HR Management & Compliance

5 Keys to Improving Employees’ Attitudes About Safety

Many of the creative and cost-saving ways to keep your safety programs effective that we went over yesterday revolve around increased employee involvement. And keeping employees involved in safety efforts requires developing a positive safety attitude.

Here are 5 keys to improving your employees’ attitudes about safety.

1. Take Safety Seriously
Every employee must take safety seriously in order to:

  • Avoid accidents that can cause fires, explosions, or other dangers.
  • Avoid accidents that can cause job-related injuries.
  • Avoid exposure to hazardous substances that can lead to serious illness.
  • Comply with OSHA safety and health regulations.
  • Comply with company work rules, policies, and procedures.

2. A Positive Safety Attitude Makes the Most of Company Safety Tools and Training
When you take safety seriously, you take advantage of the protections available on the job. The safety procedures, equipment, and information employers provide include:

  • Engineering controls, such as ventilation
  • Work procedures, such as lockout/tagout
  • Personal protective equipment (PPE), such as gloves, hard hats, and protective eyewear
  • Emergency planning and response programs, such as alarms, evacuation plans, and eyewashes
  • Safety information, such as chemical labels and safety data sheets
  • Training on how to do your job safely

Think you have no time to train? Think again. BLR’s 7-Minute Safety Trainer helps you fulfill key OSHA-required training tasks in as little as 7 minutes. Try it at no cost and see!


3. Carelessness Is the Most Common Cause of Workplace Accidents
Unsafe acts are often a factor in accidents. They result when people take attitudes like these toward safety:

  • Complacency. After performing a job many times without an accident, you may believe you’re experienced enough to skip safety procedures or steps. That’s exactly when an accident happens.
  • Being upset or angry. You can’t let emotions get in the way of doing your job correctly. Distraction can be dangerous.
  • Fatigue. Being tired can slow down your physical and mental reactions, causing your mind to wander.
  • Recklessness. Taking chances with tools, machinery, chemicals, or work procedures is foolish and dangerous.
  • Being afraid to ask questions. Training and work procedures cover a lot of ground—sometimes too much to remember. Always ask when you’re not sure what to do or how to do it. It shows you’re smart enough to know what you don’t know.

4. Take a Positive Attitude Toward Safety

  • Take personal responsibility for your own safety and that of your coworkers.
  • Pay attention to training.
  • Follow every step in every job every time.
  • Know and follow safety rules.
  • Use required PPE.
  • Give work your full attention.
  • Keep an eye out for hazards. Always ask, “What could go wrong here?”
  • Put your personal feelings and problems aside while you’re working.
  • Urge your coworkers to follow safety procedures.
  • Know what to do in an emergency.
  • Ask questions about any procedure or precaution that’s not clear.
  • Report any safety hazards you can’t fix.
  • Don’t fool around.

5. Look for Opportunities to Improve Workplace Safety
Demonstrate that you have the right attitude toward safety by:

  • Volunteering for safety committees
  • Taking an active role in safety meetings and training sessions
  • Proposing safety improvements through the suggestion system
  • Cooperating with safety inspections and monitoring
  • Setting an example of a good safety attitude for others, especially new employees

These keys to enhanced employee involvement in your safety programs were all excerpted from the BLR® 7-Minute Safety Trainer session on “The Right Attitude Toward Safety.” The session provides you with a detailed trainer’s outline as well as an illustrated handout, quiz, and quiz answers to get your points across quickly—and cost-effectively.


Effective, 7-minute sessions providing comprehensive safety training at an average cost of $1 a day. Get the details.


Effective Safety Training in Just 7 Minutes!

All told, this “trainer’s bible” contains 50 prewritten meetings covering almost every aspect of safety you’d want or need to train on, in a format designed to be taught in as little as 7 minutes. All of them are perfect for getting new employees off to a safe start, as well as keeping veteran workers alert and up to date on all your safety concerns.

Major topics in the 7-Minute Safety Trainer include:
—Confined spaces
—Electrical safety
—Fire safety and emergency response
—HazCom
—Machine guarding and lockout/tagout
—Material handling
—PPE use and care
—Housekeeping/slips, trips, and falls
—and dozens more

Just make as many copies as you need of the included handouts and quizzes, and you’re ready to train.

Equally important is that the program ships new meetings every quarter to respond to new and changed regulations. This service is included in the program price, which averages just over $1 a working day. In fact, this is one of BLR’s most popular safety programs.

If you’d like to personally evaluate 7-Minute Safety Trainer and see how it can build safety awareness, we’ll be happy to send it to you for 30 days on a no-cost, no-obligation trial basis. Just let us know, and we’ll arrange it.

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