Info

Safety on Tap

Are you a leader who wants to grow yourself, and drastically improve health and safety along the way? You're in the right place! Welcome to the Safety on Tap Podcast! We bring you interesting and inspiring people with different ideas, perspectives and stories, straight to your phone or computer, for your listening pleasure, whenever it suits you. Nice! Now this isn't just for people who have a 'health and safety' job. There are so many more people involved in drastically improving health and safety - supervisors, HR professionals, business owners, health and safety reps, CEO's, health professionals, RTW coordinators…..the list goes on And those people listening very closely will quickly work out that whilst our focus might link with health and safety, Safety on Tap actually helps WAY beyond health and safety - personal effectiveness, business strategy, people leadership, innovation and creativity….keep your ears, and your mind, open!
RSS Feed
Safety on Tap
2024
April
March
January


2023
December
October
September
August
June
March


2022
June
May
April
March
February
January


2021
December
November
October
September
August
July
June
April
March
February
January


2020
December
November
October
September
August
July
June
May
April
March
February
January


2019
December
November
October
September
August
July
June
May
April
March
February
January


2018
December
November
October
September
August
July
June
May
April
March
February
January


2017
December
November
October
September
August
July
June
May
April
March
February
January


2016
December
November
October
September
August
July
June


All Episodes
Archives
Now displaying: February, 2018
Feb 27, 2018

  Today I'm joined by Natalie Boehm, the Health and Wellness Manager at Snowy Hydro, Australia's largest hydro-electricity generator, supplying almost 40% of Australia's renewable electricity. With operations spanning three states and some pretty remote areas, Snowy is a pretty unique kind of business. Nat will be speaking at the 2018 OHS Leaders Summit which is being held on the 7th and 8th March in the Gold Coast on the topic of health and wellness and the all important question of how to decide what to focus on. The OHS Leaders Summit is the only event in Australia specifically designed for the Group Heads of health, safety and wellbeing. It offers a unique combination of standout speakers, industry thought leaders, networking and personalised meetings with the leading suppliers of products and services, meaning you can leverage the best of what's out there to help your health, safety and wellbeing programs succeed. Visit ohsleaders.com.au to find out more and get your seat - spots are limited.   Here's Natalie: Some people suggest I don't ask tough enough questions. I dug deeper on that today, did I create some discomfort for you? I'd love to hear what you thought. Before my takeaways, I wanted to talk about name calling. Some people recently have started calling me names, but in a good way. Two of them are innovative, and pioneering. I'm not big on fancy adjectives, but it does give me some insight into how people perceive my mission and how I go about it. One of the things I like to do, is break the pattern, to help people see what new & different might look like when it comes to you and your teams performance. If you have an annual strategy session, planning days, internal conferences, professional development workshops, or if you have none of these but want some help to boost the effectiveness of your team, I've got plenty of value to offer, and guarantee it will not be your standard boring presentation, training or workshop. If you are ready to move away from your status quo to something better, send me an email, andrew@safetyontap.com and let's see what we can do together.   Here's my takeaways from that chat with Nat Boehm: Takeaway #1: Where's the H in your health and safety practice? I might have sounded critical when we were discussing the absent H, believe me I'm not, I am one of those health and safety people who has been traditionally biased towards safety, because that’s what I was more familiar, more confident, and more competent in. The role of a leader is not to do everything yourself, but to lead the people who can do what they are best at. So if health is not your strong point, and it needs a boost in your organisation, be a leader by working on executive support, and either delegating the doing to specialists, or developing that capability internally. Takeaway #2: Are the humans at the centre of what you do? Traditional health and safety, and arguably traditional approaches to work, try and standardise & systematise everything, which means the humans aren't seen, heard, and treated as individuals. It's a bit of a paradox that we need standardising and systematising, but your job as a leader is to preserve the focus on individuals humans too. Takeaway #3: Data helps decisions. Again this might seem like a paradox when we talk about preserving focus on individuals, but having qualitative and quantitative data about the health of the workforce overall helps you identify your priorities, to engage your organisations leaders and to get the resources required to make a measurable impact on the health of your workforce. I still see well meaning fruit bowls and stock-standard EAP programs all over the place, which help us feel like we’re doing something, but are usually as effective as painting everything at your workplace in safety yellow or orange. We can do better than that. Data helps decisions.   Until next time, what's the one thing you'll do to take positive, effective or rewarding action, to grow yourself, and drastically improve health and safety along the way. Seeya! [thrive_lead_lock id='1854'] Here's your FREE download of: - my handwritten notes, PLUS a reflection template for you to use for this episode. AND - The full transcript of this episode. I'll also send you the links to all the available back-catalogue of reflection templates and transcripts so you can access these at any time. [/thrive_lead_lock]

