The Emerging Role of the Safety Professional, Part 3
How well do we develop our own and our team's skills, and what can we do better?
- By Donald R. Groover, CIH, CSP, Jim Spigener
- Jun 06, 2008
The safety professional’s primary
role is to help the organization
move toward an injury-free environment.
Transitioning from “technical
expert only” to versatile change agent
gets us part of the way by helping us reorient
ourselves around a bigger-picture view
of the causes and influences of safety. This
article takes the next step with a look at the
heart of the safety professional’s activity in
the organization: setting—and keeping—
improvement mechanisms in motion.
Evolving business realities affect the
safety professional’s job in very important
ways, not least of which is heightening the
polarities among resources, profit, and risk
management. How we approach new systems
and resources will have a direct impact
on how well change efforts perform
and whether or not we advance the safety
profession in a way that makes it not only
relevant, but essential, to the organization.
Why Method Matters
Becoming a change agent means that we develop a
broader view of safety and its causes. We step above a
narrow, technical focus in a way that helps us contribute
to strategy and make a case for safety’s role in
the organization beyond mere compliance. So how
does this role manifest itself in the actual practice of
managing change systems? While our thinking as a
change agent becomes more broad, our practice of
safety at the implementation level must become more
precise. Increasing organizational complexity means
change efforts face increased risk for error and, should
they fail, heightened potential for damage to the culture
and the safety objective. It is critical that we understand
and avoid those pitfalls that pertain directly
to change systems, chiefly:
Getting intimately involved in the discipline or punishment
process for rule or procedure infraction. We
cannot afford to remain the safety cop or to enable the
line to abdicate accountability.
Advocating or implementing a program because
“everyone else is doing it.” We cannot afford to attach
our reputation, or the safety of employees, to programs
we have not fully vetted for effectiveness or for
its alignment with our organization’s needs, values,
and objectives.
Being so technically focused that we give the line organization
neatly wrapped solutions without regard to
culture and behavioral reliability. We cannot afford to
expend resources on solutions that do not match organizational
realities and limitations.
To be effective, and remain relevant, the safety professional
must look at his or her role from a leadership,
rather than managerial, perspective. In addition to identifying
effective tools and systems, we must consider how
successful those solutions will be given the configuration
of our organization’s culture, vision, and resources. In
other words,we must not only consider the “what” (e.g.,
this system for this objective),we must also consider the
“how” (e.g., how this system supports our goals and who
we are as a company). This mindset informs how we
identify, implement, and manage safety systems.
Effective Change Management:
Five Essential Elements
As a change agent, the new safety professional must
know the focus (exposure reduction), understand behavior,
and understand culture and climate. These competencies
are the starting point for creating change. The
actual work of implementing and managing change efforts
requires additional tactical considerations. In our
experience, the safety professional who wishes to lead
performance must pay attention to five key areas: the
organization’s present state, the vision for the change effort,
the implementation strategy, organizational resources,
and maintaining the organization’s focus on
the safety objective.
Assessing the Present State
For a new safety system to be successful, there not only
needs to be acceptance of the new way of doing things,
but also there must be alignment among behaviors, programs,
and systems throughout the organization. Creating
this alignment requires that the safety professional
develop a clear picture of the landscape he or she is stepping
into. The safety professional needs to develop a
clear understanding of several key things, including:
The present state of the culture, namely, what beliefs
and values determine how things are done right now in
the organization? How will those beliefs and values help
or hinder a new initiative?
The aspired values of the organization in behavioral
terms. For example, an aspired value of “being a workplace
that does not accept injuries” might be stated in
behavioral terms as, “ We rigorously look for and address
exposures and their causes ahead of injuries.”
The capability of the leaders we interact with and depend
on for implementation of our programs, processes,
and systems. What can we depend on and what will we
need to compensate for?
Our own capabilities and skills and how we are perceived
by the organization. How effectively do we lead
ourselves right now? How well do we develop our own
and our team’s skills, and what can we do better?
Articulating Vision
The new safety professional must align the processes and programs he or she brings to the table with the vision
and values of the organization. This is fundamental;
without a clear link to organizational goals and
needs, the change system becomes tangential, at best.
We must be able to articulate why the change system
we’re forwarding makes sense and how it will help the
organization as a whole.
Developing a Complete Implementation Strategy
Implementation strategy is where we ensure a solution
is a true fit for the organization’s needs, goals, and values.
In addition to the basic steps needed to implement
a change system (for example, introduction, initial
training, first phase, etc.), an effective implementation
strategy must include elements that account for:
The strengths and challenges identified through assessing
the present state. For example if we find that
the organization enjoys strong supervisor effectiveness,
our implementation strategy can leverage this by giving
a defined role to team leaders in process activities or the
rollout of the implementation itself.
The need to co-develop cultural characteristics that
will support the initiative. Chiefly, successful implementation
will depend on the engagement of individuals
throughout the organization. Our strategy needs
to include activities that support or foster culture
characteristics that encourage engagement, such as
leader-member exchange, management credibility,
and perceptions of organizational support.
Matching Resources with Objectives
The safety professional needs to be pragmatic and even
proactive in matching the change effort objectives with
available resources. Effective resource matching requires,
first, clarity on the objectives that need to be accomplished
and, second, an awareness of what resources
are necessary for accomplishing them. Taking
on a broad objective without sufficient resources wastes
the resources that do get applied—and sends a message
to employees that the organization is only partly committed
to safety.
Maintaining a Sense of Vulnerability
Getting the spotlight is not hard when there is a clear demand for
change (for example, higher injury rates, a fatality, a new law, the
threat of a pandemic, or even finding out we are not as good as we
thought we were). The real challenge for safety professionals is to
maintain a sense of vulnerability even when the lagging indicators
say the organization is “doing well.” Left alone, many changes begin
to die out, even as soon as a year later, from lack of visibility and excitement
about progress. Largely this is due to settling into a comfort
zone with respect to lagging indicators, leading to a “slippage”
in attention to critical activities.
Leaders need to understand that maintaining safety excellence requires
constant and sustained focus on doing the right things in a
high-quality manner. Safety professionals must have the ability to
help the organization look deeper into safety systems and detect reductions
in quantity or quality of effort before they damage the overall
change initiative.
Maintaining a demand for change will draw heavily on the competencies
of a change agent and will require that the safety professional
develop his or her own leadership skills. Immediately, the safety
professional can maintain focus on safety by understanding the
pace of change that the organization can absorb. This understanding
dictates what milestones and metrics to put in place and at what
time.As safety professionals,we need to break the effort into achievable
chunks that allow the organization to see achievement at regular
intervals and around which people can see the next horizon.
What’s Next?
The next decade will be a challenging time for the safety professional
and potentially an impossible time for those who cannot navigate
changing business realities. The safety professional who adapts a
strategic orientation to safety, along with a rigorous attention to the
tactics of improvement mechanisms, stands to create a much more
rewarding career. Building effective and sustainable safety performance
will also position the safety professional to have a more profound
effect on the efficacy and sustainability of the organization as
a whole. In the next article, we will look at the final element of future
success: getting a place at the leadership table.
Read the entire "Emerging Role" series: Part 1 Part 2 Part 4
This article originally appeared in the June 2008 issue of Occupational Health & Safety.