Many organisations aspire to cultural maturity, but there are no shortcuts to achieving it – nowhere more so than the critical sphere of health and safety. Tony Warren, Global Health, Safety & Property Compliance Manager at Charles Taylor, explains how inclusion, engagement and empowerment are a crucial part of the process.
Establishing cultural maturity within an organisation is a frequent topic of conversation between top-level management. It’s achieved through a process of evolution and progression to more developed states of learning, insight and understanding that support strategic goals. It effects lasting change, and a legacy of best practice embedded in every aspect of working life.
Cultural maturity manifests in many aspects of operations, but seeing it come to fruition in the critical realm of health and safety is the clearest sign of its arrival: a truly mature organisational culture values the wellbeing and safety of its colleagues.
Health and safety leaders are often frustrated by the obstacles that slow the journey to this destination. We’ve all heard the tired trope about health and safety being an administrative drag on day-to-day business. It’s still a commonly held view in the working environment. In reality, the opposite is true: health and safety not only safeguards people, but also helps to improve efficiency, reputation and profitability. The principles that foster a strong safety culture are the same that promote excellence in all areas of an organisation.
There are plenty of compelling points to make the case for a health and safety culture, but the challenge for senior leadership is achieving buy-in at every level of an organisation. It cannot be achieved by force and health and safety by diktat is counterproductive. The key to unlocking it can be summed up in three words: inclusion, engagement, empowerment.
A comprehensive suite of health and safety guidance is an essential company-wide resource, but documents and videos alone are not enough for cultural maturity to take root. It needs to be supported by consistent communication and collaboration, engaging colleagues in safety discussions and actively seeking input from all levels of the workforce. All health and safety education and training should be viewed through that lens.
It’s an approach which is neatly encapsulated by some well-known words attributed to Confucius, “Tell me and I will forget, show me and I may remember; involve me and I will understand.”
Frontline Managers, Team Leaders and Supervisors are a fulcrum in that process. Interacting with the workforce on a daily basis, they are an instrumental voice at the beating heart of a business, uniquely positioned to influence behaviours, attitudes, and practices.
While policies may be developed at the top, they are implemented and lived out in the day-to-day activities of the organisation. True transformation in health and safety maturity occurs at the operational level. If frontline management are not fully engaged and committed to promoting safety, the broader initiatives set by upper management are likely to falter.
Frontline management are invariably more engaged and responsive when they gain a fuller appreciation of their own value and agency within a company’s strategic vision. They have an intimate understanding of the specific hazards and risks associated with the tasks their teams perform and are therefore best placed to ensure that effective, robust, just and commercially aware processes are implemented. Regular discussions with upper management and tailored training modules are often an effective way to help frontline management to recognise that fact, appreciate what they have to offer and understand how pivotal they can be. They see their health and safety remit in a new light – not as a set of secondary or compliance-driven responsibilities, but as integral to both their and the company’s success.
Providing access to continuous learning fosters that self-knowledge and promotes an environment of vigilance and improvement. Ongoing education and training are critical to evolving Health and Safety culture, keeping employees updated on the latest safety protocols, legislation changes, and risk management strategies. It’s important to remember that one size won’t fit all, and a mix of formats usually works best: interactive e-learning modules, gamification of training content, real-life scenario simulations, virtual reality experiences that allow for immersive risk identification and response practice, as well as traditional in-person delivery of practical application of safety principles in daily operations.
Energised by a greater understanding of their critical role in cultural maturity, Managers, Team Leaders and Supervisors are empowered to take ownership of health and safety within their teams and departments. Having bought into the concept of safety culture, they cultivate that culture and ensure that colleagues are equipped with the knowledge, resources, and mindset to work safely. They become visible, proactive, and genuinely engaged in health and safety, driving the message that safety is an indivisible part of the workplace and ensuring it becomes second nature to every team member.
When frontline leaders and managers understand the value of their knowledge and input, they encourage colleagues to think the same way about their own role. With open communication channels and an environment that acknowledges safe behaviours and encourages the sharing of information in supporting continual improvement, colleagues are comfortable reporting hazards and near-misses without fear of retribution. Teams see safety and risk data reporting as a tool for collective development rather than a lever to enforce rules, fostering trust.
A feeling of inclusion and personal agency in the process is a critical dynamic. When employees actively participate, they feel valued and take ownership of safety outcomes. By contributing to risk assessments, safety meetings, and decision-making, employees bring diverse perspectives and innovative solutions to the table, strengthening the effectiveness of health and safety practices. This participatory approach within a collaborative environment nurtures a sense of shared responsibility and reinforces the principle that safety is everyone’s business.
Inclusion and participation also empower colleagues to feel more accountable for their own safety and the safety of others, which is a hallmark of a mature safety culture. As a result, corporate safety policies are translated into practical, on-the-ground actions.
For senior management, the ultimate objective is an organisation in which health and safety leadership is present at every level. When that goal is achieved, cultural maturity has truly arrived.