Feb 15, 2018

Today I'm joined by previous guest and friend of the podcast Dave Provan. You know, you are pretty amazing. I know this based on one fact alone, and that is that you are listening because you are invested in your own development, your own growth. One of the biggest challenges to improvement that I observe in my work and general conversation with health and safety professionals is seemingly simple - taking action. We know what we might be able to do. We are often motivated. But action doesn't follow. We are too busy, too distracted, too disjointed, or we simply don't know why it is that we have great POTENTIAL which doesn't turn into REALITY. I help people like you to take action to improve, to become more effective - I do this in a variety of ways like coaching, team facilitation and planning, and more. I am an action taker, and can help you to be too. If you want to improve your personal or team performance, I'd love to hear from you to see if we are a good fit and can make good stuff happen together - send me an email andrew@safetyontap.com and we can start the conversation.   Dave Provan rejoins us today, after a deep and somewhat challenging chat in Episodes 41 and Episode 42. He's focussing in on what the role of a safety professional might look like leading a Safety II philosophy, which he explains in the conversation. Dave will be speaking at the 2018 OHS Leaders Summit which is being held on the 7th and 8th March in the Gold Coast. The OHS Leaders Summit is the only event in Australia specifically designed for the Group Heads of health, safety and wellbeing. It offers a unique combination of standout speakers, industry thought leaders, networking and personalised meetings with the leading suppliers of products and services, meaning you can leverage the best of what's out there to help your health, safety and wellbeing programs succeed. Visit ohsleaders.com.au to find out more and get your seat - spots are limited.   The thing I like about Dave, is that we have one thing in common, to such a degree that few others do - we are both focussed, we're both fascinated, by the role of health and safety professionals, people like you. Not many people are out there with such a deep commitment to understanding and furthering you - it's not your organisation, it's not executive, it's not supervisors, it's not systems or training or technology or risk controls - it's all about you. So in this chat, you have a doubleshot, two blokes committed to a better, more effective you.   Here's Dave:     I just realised that at the beginning of this, I probably asked you out on a date, by suggesting I might come out to help you or your team. Which is pretty much a blind date since I don't know you and you don't know me, much. So if you want to go slow, please do listen to more podcast episodes. Connect with me on Linkedin, like a number of you have done recently - but expect me to engage you in a conversation to get to know you, I'm not a connection collector. Or send me an email to say hi, let me know anything that's on your mind, or what you thought about the podcast. I really enjoy getting to know listeners, and I'd love to hear from you.   Here's my three takeaways from that chat with Dave Provan: Takeaway #One: Safety II is NOT the same as the decade old legal requirements to involve or consult with workers. Not true. Dave explained that. I suspect the vicious critics of Safety II using that objection, have probably never read Hollnagel, or Dekker, or much at all about different approaches to health and safety, so judge it on face value. It is far deeper than that, far more human than any legal requirements out there. Takeaway #Two: Don't think that you have your job nailed, all sorted out - because no one does. I am a believer of this, and have been for a while, but it's so refreshing to hear Dave give us permission to be unsure, to be curious about what's working and what's not, about what alternative perspectives or models or ways of working could improve our effectiveness. I'm sure you acknowledge this, but how much do our words and actions reflect it? And what about your boss, your team, your organisation, how confident and zealous are they in the status quo? Appreciate where they are coming from, and consider whether you can start to take them on a journey. Takeaway #Three: I want to help you be more like Dave's example, towards the end there. The way you can be a more informed, more curious, and more effective safety person, is to start by loosening your grip on safety things - anything already labelled safety. Entertain the idea that they might not exist, or might change. When you aren't then buried under all the 'safety' stuff, it will allow your mind to open and behaviour to change, as it did for Dave. Go into different areas of the business, build new and random relationships, ask lots of questions, connect people and resources together, be generally helpful. Looking for less safety things, will probably help you facilitate more safety outcomes in the end.   Until next time, what's the one thing you'll do to take positive, effective or rewarding action, to grow yourself, and drastically improve health and safety along the way. Seeya!   [thrive_lead_lock id='1854'] Here's your FREE download of: - my handwritten notes, PLUS a reflection template for you to use for this episode. AND - The full transcript of this episode. I'll also send you the links to all the available back-catalogue of reflection templates and transcripts so you can access these at any time. [/thrive_lead_lock]

Feb 11, 2018

 

