From Accidents to Zero

Just Right

In many organizations today, it seems that safety has lost its way. Everyone tells you how important safety is, but it’s seen as burdensome and bureaucratic. It shouldn’t be – after all what could be more important than taking care of the most valuable asset in your business – the people who work in it?

For many leaders safety has become about paperwork, policies and procedures – doing things because others say they must be done, rather than doing the right thing and leading from the front. People can have very different ideas and understanding about risk in general, about how to identify which risks really matter, and how they can be managed effectively. This panoply of views makes it difficult for leaders to gain clarity and confidence about how they can play their true part in leading safety. So it gets put in the “difficult” box and leaders look to others to do it for them.

Together Prof Dr Andrew Sharman and Dame Judith Hackitt get under the skin of how and why many leaders tend to complicate matters by compartmentalising different types of risk. They explore why leaders encourage specialists to take control for them and consider why responsibility for health and safety is delegated to others when leaders would not surrender other aspects of leading their business.

Other products you may like

Care Cards (bundle of 10 decks)
240,00  Exc. Tax
Select options This product has multiple variants. The options may be chosen on the product page
Conversation Cards (bundle of 10 decks)
240,00  Exc. Tax
Select options This product has multiple variants. The options may be chosen on the product page
From Accidents to Zero
15,00 30,00  Exc. Tax
Select options This product has multiple variants. The options may be chosen on the product page
Pocket Power Bundle
50,00  Exc. Tax
Select options This product has multiple variants. The options may be chosen on the product page

Stay updated !

Get the latest agenda updates ticket discounts and more – sign up for IILSC and EHS Congress Newsletter