Safety is often treated as a checklist, but according to Colleen Walker, the real goal is creating systems and cultures that sustain themselves. In this episode of Facility Rockstars, Colleen shares insights from her career at the intersection of manufacturing safety, systems thinking, and education. Drawing from her experience both on the factory floor and in the classroom, she explains why the most effective safety programs are designed to function even when key leaders are absent.
Colleen also dives into the practical challenges EHS leaders face every day: constant firefighting, balancing urgent issues with important long-term improvements, and making safety training truly stick. She discusses how understanding your audience can transform training outcomes, how technology and AI are beginning to support root cause analysis, and why safety culture ultimately comes down to the choices people make when nobody is watching.
Takeaways:
- Build systems that don’t rely on one person: Effective safety management systems ensure operations continue safely even if a safety leader isn’t present.
- Don’t let urgent tasks crowd out important work: EHS leaders often spend their days putting out fires, but long-term safety improvements require deliberate time for planning and system development.
- Start safety training with the audience, not the content: Understanding how your workforce learns best dramatically improves knowledge transfer and real-world application.
- Focus on knowledge transfer, not compliance: Training shouldn’t just satisfy a requirement; it should enable employees to make better safety decisions when they encounter hazards.
- Use technology to reinforce safety thinking: Tools like AI prompts for root cause analysis or engagement platforms during virtual training can make safety processes more effective.
- Design visual systems that support safe behavior: Simple visual indicators—like color-coded lockout/tagout systems—can help workers make safer decisions quickly.
- Connect safety to what matters in people’s lives: Understanding employees’ personal motivations helps reinforce why safety matters beyond compliance.
Quote of the Show:
- “Training is intended to educate so that people can make better or different decisions when they encounter a hazard or a risk personally.”
Links:
- LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/colleenm-walker/
- Website: https://www.stanleyblackanddecker.com/
- Email: colleen.able@sbdinc.com