Are You A Safety Manager Or Safety Leader?
Many of us have the title of “Safety Manager” yet in today’s
business culture the typical managers are inefficient. Organizationally what is
needed, is to evolve to “Safety Leaders”. There is an axiom that states “you
manage things but you lead people”. Leading
people is paramount if you are to be successful in the safety field.
During my long career I have always tried to conduct myself
as a leader and not a manager. This is not to suggest that I don’t focus
anytime on managerial tasks (like program management elements) but for me
coaching and leadership activities is where my heart goes. This means being in
the field and talking with as many people as I can. For me it is about asking
if they have any concerns, are there any barriers to performing work safely, or
sometimes just talking about what they did for the fun. I came up through the
trades so walking among craft personnel is natural for me. Having a common background
also gives me an advantage in building trust. For a leader trust is the
cornerstone of a strong foundation. Trust is not given easily, especially in
construction work where the work is transient. Therefore, you need to
constantly work at it. We have all heard the phrase one “aw crap” will erase a
trunk full of “atta boys” so remember trust can be fragile; protect it.
If trust is the cornerstone, then integrity is the mortar
that holds the foundation together. Without integrity trust will erode quickly
and the foundation of your program will crumble. Integrity is about doing what
you say and saying what you do. It is a simple process but too many have failed
to grasp it. Integrity combined with
trust is what Safety Leaders leverage to propel an organization’s safety
culture in a positive direction. When you try to “manage” versus “Lead” you naturally
gravitate towards an authoritative stance where you end up being a “safety cop”.
So do you still want to be a “Safety Manager”?
I’ll
choose being a “Safety Leader” because as Tom Peters so eloquently put it “Leaders
don’t create followers; they create more leaders”.
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