The Cool Kids Win Sometimes

Who are the cool kids at your worksite? Is it YOU, the PPE laden vestibule of virtue and wisdom? No offense but I highly doubt it. You might as well go to the costume shop, buy some fairy wings and a halo before walking out in front of the workforce. Regardless, you and your leaders (if they are mindful of their actions) often go out and earnestly try to influence worker behavior.

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Timothy LudwigComment
Words That Don't Mean Anything

The reason I’ll bet you don’t truly understand terms like complacency or, on the flip side, ownership is because, if you did, you would have already done something about them. Instead you’re begging your workers to conform to some type of feelings to reach the goal. Nothing could be further from the truth and you're left frustrated.

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Timothy LudwigComment
The Safety Police

Safety auditors now become the safety police. I haven’t talked to a safety professional who hasn’t bristled at the notion that, at least part of their job is to serve as the safety police. Sad but true. One would think that the front line supervisor should be playing the role of rule enforcer. After all, it is probably in their job description and they are the folks most likely to be present when front line workers violate rules, or at least present enough to learn that it happened because of equipment damage, a disrupted process, or their own spidey-senses (supervisors know).

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Behavior is Costly

Acting safely can be punishing! Safety is punishing because it creates a Response Cost. A famous behavioral dude named Tom Glibert made a strong point in his Behavioral Engineering Model: Behavior is costly.

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Timothy LudwigComment
I Got an Ouchee

How much do you know about your workforce’s minor injuries? What is your reporting culture around minor injuries? What percentage of minor injuries do you know about? Some of these minor injuries are above the waterline. This could be the case if a worker suffers a cut and seeks first aid and it gets recorded or a manager witnesses the minor injury. You can also see some of the iceberg right below the waterline, although it may be distorted. Here we may learn about a minor injury sometime after the fact or learn about one through the grapevine.

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Timothy LudwigComment
Labels

Labels are Easy. It’s quite easy to give ourselves a label, isn’t it? We look at our behavior, see the outcome of it, and we give ourselves a label. In fact, labeling is quite popular in modern business where management training often involves some personality test like the Colors or the MBTI (Myers Briggs Type Inventory) where we learn everyone’s label in hopes of better collaboration. We are taught to describe ourselves

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Timothy LudwigComment
Now, Listen Carefully...

Now listen carefully: your system is perfectly designed to get the results you received… because your system is perfectly designed to produce the behaviors you shaped. You built it, folks. You and your engineers, and your managers, and your industry egg-heads, and your consultants, and people you’ll never know who built parts of your system long ago. All of you constructed the systems, processes and environment that put the worker in a position to take the risk.

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Timothy LudwigComment
Go Out and Watch (but don't be creepy about it)

Have you heard the old adage: You can’t manage what you can’t measure? Frankly, if you cannot measure something, you’re merely guessing. There is too much at stake in safety to guess. Your job, in fact everyone’s job, indeed the job of ALL your safety management systems and processes is to measure behavior. Because it takes discipline, measurement is the hardest management practice to execute, yet the most essential. And that discipline is practiced through observation.

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Timothy LudwigComment
The Impotency of Attitudes

Our attitudes don’t always translate into behaviors. That’s the bottom line. Similarly, attitudes of workers, supervisors and leaders don’t always translate to the critical safety behaviors needed at work. Similarly, values and intentions also don’t always translate to actions either.

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Timothy LudwigComment
Show me the MONEY: Having Safety Values

We hear a lot about Safety Values. Many folks say that we all have to value safety to create a safety culture that will keep incidents down. When pressed on what a “value” is you usually hear something about a feeling, deep down, where “safety is first,” or “caring is a way of life”. I get that and agree… but as someone who trumpets Behavioral Safety I want something more tangible…something I can see… a behavior I can teach and reinforce.

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Timothy LudwigComment
The Feedback Sandwich Should be a Pizza

Feedback is one of those unique tools that serves as both a consequence and an antecedent to behavior. As a consequence, feedback occurs after the behavior and can reinforce and shape behavior. As an antecedent, feedback helps direct changes in the quality or quantity of subsequent behavior because performance can be compared to a goal, standard, or prior performance.

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Timothy LudwigComment
Fear Is As Fear Does

Our body is equipped with automatic protective wiring that automatically reacts to scary stimuli with a fear response. This Fear reaction can then be transferred to otherwise neutral stimuli through experience.

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Timothy LudwigComment