Episode Details
Back to EpisodesSupervisors sending mixed signals about safety
Description
Dr. Ayers explains how supervisors often unintentionally send mixed signals about safety, and how those inconsistencies quietly shape the safety culture more than any written policy.
 🔑 Key Points 1. Supervisors create the culture they actually modelEven when supervisors say safety is important, employees judge the truth by what supervisors do. Mixed signals happen when:
-
Production is praised more loudly than safe behavior
-
Shortcuts are ignored “just this once”
-
Safety rules apply only when convenient
-
Leaders rush, skip steps, or fail to intervene
Employees quickly learn which priorities are real.
 2. Inconsistency erodes trust and clarityWhen supervisors’ actions contradict their words:
-
Employees become confused about expectations
-
Safety becomes optional or situational
-
Risk tolerance increases
-
The safety program loses credibility
A supervisor’s smallest inconsistency can outweigh a company’s entire safety manual.
 3. Mixed signals are usually unintentionalDr. Ayers emphasizes that most supervisors aren’t trying to undermine safety. The problem is:
-
Habit
-
Pressure
-
Lack of awareness
-
Not realizing how closely employees watch them
Supervisors often don’t see the mixed signals they’re sending.
 4. The fix: Align words, actions, and reactionsTo eliminate mixed signals, supervisors must:
-
Model the exact behaviors they expect
-
Slow down and demonstrate safe decision‑making
-
Reinforce safety even when production is tight
-
Intervene consistently and respectfully
-
Praise safe choices as visibly as production wins
Culture follows leadership behavior, not leadership slogans.
 🎯 Episode TakeawaySupervisors don’t just influence safety culture — they are the safety culture. Employees will always follow the signals leaders send, whether intentional or not. When supervisors align their actions with their safety messages, the entire organization becomes safer.