How To Marry Production And Safety

Why aren’t production and safety working out of the same office? Here are five ways to marry safety and production.

how to marry safety and production

Production and safety blame the other for either slowing work down or increasing incident levels. Safety blames operations when there is a push on for greater production. Operations blame safety for holding up production. Neither wants to be wrong. Both want to be right. (Note: if you still believe that safety holds up production, you need to resign immediately.)

Why aren’t production and safety working out of the same office? And whose bright idea was it to let the two coexist separately? Here are five ways to marry safety and production:

1Safety is not something you add to the job. Safety must be the foundation of everything you do in the job. No one ever got a driver’s license before they learned the rules of the road. You can’t just add safety to an existing culture and expect that it is going to be smooth sailing. When you assemble a crew, pick your supervisors, train your workers … and then, add safety rules after the fact, it won’t sustain. You can't hire workers, pick managers and then complete training without considering safety. Safety needs to be in the hiring interviews looking for job candidates who already own the safety gene. Then, your best cheerleaders for safe production should become your site supervisors. Finally, training must include safely doing the job. You can’t add safety to it afterward.

2Create a sense of pride in the quality of the work. You can never call it your best effort if you have cut corners, flaunted safety and took unnecessary risk to complete the job. That’s not your best effort. If you’re doing just enough to look like you’re staying busy on your job site, you’re not giving your best effort either. If there is still capacity to ramp up and speed up production then your crew isn’t giving their best effort. That is a broken production system. Help people instill a sense of pride in the quality of their work. If you can get them to take pride in the job they do, safety becomes part of that pride. If you want to marry production and safety, focus on getting every one of your team to give their best performance.

3Look at your work as a team sport. How many athletes are thinking of their families when they’re pushing for the victory in the final few minutes of the game? Focused players only think about getting the win. Getting your people to focus on their families in safety meetings brings distraction to the job site. When you’re in the middle of your best effort, you had better not be thinking about your kids or your family. That would be distraction. You focus on getting the team win - safely. Athletes focus on nothing but giving their best performance and on getting a team win. Your team should follow this process. When everyone gives their best performance, teams get a win.

4Safety supervisors have a choice: to be a referee or a coach. Referees enforce the rules. Coaches improve player skill and productivity within the rules. Going outside the rules results in penalties and setting back the team effort. You marry productivity and safety when you stop being a referee and start coaching within the rules. That means supervisors need to know the rules of the game - the safety rules. They also must be able to motivate and inspire his/her team to their best performance. The better that coaches can develop players, the better production they will get from their players.

5The safety manual is a playbook. When faced with a certain situation, your run a specific play from the playbook. The playbook keeps you safe and gets you a win. Winning teams play the game with meticulousness and attention to detail. If they get behind in the score early, they stick to the game plan. They follow the playbook and execute the plays as they would if they were ahead. Then they trust that the process that got them here this far will get them their win.

Trust your coach. Trust the playbook. Trust your team. Trust your ability to give a championship performance in every game.

That’s how you marry production and safety.

(c) Can Stock Photo

Topics: safety leadership, safety culture