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March 17, 2015

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Developing a safety culture – your next step to improving safety performance

By Phil Ross, Turner & Townsend

These days, more and more progressive organisations are recognising the value and benefits to be gained by making health, safety and wellbeing management a fundamental part of their business activities. At the same time, however, many of them find themselves in a position where their safety performance has reached a plateau and they struggle to take the next steps to improving it. One way of moving forward is by improving the organisation’s culture – defined as its ideas, attitudes, beliefs and behaviours – in relation to safety. The most common way to facilitate this is through a behaviour-change programme, sometimes referred to as behaviour-based safety.

But before setting off on the journey to transform safety culture, organisations have to be aware of where they are in terms of their existing safety culture maturity and have a clear vision of where they want to go. Undertaking a safety climate survey across the organisation will provide the necessary information to determine whether or not it is ready and able to take the next step. Trying to introduce a behavior-modification programme into an organisation where there is a disconnect, or lack of trust between the management and the workforce will almost certainly result in failure. Equally, without a foundation of robust, practical procedures and systems to build on, changing safety behaviours alone will not achieve sustainable performance improvement.

The outcome of the improvement process needs to become part of the organisation’s objectives and the ‘way they do business’. How many times have you heard the claim “safety is our number-one priority” made by organisations that don’t even mention health, safety, or wellbeing in their company vision or objectives?!

Common pitfalls

To be successful, safety culture transformation should not be treated as a project with a defined time limit by which it must be achieved. This will only lead to an overload of information and campaigns in the push to hit milestone dates, which ultimately creates confusion and apathy towards the whole process. It can also lead to focusing on easily achieved objectives to the detriment of real, sustainable improvements. Instead, regular checks need to be undertaken to determine how far along the road to maturity an organisation is progressing, and the whole process needs sufficient time to become integrated within the business culture, with new elements being introduced at the appropriate time.

It is important to stay in it for the long haul and not lose sight of the long-term objectives and vision. Many organisations fail to complete the journey because they measure success based on a comparison of accident statistics immediately subsequent to the programme’s implementation. While it is vital that organisations collect accident data, this information – as a lagging performance indicator – does not give the full picture. It is more useful to combine these data with leading performance indicators, such as number of leadership safety tours conducted, to give a holistic view.

Implementing the programme

Once the decision has been taken to implement a behaviour-change programme, a significant amount of time needs to be invested in determining the behaviours the organisation aspires to achieve. The most successful programmes consider the specific nature of the organisation and create a bespoke model suited to the objectives and environment in which it is to operate. Typically, the model will include the expected behaviours from all levels of the organisation in relation to issues such as communication, setting standards, and risk management and recognition.

Commitment of the organisation’s leadership to the safety culture change programme is crucial to its success. Visible and proactive leadership is essential if the programme is to have credibility and thus lead to an improvement in safety behaviour and attitudes. It is therefore imperative that the focus is on changing safety behaviour throughout the organisation and not just among the workforce.

Empowering the workforce by engaging with it is another critical factor in achieving success. The leadership of the organisation must ensure there is two-way communication around health, safety and wellbeing issues and encourage proactive feedback to help engender workforce ownership. This allows the safety culture to become embedded as normal working practice over time – and when that happens, your organisation will find itself once again scaling the heights of health and safety excellence.

Phil Ross is principal consultant at Turner&Townsend

For more information, contact Graham Taylor at Turner&Townsend: [email protected] +44 (0)207 544 4000.

Turner&Townsend is an independent professional services company specialising in programme management, project management, cost management and health, safety and wellbeing consultancy.

Turner&Townsend will be speaking at the Safety and Health Expo on the 18 June at the IOSH/SHP Academy.

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