Let’s face it: no one looks forward to tackling unsafe behaviour with their workmates but this is where a culture assessment comes in.
Unless you’re a start-up business, you will already have a safety culture although you may not be aware of what it looks like. Your safety culture is the product of your employees’ development over the lifetime of the workplace. The key, therefore, is how to develop your safety culture from where it is now to where you want it to be.
“The safety culture of an organisation is the product of individual and group values, attitudes, perceptions, competencies and patterns of behaviour that determine the commitment to, and the style proficiency of, an organisation’s health and safety management. Organisations with a positive safety culture are characterised by communications founded on mutual trust, by shared perceptions of the importance of safety, and by confidences in the efficacy of preventive measure.”
ACSNI Human Factors Study Group: Third Report – Organising for safety HSE 1993
Let’s take a look at each word in turn…
Put simply, safety culture is ‘the way we do things here’. So, to create something more effective, you must first develop and improve the culture you already have. Perhaps it might just be a sense that change is needed from a moral perspective, or maybe your customers are motivating this need for change, or perhaps there are other drivers.
Safety culture is seen as essential for safety, but it can often be seen as intangible, to some extent. By turning to your employees for information, i.e. the people who really know what’s going on, you can take a deep dive into the way your company is actually working.
A positive safety culture is about working together in the workplace to achieve positive change instead of blaming each other when things don’t go as planned. Creating a positive safety culture is a journey that requires honesty, commitment and hard work.
Sometimes you know a change in the health and safety culture is needed because of a preventable challenge e.g. a significant accident.
You can only address these issues – and possibly many more – by confronting the reality of where your culture is at present, and by understanding the different views and perceptions around what makes your company tick. Only then can you unlock opportunities to improve as well as understand any barriers to making changes. This ties in with our approach.
A culture assessment forms part of this approach. A culture assessment will not only help you at the beginning of your journey but allows you to continuously monitor and improve your organisation’s approach to health and safety throughout your journey.
By starting with this question, your approach to creating a good safety culture becomes much more meaningful. Instead of sticking to a rigid formula that runs the risk of failing, you can consider changes that need to be made, understand the absolutes, and be very flexible in your approach.
Based on Tribe’s experience, here are our top four attributes for a truly world-class safety culture:
Are all four attributes in place at your organisation? Read our examples of strong safety culture for ideas on how to get there.
Let’s face it: no one looks forward to tackling unsafe behaviour with their workmates but this is where a culture assessment comes in.
At Tribe, we use a range of 16 statements in our culture assessment model which allows us to give a detailed analysis, feedback and recommendations in five safety-related areas across every level of the business, whatever its size:
To know where you’re going, it helps to know where you are – and where you’ve been. That’s the idea behind a culture assessment. Yet there’s more to measuring cultural maturity than meets the eye, and without expert guidance you might stumble into some common pitfalls along the way.
Here’s a helpful introduction to three of the main reasons why you might want to benchmark your safety culture and what to watch out for.
Some organisations find it useful to compare the maturity of their safety culture with other external organisations, often operating in the same industry sector. This is entirely understandable, after all, why wouldn’t you want to see how you’re doing in your industry league table?
Unsurprisingly this can be difficult to arrange and needs comparison with a wide portfolio of benchmarked culture assessments (the kind only an experienced culture change consultancy has…) to facilitate the process.
The major consideration is to benchmark yourselves against the best in the sector. Some industry sectors are notorious for featuring lots of organisations with weak safety cultures so benchmarking against the average in these sectors is a recipe for aiming for mediocrity.
Aim for the best examples in your sector or, failing that, look outside your industry sector.
A site-by-site culture assessment and associated benchmarking within your organisation will let you know how you’re doing compared with your peers. Of course, this implies two fairly obvious requirements:
If the result is favourable compared with other parts of your organisation the temptation might well be to relax and assume your mission is accomplished. Beware though: this attitude means any ambition to improve will be stifled until the other areas of the organisation catch up.
The most important reason to benchmark the maturity of your safety culture is to establish how to improve safety culture in the workplace from where you are now. Any worthwhile benchmark must provide a clear definition of the different levels of maturity in safety culture and what’s required to meet the criteria of each level.
Most models feature five levels (like in the primate/man scale table) with brief descriptors. Behind these brief descriptors should lie detailed descriptions of the attitudes and behaviours that prevail at each of the five levels subdivided by director, manager, supervisor and employee.
You’ve got to get to the point where safety is talked about every day. Then it will become second nature.
Ambassadors are your key to success. They’re the ones who believe in what you’re trying to achieve, they are the people within your organisation who will promote a positive safety culture to their peers. Perhaps because they’ve experienced accidents or understand the positive benefits a safer organisational culture brings.
Ambassadors need to get other employees thinking ‘how will you personally contribute to building a safety culture?’
Read more about culture assessments.
Here’s the advice we’d give to someone about to begin a safety culture change programme:
Culture based safety is about setting, understanding and truly believing in an organisation’s values, beliefs and attitudes to safety, including its behaviour.
Properly facilitated interactive workshops are an opportunity to focus participants’ minds on the most important asset the organisation has – its employees – and what they must do to keep themselves and others safe.
Culture based safety workshops aren’t focused on procedures, risk assessments, training documents or legislation. They’re more about re-igniting desire and passion in every single person to want to go home uninjured at the end of every working day and help others do the same.
People need an appropriate forum that stimulates them to openly challenge and critique their individual attitudes, values, beliefs and behaviours towards safety versus those required by the organisation’s vision. Then it’s time to agree on what’s needed to achieve them.
In our experience, culture based safety workshops are an ideal forum for this type of review and allow time for reflection. The workshop format encourages people to make changes, rather than being forced to make them by their senior leaders.
To be truly successful, all leaders must believe in and work towards the same safety excellent culture and adopt the relevant safety excellent behaviours to create and maintain this culture. This isn’t something you can buy off the shelf or create overnight. It needs close monitoring, support and nurturing to grow, mature and flourish.
Culture based safety workshops are part of this growth process. They help leaders to take a step back, think about what safety culture means to them and agree on the steps needed to achieve it. In basic terms, it gets them to focus on the safety culture they want and the relevant attitudes, values, beliefs and behaviours needed by everyone involved.
Read more about how to embed vision and values in your organisation.