Sunday, August 28, 2016

If You Want To Succeed, There Better Be An "I" in Team

If You Want To Succeed There Better Be An "I" in Team!


We have all heard (and probably uttered) that there is no "I" in TEAM but to be successful this can't be further from the truth. The definition of team is a collection of individuals working toward a single objective. In order to meet the objective every member of the team must be accountable for doing their part. If any member of your team does not accept accountability for their role as a member of the team meeting your objectives will be challenging. To ensure that team members become accountable they will each need to understand what is expected of them and where their role fits in to the overall scheme. Leaders will need to clearly state expectations and discuss these with each of the team member so that the team has a clear understanding of the path required to meet the objective.

So how do I apply this to safety management? From experience I can tell you that when safety is the just the responsibility of the safety staff your organization will struggle and the only time “accountability” is discussed is during an incident investigation. If you are the safety guru then you need to have a dialogue with your management team and start instilling a sense of “accountability” across the whole enterprise. This starts with communicating clear expectations up, down and across the organization. In order to be a driving force towards improvement these expectations need to be discussed, shared, and finally accepted at all levels. Therefore, they cannot be an edict sent down from above or it will be just an another flavor of the month and will evidently lose traction and then sputter to just a memory. This is a process and not just a onetime event. Like anything worthwhile it takes full commitment and engagement from every level. You will undoubtedly come up against team members that are reluctant and resistant to putting in the effort and here is where leadership qualities will need to surface. It is the leader's task to work with those that fail to grasp or understand how accountability provides a benefit to not only the organization as whole but to the individual. To get people to become engaged you must win their confidence.


Accountability should not invoke a negative emotion.  Accountability will instill a sense of pride and accomplishment. When we hold every one accountable to their expectations we propel the entire organization upward and together we all can achieve more. I leave you with this short quote from Coach John Wooden The main ingredient of stardom is the rest of the team”

Monday, August 15, 2016

Lessons From Failure

Lessons From Failure

For an organization to thrive and mature it must learn from its mistakes. This is also the main purpose of performing root cause analysis. Earlier in the week I saw a post where the author asked the question, why does management ask to review the JSA after an incident occurs? My initial thought was to learn where the system broke down. As I read the comments I started to realize that for many the answers were akin to how to fix blame to what happened. In my experience unless there was blatant and willful misconduct blame needs to be removed from our thought pattern. What we need to do is to look hard at the event to determine what part of the management system broke down that allowed the incident to occur. We can then apply what we learned so that, organizationally, we reduce the potential of repeating our flawed history.

One of the common root causes that I have witnessed is Management Oversight Less Than Adequate (or some variation). This can be viewed in one of two ways first is to blame the Supervisor for doing a poor job watching the workers but if you look back to my earlier statement on blame I doubt it is very likely that blame is the culprit. Since blame is now out of the equation the second option, becomes more prominent, what barriers were present that reduced the effectiveness of the management oversight? This is where the real value of your investigation lies and where you can create the learning/teaching moment. By peeling back, the layers of the onion you reveal what were the barriers to effectively managing the workforce. Is there a lack of resources, are the supervisors spread too thin, is work being properly authorized, are workers encourage to work independently, the barriers can go on and on.... Knowing what failed permits an organization the opportunity to strengthen those particular weaknesses and then develop a corrective action plan that can be monitored and later assessed for effectiveness.


We all are prone to errors and failure what we do with the lessons that come out of those failures determines whether we grow  organizationally or as George Santayana stated "Those who cannot remember the past are condemned to repeat it." 

Wednesday, August 10, 2016

Welcome to Insights In Safety

In 1990 I decided to change direction and become serious about working in the safety and health field. I have worked under all 3 OSHA standards General Industry, Construction, and Maritime but this blog will not be about OSHA requirements but safety management practices that are universal regardless of your industry. After 25 plus years I have learned and experienced a lot so now is the time to share those lessons learned. Over the coming months my goal is to capture these experiences in this blog as a tool that will be useful to others. I encourage the reader to be interactive and together we can grow.

My vision is for this blog to useful to safety professionals and those assigned to be your organization's safety guru. So if you are ready let us start journey together. 


Paul A. Collins CSP, OHST