The Emerging Role of the Safety Professional, Part 1
The landscape of your career has changed. Yours and other organizations must increasingly rely on effective leadership at all levels to motivate people in new ways.
- By Donald R. Groover, CIH, CSP, Jim Spigener
- Apr 15, 2008
Safety professionals have long been
the mainstay of EHS performance.
Even as methodologies evolve, new
tools emerge, and thinking changes, organizations
have counted on these practitioners
to guide the core of EHS functioning.
Still, changes in the business
landscape are beginning to change that
role. Businesses have moved to flatter
organizational models, leaders have less
discretionary time, and competition is
increasingly global. Whether you are
working at a plant site or in a corporate
office, the new reality is that what made
you successful in the past may not be
enough for success in the future.
This article is the first in a series on the
emerging role of the safety professional in
today’s business landscape. The series will
outline how safety professionals can successfully
navigate the issues and opportunities
of new business realities for personal,
professional, and organizational success.
We begin with a look at the new landscape
safety professionals must work within, the
opportunity these circumstances present,
and the major pitfalls that can derail a
safety professional’s credibility and value in
this new environment.
The Safety Professional
in Today’s Organization
Whether she is called an industrial
hygienist, safety manager, loss prevention
engineer, or any of a myriad of other titles,
the safety professional’s core duty is the
prevention of events that cause harm to
people, property, or the environment. Traditionally,
the safety professional has been
viewed as a technical expert who must be
proficient in a wide range of methods, controls,
and administrative tasks in order to
drive safety functioning. There was a time
when being a good technician and “safety
cop” was sufficient for career success. That
is no longer the case. Today, merely
applying effective safety controls requires
navigating an increasingly complex organizational
landscape.
To start, safety professionals must contend
with threats to people that exist in
greater number and variety than ever
before, among them pandemics, terrorism,
and on-the-job violence. Within the organization,
old, reliable landmarks have
shifted—beyond recognition, in some
cases. Fewer people must do more work
faster and with fewer resources. Technology
is moving at light speed. Employees
work under less supervision, in flatter organizations,
and with responsibility for
increasingly complex decisions. The workforce
is also aging, and years of downsizing
have left a declining manufacturing base
and an influx of newer, less-experienced
employees at every level. The organizations
that survive must not only deal successfully
with these problems, but also
must do so in an atmosphere of less tolerance
for injuries and environmental mistakes
and a higher penchant for litigation.
Perhaps the most significant casualty of
these developments is the erosion of the
traditional relationship between employee
and organization. There are no more lifetime
jobs. Upward opportunities are more
scarce. Benefits have become sources of
frustration as employees see pensions disappearing
and health care costs either
going the same way or becoming prohibitively
expensive. Organizations today must
increasingly rely on effective leadership at
all levels to motivate people in new ways.
Opportunities & Pitfalls
Certainly, future success is going to
demand increased proficiency and savvy. At
the same time, this new environment presents
safety professionals with a new
opportunity: partnering with leadership in
enhancing organizational culture and performance.
Safety is one business function
that allows an organization to demonstrate
genuine concern for the well-being of the
individual and give life to the ethics that are
becoming more important to employee
satisfaction. Safety professionals have the
skills and ability to help implement
processes and technology with reliability
and sustainability. In this way, safety professionals
position themselves as consultants
to the organization and trusted advisors
to the line organization and its leaders.
Realizing this level of personal and professional
growth means moving beyond the
role of the technician toward that of a
change agent. While the change agent role
involves different skills and knowledge, the
process begins with recognizing how the
safety professional is currently adding—or
undermining—his or her core value to the
organization and personal credibility.
There are several traps we have seen safety
professionals fall into that are illustrative of
the safety professional’s role and value and
what happens when people fail to realize
their influence. The vast majority of people
caught in these traps are not doing these
things because they lack concern for
employees. Instead, they get caught up in
the organizational situation and in many
cases make decisions under pressure to
appear as a “team player.”
• Independently deciding resources are
unavailable: One of the tough questions
that needs to be considered by safety
professionals and line leadership is to
what extent safety professionals should
be concerned about, and influenced by,
production and profitability targets. For
example, not recommending a new initiative
to encourage workers to submit
safety suggestions because people are
“too busy already” compromises the
safety professional’s personal value and
worth to the organization. Effective
safety professionals must make risk evaluations
and safety strategy recommendations
independently of business considerations.
It is the professional’s job to
be proactive in anticipating safety needs
and to prepare solutions that fit those
needs as they arise.
Clearly, safety professionals need to
have a strong case for change, give consideration
and thought to the process or
system they are recommending, plus have
an accurate assessment of the resource
requirements. But that is where the obligation
needs to end. It is then up to line
management to determine whether the
organization has the capacity to absorb
the change.
• Adding layers of complexity: The
second issue is almost an antithesis of
the first. This is the situation where the
safety professional gives little or no
consideration to the organizational
structure or its capacity for change.
The mindset is that every situation
needs to be handled by a new and complex
program. The effect becomes
more severe in organizations with an
increasing employee–to-leader ratio or
where employee engagement in safety
prevention activities is not possible or
is ineffective.
A good example of this mindset is
treating every exposure type with a similar
level of programmatic development, complexity,
and detail. The reality is that not
all exposures deserve the same level of
intervention; while all are important, their
potential outcomes differ. An organization
that spends as much time and effort
dealing with a situation where the most
likely result is a minor injury as it does
with exposures that can lead to lifealtering
injuries or fatalities has the beginnings
of a problem. Left unchecked, complicated
procedures and systems force line
leaders to pick and choose what to focus
on, compromising the effectiveness and consistency of safety activities.
• Insertion into the disciplinary
process: Another easy trap for safety
professionals to fall into is seeing themselves
as the people who should decide
whether discipline should be administered
to a person who violates the rules
or procedures. While everyone at the
site has an obligation to ensure rules
and policies are followed, this doesn’t
mean it is appropriate for safety professionals
to be in the middle of a discipline
process. When a safety professional
becomes the person in the
organization who administers discipline,
two things can and often do
happen: First, it gives management permission
to abdicate its responsibility to
enforce the safety policies and rules.
Second, this situation strongly positions
the safety professional as an advocate
for management, versus an advocate and
resource for safety.
• Failure to investigate and analyze
new initiatives and approaches: The final
trap has to do with how safety professionals
think about change. The worst
thing that can happen to a safety professional
is to become known as the
person who thinks only tactically or
presents solutions he has not fully
investigated. Just because something
worked in one location or in one particular
situation does not mean that
approach is valid or appropriate given
your organization’s situation, configuration,
or desired direction. Leaders
serious about improvement will want
long-term, proven solutions and will
look to your safety expertise for
answers. Thinking strategically about
how to improve results helps you get a
seat at the leadership table.
Effective and credible safety professionals
must think beyond problems and
issues and learn to recognize problems in
the interactions among systems and programs,
both within the safety domain and
across other business domains. For
example, the solution to an ineffective program
may not be finding a new one; it may
be reconfiguring its interface with the nonsafety
business systems that influence it.
What’s Next?
Safety professionals have a great deal to
offer their organizations. They stand to
gain in standing and influence as they
assert their expertise in safety and organizational
change. The first step is ensuring
you are fulfilling your safety role effectively.
In the next article in this series, we
will discuss the role of safety professional
as change agent.
This article is the first part
of a four-part series titled “The Emerging
Role of the Safety Professional,” which
will continue in the following three consecutive
issues.
Read the entire "Emerging Role" series: Part 2 Part 3 Part 4
This article originally appeared in the April 2008 issue of Occupational Health & Safety.