Episode Details

Back to Episodes

Episode 19 - Creating Employee Engagement in Safety

Episode 19 Published 3 years, 4 months ago
Description

Episode 19 focuses on one of the most powerful drivers of a strong safety culture: employee engagement. Dr. Ayers explains that safety programs succeed not because of rules or paperwork, but because employees feel involved, valued, and responsible for safety outcomes. Engagement transforms safety from something workers have to do into something they want to do.

The core message: Engaged employees don’t just follow safety rules — they help create, improve, and sustain them.

  🧠 What Employee Engagement Really Means

Dr. Ayers emphasizes that engagement is not:

  • Compliance

  • Attendance at training

  • Signing forms

  • Following instructions

Engagement is when employees:

  • Speak up about hazards

  • Offer ideas for improvement

  • Participate in solutions

  • Feel ownership of safety

  • Look out for each other

Engagement is emotional, not procedural.

  🧭 Why Engagement Matters for Safety

Engaged employees:

  • Report hazards earlier

  • Participate in investigations

  • Follow procedures more consistently

  • Help new employees learn safe habits

  • Support safety initiatives instead of resisting them

  • Strengthen trust between workers and leadership

A disengaged workforce, on the other hand, stays silent — and silence is dangerous.

  🧰 How to Create Employee Engagement in Safety

Episode 19 highlights several practical strategies:

  1. Ask for Input — and Use It

Employees engage when they see their ideas matter. Even small suggestions, when acted on, build momentum.

  2. Involve Employees in Decision‑Making

Let them help shape:

  • Procedures

  • PPE selection

  • Equipment layout

  • Safety rules

  • Improvement projects

People support what they help create.

  3. Communicate Openly and Respectfully

Engagement grows when leaders:

  • Listen without judgment

  • Explain the “why” behind decisions

  • Share results and follow‑up actions

Communication builds trust.

  4. Recognize Positive Behavior

Recognition doesn’t have to be formal — even simple appreciation reinforces engagement.

  5. Remove Barriers to Participation

If reporting hazards is difficult or time‑consuming, engagement drops. Make participation easy and accessible.

  6. Build Relationships, Not Just Programs

Employees engage with leaders they trust. Trust comes from consistency, fairness, and respect.

  ⚠️ Common Mistakes That Kill Engagement

Dr. Ayers calls out several pitfalls:

  • Asking for input but never acting on it

  • Punishing people for reporting issues

  • Over‑relying on compliance instead of collaboration

  • Ignoring frontline expertise

  • Treating safety as a “management responsibility”

  • Using fear or blame as motivators

These behaviors shut people down and create silence.

  🧑‍🏫 Leadership Takeaways
  • Engagement is built through relationships, not rules

  • Employees must feel heard, respected, and valued

  • Small wins create big cultural shifts

  • Engagement turns safety from a requirement into a shared mission

  • Leaders must model the behaviors they want to see

The episode’s core message: When employees are engaged, safety becomes a team effort — and the entire organization becomes stronger.

Listen Now

Love PodBriefly?

If you like Podbriefly.com, please consider donating to support the ongoing development.

Support Us