Safety Culture: 7 Steps To Assessing – and Improving – Yours
Safety Culture Webinar Recording
As a safety manager, you may have heard someone at your company say something like the following – usually after an accident or near-miss:
“We need to improve our safety culture.”
The problem is, a “safety culture” isn’t something you can just pick up like a new batch of hard hats or ear plugs. It’s something that needs to run deeply through your organization at all levels – something that goes beyond mere lip service and inspirational “safety first” posters.
So how do you go about getting, or improving, a true culture of safety at your workplace? Join us for an in-depth webinar and find out. You’ll learn:
- A comprehensive 7-step process that will help you assess your existing culture and identify gaps and areas for improvement
- Methods for ensuring a high level of management commitment to the assessment process
- Practical approaches for turning assessment findings into actionable items that can be measured and tracked
- How to best energize and engage stakeholders at all levels, including top management, supervisors, and employees
- Common “safety culture” pitfalls to avoid – including the mistaken belief that it’s something you need to address only once
- The most effective ways to establish a culture of safety excellence that endures – and protects both your workers and your bottom line
This webinar was recorded on Friday, September 7, 2012
Safety Culture: 7 Steps To Assessing – and Improving – Yours
About Your Speaker:
Terry Mathis founder and Chief Executive Officer of ProAct Safety, is known for dynamic and thought-provoking presentations in the fields of behavioral and cultural safety, leadership, and operational excellence. He is a veteran of more than 1600 safety, culture, and performance improvement projects in 39 countries and has personally assisted Georgia-Pacific, AstraZeneca, Wrigley, ALCOA, and many other organizations to achieve excellence.
Mr. Mathis is a professional keynote speaker and speaks at dozens of events annually. He is also a columnist for several publications and coauthor of the upcoming book, STEPS to Safety Culture Excellence. He was listed as a Safety Guru by EHS Today magazine in 2010 & 2011’s “50 People Who Most Influenced Safety.”
