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Here’s six ways to get dirty and begin to improve your culture for safety.
1. Anonymous pencil and paper perception surveys provide a wealth of comparative information about our cultures for safety which needs to be embraced and acted upon, when appropriate and necessary.
2. Open-ended questions placed near the end of the survey provide valuable information that needs to be further explored.
3. Safety focus sessions give homogeneous groups a chance to voice their opinions. This type of upward feedback can be ranked and sorted in order of importance and provide further insights not revealed in the perception survey.
4. On-the-floor or in-the-field interviews provide a valuable means for open two-way discussions for EHS improvements.
5. Properly executed employee safety suggestion boxes are a very simple and straightforward way to bring up some dirt that can be used for ongoing improvements.
6. Safety maturity matrices and grids offer groups of people further insights and strategic road maps for improvement, but you need to have the right cross section of participants.
Any way you look at it – you have to bring up some dirt on your organization if you want to get better. Better yet, your leaders need to get dirty, a bit naked, and more transparent with your people too!
And if you want a quick and dirty snapshot of your culture for safety, take this brief survey.
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