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Episode 205 - Occupational Safety - Incident Investigation Team
Episode 205

Episode 205 - Occupational Safety - Incident Investigation Team

The Occupational Safety Leadership Podcast

November 14, 20246m 52s

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Show Notes

Dr. Ayers explains how to build an effective incident investigation team, emphasizing that the right people — not the most people — determine whether an investigation uncovers meaningful causes or just produces paperwork.

  🧠 Key Themes 1. Choose Team Members Who Want to Help

The episode stresses that investigators must be:

  • Curious

  • Objective

  • Willing to learn

  • Motivated to prevent recurrence

A reluctant or biased team member can derail the process. Sources:

  2. Select People With Relevant Knowledge and Experience

Dr. Ayers highlights the importance of including individuals who understand:

  • The task involved

  • The equipment

  • The environment

  • The workflow

This ensures the team can accurately reconstruct what happened. Sources:

  3. Keep the Team Small and Purposeful

More people doesn’t mean better investigations. A focused team:

  • Works faster

  • Stays aligned

  • Avoids groupthink

  • Maintains confidentiality

Quality > quantity. Sources:

  4. Include Cross‑Functional Perspectives

A strong team may include:

  • Supervisors

  • Operators

  • Safety professionals

  • Maintenance

  • Engineering

Each brings a different lens to understanding causal factors. Sources:

  5. The Goal Is Prevention, Not Blame

The team must be aligned around:

  • Learning

  • Understanding system contributors

  • Identifying meaningful corrective actions

Blame shuts down honesty and limits insight. Sources:

  🚀 Leadership Takeaways
  • Pick people who care and who understand the work.

  • Small, skilled teams outperform large, unfocused ones.

  • Cross‑functional perspectives strengthen investigations.

  • The team’s purpose is prevention, not fault‑finding.