the British Psychological Society. Prior to establishing PCL, he was Honorary Research Fellow at University College London (UCL) and European Manager for The Psychological Corporation (San Antonio, USA). 

Despite decades of workplace safety regulation, we’re still struggling for solutions. Tension frequently arises between those who regulate and those who deliver – perhaps even a whiff of hostility. Risk managers often despair because employees are unable to stick to the regime demanded by regulators and legislators. Staff, on the other hand, feel tightly bound by inflexible policies. Frustration arises because they can’t use their own personal judgement to change procedures, even when their ideas seem to make more sense! The question is, given these ongoing tensions, can risk really be addressed

adequately through blanket policies and procedures?

Difficulties inevitably arise when the dispositions and risk appetites of the people who must deal with risk are not addressed. Behavioural safety management offers an alternative approach to enriching safety culture. It promotes a more people-centric focus, taking a broader perspective on risk that incorporates differences in individual risk dispositions. Viewing workplace safety at the individual level makes H&S personally relevant, encourages buy-in, employee engagement and promotes personal accountability.

Behavioural safety management is a bottom-up approach backed by strong top-down support. It offers an entry point for company-wide dialogue around personal, team and organisational risk and H&S culture and draws out the crucial managerial issues that impact front-line performance.

Measuring differences in risk disposition

While risk itself defies succinct, consensual or useful definition (other than “the probability of an adverse outcome” or similar), the risk dispositions inherent in personality are eminently measurable. Although every individual has ‘free will’ to act as they choose, each also has an individual risk bias which leads them to perceive, respond to and take risk in different ways.

To further complicate things, the individuals willing to take on the most physically demanding and dangerous operational roles are, in personality terms, the polar opposite to most risk managers. Whether it’s because they are too carefree, spontaneous, fearless or imperturbable, those operating on the frontiers of risk are unlikely to be the most placid, vigilant or routine-orientated individuals.

Being able to assess these differences opens up a largely untapped seam of opportunity to understand human risk factors. It enables organisations to help individuals develop greater awareness of their risk tendencies and address potential blind-spots. It encourages personal responsibility as an alternative to reliance on regulatory systems that discourage discretionary judgement, innovation and initiative.

So how do we measure differences in risk disposition? There are two neurological systems that are recognised by the UK Government Chief Scientist as key to decision-making: the emotional and the cognitive. Taking these two as conceptually orthogonal axes, the Risk Type Compass generates a 360-degree spectrum of risk dispositions, segmented to define eight Risk Types.  Each Risk Type reflects a natural disposition towards risk – the extent to which a person is, for example, naturally adventurous and optimistic as opposed to being cautious and anxious about uncertainty, or to what extent they plan things carefully, seek excitement or act on impulse. Temperament is deeply rooted and will influence how much risk an individual is able to take, how much uncertainty they can cope with and how they react when things go wrong.

Risk Type adds a crucial new component to the H&S risk management tool kit. It supports behavioural safety management by engaging individuals and provides a healthier balance to micromanagement and the ‘command and control’ approaches of regulation.

See Geoff Trickey speak a SHE 2017. Register here.

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Karl Spencer
Karl Spencer
6 years ago

I like the article and agree with needing to enrich safety culture, don’t agree that we’re still struggling for solutions. I would welcome the chance to explain why

Phil
Phil
6 years ago

I’m not convinced, and I’ll explain why. We are not struggling for solutions, we already have them, they are just not being applied, more so internationally. We also need more enforcement of existing regulations, however that costs money and governments have little will or money to enable this. Safety is a junior ministerial post in the UK, despite workplace accidents and ill health costing society £13 billion a year. If any persons need their risk dispositions assessed it’s the most senior executive management, those in power. The people that deal with the risk can’t be ignored, and generally aren’t. They… Read more »