Today I'm joined by Genevieve Hawkins from Coles.  This episode is made possible by Safety on Tap Connected - what you might call a drastic innovation to your usual professional development.
I had a note from a member of Safety on Tap Connected the other day, after I helped him with a bit of a breakthrough.  Part of SoTC membership is members get coaching from me, which gives members access to the kind of support usually reserved for only the most senior managers.
Anyway, he had been struggling with a few different things. Balancing the focus of these things was difficult for him.  Two of these activities required him to present quite new and challenging ideas, to quite different audiences.  It was quite a jumbled mess, but most troubling was that it was slowing him down, and clogging up his brain.  Not a good situation for a go-getting kind of professional.  So through our coaching we managed to disentangle these different priorities, get clear on the messages and audiences, and focus just on the next couple of steps to move those things forward.
This kind of thing is quite common, and really affects out effectiveness.  Coaching is one way you get accelerate your growth.  The best bit about SoTC is that if you have a supportive manager, you are supercharging your chances of success.  If you don't, then you aren't limited by your circumstances, you have external support right at your fingertips.
If you want to know more about Safety on Tap Connected membership, check out safetyontap.com/connected
Genevieve Hawkins and I share some stories today, stories about how stories are such an important part in being more effective.  Genevieve leads the Health, Safety and Wellbeing function at Coles, one of Australia's largest supermarket chains.
Genevieve will be speaking at the 2018 OHS Leaders Summit which is being held on the 7th and 8th March in the Gold Coast.  The OHS Leaders Summit is the only event in Australia specifically designed for the Group Heads of health, safety and wellbeing. It offers a unique combination of standout speakers, industry thought leaders, networking and personalised meetings with the leading suppliers of products and services, meaning you can leverage the best of what's out there to help your health, safety and wellbeing programs succeed.  Visit ohsleaders.com.au to find out more and get your seat - spots are limited.
Let the story begin.  Here's Genevieve:
I love a good story.  I really appreciated that after we stopped recording, I had the opportunity to share and hear a few more stories with Genevieve, which honestly makes me feel like I know her more than just someone I spoke to for the first time today.
So before my takeaways, don't forget, check out safetyontap.com/connected if you want to accelerate your effectiveness this year, and have a look at OHSleaders.com.au if you want to head along to this year's event.
Here's my three takeaways from that chat with Genevieve Hawkins:
Takeaway #1: Everyone can, and does tell stories.  So it's not hard for us to use stories more intentionally in our communication.  I'm not suggesting it becomes forced or fake, quite the opposite - it's about harnessing the wealth of experiences we have and to share these with good intent - to educate, to inspire, to move people to action.  When Genevieve mentioned her focus on mental health, I saw the opportunity to reinforce that point, because I believe it to and want to help you to take action, so I shared a story I've never shared publically before.  But your stories don't have to be so deep and raw, maybe your intent is about relationship building through commonality with others, maybe it's using humour to loosen up a group, maybe it's educational about an incident so you can offset the bias people have about risk perception, which is limited by their own experience.  You have the stories, and with the right intent, please use them.
Takeaway #2: Let stories dominate how you communicate.  Genevieve mentioned that statistic about the proportion stories should have in even the most formal presentations.  This is a hard suggestion to swallow, and I struggle with it.  Our ego gets in the way, and our need to spew forth as much of what we know as we humanely can in the time available, and with as much facts and figures as possible.  I do this, and I have to try very hard to pull back, to strip away the detail, and to focus on the one or couple of key points, and to enhance these with story.
Takeaway #3: Ask for stories! They are out there, so be curious.  Literally, instead of saying "How did you get your nickname Babyface?" say "Tell me story behind your nickname, Babyface".  Asking for stories does a few things.  First, it establishes you as interesting, because you are showing interest.  Two, it gives you common ground with that person, the beginning or strengthening of the relationship.  Three, it tells you so much about the person, how they told it, how vivid was it, what they emphasised, whether it was easy or hard to retell, the emotions in the retelling.  Four, it builds your repository of stories to retell.  I retell other people's stories, with credit, all the time, when that helps the intent of my message.  So please, ask for other people's stories.
Until next time, what's the one thing you'll do to take positive, effective or rewarding action, to grow yourself, and drastically improve health and safety along the way.  Seeya!
[thrive_lead_lock id='1854']
Here's your FREE download of:
 - my handwritten notes, PLUS a reflection template for you to use for this episode.  
AND
 - The full transcript of this episode.  
I'll also send you the links to all the available back-catalogue of reflection templates and transcripts so you can access these at any time.
[/thrive_lead_lock]

 

Feb 1, 2018

My guest Emma Blee spends her working hours at Australia Post, Australia's national postal service.  In her role as Head of Enterprise Safety, Emma is the architect of her organisation's mental health strategy.  Learn more about the importance of strategy, and key tips for your own in this episode.  

Get the transcript & bonus reflection download from safetyontap.com/ep067

1