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Episode 104 - Tactical vs. Strategic Occupational Safety Goals
Episode 104

Episode 104 - Tactical vs. Strategic Occupational Safety Goals

The Occupational Safety Leadership Podcast

January 8, 20248m 10s

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Show Notes

Episode 104 digs into a distinction that separates reactive safety programs from truly high‑performing ones: the difference between tactical and strategic safety goals. Dr. Ayers explains why many organizations stay stuck in compliance mode and how safety leaders can shift their focus to long‑term, culture‑building work that actually reduces risk.

  Core Message

Tactical goals keep you busy. Strategic goals move the organization forward. World‑class safety performance requires both—but most teams are overloaded with tactical work and underinvested in strategy.

  Key Points from the Episode 1. What Tactical Safety Goals Are

Tactical goals are short‑term, task‑focused, and operational. They include:

  • Completing inspections

  • Conducting toolbox talks

  • Closing corrective actions

  • Tracking PPE use

  • Responding to incidents

  • Managing compliance paperwork

These tasks are necessary, but they don’t fundamentally change culture or risk.

  2. What Strategic Safety Goals Are

Strategic goals are long‑term, high‑impact, and culture‑shaping. Examples include:

  • Strengthening supervisor safety leadership

  • Improving hazard identification systems

  • Building a reporting culture

  • Reducing serious injury and fatality (SIF) potential

  • Enhancing worker engagement

  • Developing long‑term competency in frontline leaders

Strategic goals change how the organization thinks and behaves.

  3. Why Organizations Get Stuck in Tactical Mode

Dr. Ayers highlights several reasons:

  • Tactical work is visible and easy to measure

  • Leaders feel pressure to “check boxes”

  • Safety teams get pulled into daily operational noise

  • Strategic work requires time, planning, and leadership alignment

  • Tactical tasks feel productive, even when they don’t reduce risk

This creates a cycle where safety becomes reactive instead of proactive.

  4. The Danger of Tactical Overload

When safety leaders spend all their time on tactical tasks:

  • Supervisors stop owning safety

  • Safety becomes compliance policing

  • Long‑term improvements stall

  • Culture stagnates

  • High‑risk hazards remain unaddressed

Tactical work alone cannot produce meaningful safety performance.

  5. How to Shift Toward Strategic Safety Leadership

Dr. Ayers offers practical guidance:

  • Protect time for strategic planning

  • Delegate routine tasks to supervisors

  • Align goals with organizational priorities

  • Measure leading indicators, not just lagging ones

  • Build systems that reduce recurring tactical workload

  • Communicate strategic goals clearly and consistently

Strategic work requires intentionality and leadership discipline.

  Practical Takeaway

Tactical goals keep the safety program running. Strategic goals transform the organization. Safety leaders must balance both—but the real breakthroughs happen when they carve out time for the strategic work that builds capability, strengthens culture, and reduces serious risk.