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Portage County Safety Council Safety Awards

Portage County Safety Council Safety Awards. Achieving a Culture of Safety.

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Portage County Safety Council Safety Awards

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  1. Portage County Safety CouncilSafety Awards Achieving a Cultureof Safety

  2. Culture is the set of habits that allows a group of people to cooperate by assumption rather than by negotiation. Based on that definition, culture is not what we say, but what we do without asking. A healthy culture allows us to produce something with each other, not in spite of each other. That is how a group of people generates something much bigger than the sum of the individuals involved. Culture Trumps Strategy, Every Timeby Nilofer Merchant, Harvard Business Review

  3. Shift #1 Perspective • ClimateCulture The viewpoint of safety enlarges fromnarrow situations where safety is crucialto encompass the wider organization where safety is paramount. What is the context?

  4. Shift #2 Ownership • ComplianceCommitment The sense of ownership changes safetybeing about people caring about mandatesand rules to people caring about each other. What is the basis of success?

  5. Shift #3 Vision • ReactiveProactive Reactivity evolves into proactivity.Safety moves from being centeredaround learning from the pastto being centered around shapingthe future. What is your focus?

  6. Shift #4 Accountability • Fear-based Learning Safety based in fear and placing blamechanges into being based in learning,systemic problem solving, and, recognizingsuccess. What behaviors foster trust?

  7. Shift #5 Values • NegotiatedCore Value Safety shifts from being one important priorityamong many competing priorities tobeing a non-negotiable, core value. Does everyone share the same priority?

  8. Shift #6 Structure • CompartmentalizedCollective Safety is moved from being a departmentalcommitment and silo’d, to being anorganization-wide commitment with everybodyworking together. How is safety organized?

  9. Core culture aspires to zero errorand 100% learning from errors

  10. In the past, manufacturers have been told that safety is a line-driven activity that must first be implemented at the bottom of an organization and then work its way to the top. But the reverse is true. Safety must start with an organization’s senior management team. Leadership must demonstrate an active commitment to safety and promote that commitment with a passion, down and through the entire organization. Kimberly-Clark Corporation

  11. The very best leaders deliver safety values with true passion and understand that their employees are responsible for their company’s success. The safety process must touch every person in the organization. Safety must be a permanent agenda item, discussed at the start of every meeting. Leaders must be held accountable for safety performance. Safety must be the operational fabric of a facility, not a separate function. Safety must be integral to every business activity. Kimberly-Clark Corporation

  12. Thank you,andbe safe!

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