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Episode 182 - Shawn Galloway - ProAct Safety - Safety Marketing Strategies
Episode 182

Episode 182 - Shawn Galloway - ProAct Safety - Safety Marketing Strategies

The Occupational Safety Leadership Podcast

September 13, 202427m 7s

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Show Notes

Episode 182 features Sean Galloway, a well‑known safety culture strategist, who explains why safety leaders must think like marketers, not just managers. His central message: if you want people to adopt safe behaviors, you must promote safety the same way great brands promote products — with clarity, emotion, repetition, and relevance.

  🔑 Key Takeaways 1. Safety Has a Marketing Problem

Galloway argues that many safety programs fail not because the content is bad, but because:

  • The message is unclear

  • The delivery is inconsistent

  • The “brand” of safety feels negative or punitive

  • Leaders don’t communicate in ways that resonate with workers

Marketing principles fix these issues.

  2. People Don’t Buy Safety — They Buy What Safety Does

Just like customers buy outcomes, not features, employees buy:

  • Feeling valued

  • Going home healthy

  • Confidence in leadership

  • Pride in their work

Safety messaging must connect to these emotional drivers.

  3. Leaders Must Create a Safety “Brand”

Galloway explains that strong safety cultures have a recognizable identity. A good safety brand is:

  • Positive

  • Consistent

  • Easy to understand

  • Reinforced through stories

  • Modeled by leaders

If the brand is unclear, people fill in the gaps with assumptions.

  4. Repetition and Consistency Are Non‑Negotiable

Marketing works because messages are repeated across:

  • Multiple channels

  • Multiple leaders

  • Multiple contexts

Safety must be communicated the same way:

  • In huddles

  • In field visits

  • In emails

  • In training

  • In casual conversations

Consistency builds trust and recognition.

  5. Storytelling Beats Statistics

Galloway emphasizes that:

  • Stories change behavior

  • Data alone rarely motivates

  • Real examples make risks relatable

  • Personal experiences create emotional connection

Leaders should use stories to bring safety principles to life.

  6. Engagement Requires Two‑Way Communication

Marketing is not broadcasting — it’s interaction. Effective safety communication includes:

  • Asking questions

  • Listening to concerns

  • Testing messages with workers

  • Adjusting based on feedback

This makes employees feel like partners, not targets.

  7. Measure the Impact of Your Messaging

Just like marketers track engagement, safety leaders should track:

  • Reporting trends

  • Participation levels

  • Message recall

  • Behavioral changes

  • Perception surveys

If the message isn’t landing, change the strategy.

  🧩 Big Message

Sean Galloway makes it clear: safety leadership is marketing. If leaders want people to care about safety, they must communicate with purpose, emotion, clarity, and consistency — just like the best brands in the world.