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Episode 102 - Giving Feedback on Workplace Hazard Identification
Episode 102

Episode 102 - Giving Feedback on Workplace Hazard Identification

The Occupational Safety Leadership Podcast

January 3, 20247m 20s

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Show Notes

Episode 102 focuses on one of the most important—and most mishandled—skills in safety leadership: how to give feedback when employees identify hazards. Dr. Ayers explains why the way leaders respond in these moments determines whether workers keep speaking up or shut down.

  Core Message

Hazard identification only works when employees feel safe reporting what they see. Your feedback either reinforces that behavior or kills it.

  Key Points from the Episode 1. Feedback Shapes Future Reporting

Dr. Ayers emphasizes that employees watch how leaders respond:

  • Positive, appreciative feedback → more reporting

  • Critical, dismissive, or rushed feedback → silence

  • Overly corrective responses → workers feel punished for speaking up

The goal is to reward the behavior, not critique the person.

  2. The Three Types of Feedback Safety Leaders Give

Dr. Ayers breaks feedback into three categories:

a. Reinforcing Feedback

  • “Thank you for catching that.”

  • “Great job noticing this hazard.” This builds confidence and encourages future reporting.

b. Redirecting Feedback

  • Used when the hazard was misidentified or misunderstood

  • Must be delivered respectfully

  • Focuses on teaching, not embarrassing

c. Developmental Feedback

  • Helps employees improve their hazard‑spotting skills

  • Encourages deeper thinking and better risk recognition

All three types must be used intentionally.

  3. The Biggest Mistake Leaders Make

Correcting the hazard before acknowledging the employee’s effort. Example: Worker: “I found this hazard.” Leader: “Yeah, but that’s not really a hazard.”

This instantly shuts down future reporting.

  4. What Good Feedback Looks Like

Effective feedback includes:

  • Appreciation for speaking up

  • Curiosity (“Tell me what you saw”)

  • Coaching when needed

  • Reinforcement of the reporting expectation

  • Follow‑through on corrective actions

The tone matters as much as the words.

  5. Why Feedback Must Be Immediate

Delayed feedback:

  • Feels less meaningful

  • Makes employees wonder if reporting matters

  • Weakens the connection between action and recognition

Immediate feedback strengthens the reporting culture.

  6. Feedback Builds Competence Over Time

Dr. Ayers explains that hazard identification is a skill:

  • Workers get better with practice

  • Leaders accelerate that growth through coaching

  • Consistent feedback builds a more observant workforce

This is how organizations move from reactive to proactive safety.

  Practical Takeaway

Every time an employee identifies a hazard, you’re not just fixing a problem—you’re shaping the culture. Positive, timely, and respectful feedback builds a workforce that speaks up, notices more, and prevents incidents before they happen.