I got my start as a professional speaker very early on. I entered radio when I was fourteen years old; my father owned a small-town radio station. Some refer to radio as the media. But radio is only a part of media as is television, newspaper, bus benches, billboards, Yellow Pages and on the list goes.
Near the end of my radio career, I moved into the sales department. Some think sales and marketing are interchangeable terms but marketing is so much more than just sales. Sales is part of the marketing process as is advertising, positioning, logo development, web sites, campaign development, social media strategy, communications, public relations and the list goes on.
Safety makes this same mistake too: using broad brush strokes to call itself safety when it may only have a loose affiliation with safety.
Here are ten commonly-used definitions that are not safety in its entirety:
The commonality of ten items above are that they are all terribly impersonal: without any emotion or that icky, touchy-feely part attached to them. They are cerebral and are meant to appeal to the logical brain only. But safety is not a discussion of logic. People don’t choose to be unsafe logically. They do it illogically. And although each of the items described above may be a part of safety, they are not safety unto themselves.
The wholistic view of safety also includes the human elements: personal choice, personal values, attitudes, beliefs, behaviors, judgments, management interaction, communications skills, information dissemination, research, observation, human interaction, courtesy, teamwork, care for your co-workers, and the list goes on.
If you want your safety program to become more effective, you can’t do it successfully without appealing to the softer side of human emotions. And until safety professionals get good at dealing at an emotional level with their employees, something more than trying to scare them into compliance, safety will always be hit or miss.
You might never know it based on accepted safety presentation practices, but safety is allowed to be fun and funny, emotional, uplifting, spiritually enlightening, inspiring, motivating, joyful and contagious. Personally, I think it makes safety easier to buy-in to. That’s why I try to bring all of these to my safety speaking presentations. You should try it.