Episodes
Wednesday Jan 15, 2014
The Danger of Relying on Awareness
Wednesday Jan 15, 2014
Wednesday Jan 15, 2014
Awareness is an important part of safety, but it is not the only part. Awareness is simply a step in the right direction that produces nothing without the other steps. Further, there are also two types of safety awareness: awareness of risks and awareness of how to manage those risks. So, when people say that safety is all about awareness, they are missing the big picture.
Consider the following illustration: Two people are traveling in a car and one is aware of the need for seat belts and the other is not. Neither of them buckle their seat belts. They have a head-on collision. Which person hits the windshield hardest, the person who is aware or the person who is not?
The true definition of safety includes two types of awareness and one type of action. Awareness of risks is first. In business we call this risk assessment. Awareness of the ways to address and reduce the risks is second and we call these mitigation and precautions. The third step is the action step. Awareness does not improve safety unless it results in action.
Leaders must mitigate risks where possible. Workers must take precautions where risks still exist. Failure to be aware results in inaction. But inaction can occur even with awareness and can render awareness inadequate to prevent accidents.
-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 Jan 13, 2014
324 - Stop demotivating safety excellence
Monday Jan 13, 2014
Monday Jan 13, 2014
Greetings everyone, this podcast recorded while in Roosevelt, UT. I’d like to share an article I wrote, published November 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 Jan 08, 2014
Promoting Safety: When to Talk and When to Shut Up
Wednesday Jan 08, 2014
Wednesday Jan 08, 2014
There is an old saying that “Talk is cheap because supply is greater than demand.” In safety, we find that leaders all too often talk and don’t talk at exactly the wrong times. So what are the right and wrong times to talk about safety?
Wrong Time to Talk: When you don't plan on taking action. Talking about safety issues when no action is being taken damages credibility about as much as anything leaders can do. Have you ever heard a whole work force say “They don’t put their money where their mouth is!”? When talk is not paired with action, there isn’t much to talk about except future plans, and that conversation will set a future trap for leaders if they fail to follow through.
The second worst time to talk is when leaders urge workers to improve safety but have no solid plan for doing so. Saying the awful generalizations like “be careful” and “think before you act” are insulting and meaningless.
Right Time to Talk: When leaders have invested either money, resources or time in safety and have made a difference, it is time to make sure everyone knows. This should not be boasting or grabbing credit, but simply stating that the organization has addressed a safety issue. Failing to let the workers know about significant progress or effort, perpetuates the perception that talk doesn’t match action. It can also ambush workers with unexpected changes in their work place.
Leaders can also set specific behavioral targets and create true talking points. While the tired approaches of preaching generic safety to the troops are often counterproductive, setting improvement goals and defining individual roles and responsibilities in achieving them can truly rally people to meaningful action.
The best safety leaders have learned when to talk and when to shut up.
-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 Jan 06, 2014
323 - What should you stop doing in safety?
Monday Jan 06, 2014
Monday Jan 06, 2014
Greetings everyone, this podcast recorded while in Mineral Wells, WV. I’d like to share an article I wrote, published October 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 Jan 01, 2014
Consistency vs. Continuity: Can Either or Both Improve Performance?
Wednesday Jan 01, 2014
Wednesday Jan 01, 2014
Ralph Waldo Emerson commented that “A foolish consistency is the hobgoblin of little minds…” To an extent, every manager and leader has some of this “littleness” of mind. Almost all long for people and process to be more consistent and predictable. If they were more consistent, changes and improvements could be accomplished uniformly across the organization. Sameness smacks of control and what leader doesn’t want to be in control? But the extreme side of consistency is robotic sameness. It contains no original thought, nor creativity. It has no motivation to go above and beyond. It does not question the status quo, nor long for excellence.
Continuity, in its best form, is enough consistency to allow for aligned effort but not stifle it. Continuity of strategy, programs, and terminology allow for individuals to work together toward a common cause with likeness of mind but room for individuality. People can seek the same goals, use the same tools and speak the same language, but do so in their own completely unique way. Each contribution can add up to a much greater sum with such synergy of effort.
So leaders, here is the challenge: Can you lead without micromanaging, align without stifling, create focus without destroying individuality. In short, can you build continuity without going too far and creating little-minded consistency?
-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 Dec 30, 2013
322 - Is the Term Accident Still Acceptable?
Monday Dec 30, 2013
Monday Dec 30, 2013
Greetings everyone, this podcast recorded while in Canmore, Alberta. I’d like to share an article Terry Mathis wrote, published October 2013 in EHS Today 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 Dec 25, 2013
Is This Really Safety Training: Checking for Understanding
Wednesday Dec 25, 2013
Wednesday Dec 25, 2013
There is an old saying, “I can explain it to you but I can’t understand it for you.” Like communication, training is a two-part process. Part one is delivering the training. Part two is learning what is being trained. In a perfect scenario, the trainer does the first part and the trainee does the second. In too many scenarios, the first part is attempted and the second part simply does not happen.
Much classroom training is simply delivered and evaluated. No learning is measured. Even in Computer-Based Training which includes testing, many of the lessons are repetitive and the answers can often be memorized without being understood. Most organizations feel pressured to deliver the quantity of training required and largely neglect the quality of the training. This has created a workforce of over-trained and underperforming workers in regards to safety. Much of our improved safety performance has resulted from worker experience rather than formal training programs.
The bottom line is that training is not really happening if learning is not taking place. Learning can be measured and verified both formally and informally through open questioning, role playing, or through testing. Every safety program should question whether they are just going through the training motions, or truly developing safety competence in their workers.
-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 Dec 23, 2013
321 - Is Failing Less a Better Safety Goal Than Achieving Success?
Monday Dec 23, 2013
Monday Dec 23, 2013
Greetings everyone, this podcast recorded while in Chicago, IL. I’d like to share an article I wrote, published October 2013 in OHS 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
Monday Dec 16, 2013
320 - Three Strategies for Employee Engagement
Monday Dec 16, 2013
Monday Dec 16, 2013
Greetings everyone, this podcast recorded while in my home in TX. I’d like to share an article Terry Mathis wrote, published September 2013 in IndustryWeek 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 Dec 11, 2013
Showing Up: Step One of Safety Leadership
Wednesday Dec 11, 2013
Wednesday Dec 11, 2013
We have been told that the first step of doing any job is showing up. This is equally true of the job of leading safety. Leaders who are noticeably absent lose opportunities to effectively lead. Obviously leaders cannot be everywhere every time; but they can pick and choose key opportunities to emphasize the importance of safety with their presence.
When tragedies happen and leaders don’t show up, what is the message sent to the troops? When major new safety initiatives begin without the in-person support of key leaders, how official and important are they. When organizations have safety teams or committees which oversee safety efforts, how do they proceed when leaders fail to attend?
The physical presence of leaders must be accompanied by their involvement and attention as well. A worker commented recently, “There was a serious safety incident and none of the leaders got mad.” He reflected that at his last job leaders showed emotions when safety efforts didn’t go well and caused heated discussions and decisive actions. In short, he equated emotion with caring. Leaders show they care when they show up and participate. What they do in their offices and the boardroom will not have the necessary impact if they are not present and engaged at key happenings in the workplace. Leaders, start with step 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.