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Episode 210 - Jean Ndana - Making New Hire Safety Orientation Fun and Exciting
Episode 210

Episode 210 - Jean Ndana - Making New Hire Safety Orientation Fun and Exciting

The Occupational Safety Leadership Podcast

November 27, 202430m 4s

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Show Notes

This episode features Jean Ndana, who joins Dr. Ayers to explore how safety leaders can transform new hire safety orientation from a dull, check‑the‑box requirement into an engaging, memorable, and motivating experience. Ndana argues that when orientation is exciting and human‑centered, new employees connect with safety on day one — and that connection shapes their long‑term behavior.

  🧠 Key Themes 1. Engagement Beats Information Dumping

Ndana emphasizes that most orientations fail because they overwhelm new hires with rules, slides, and jargon. He encourages safety pros to:

  • Tell stories

  • Use real examples

  • Make the content relatable

  • Create emotional connection

Engagement drives retention.

  2. Make Safety Personal

New hires respond better when they understand:

  • Why safety matters

  • How it protects them

  • How it affects their families

  • How it shapes their success at work

Personal relevance turns safety from a requirement into a value.

  3. Use Energy, Humor, and Interaction

Ndana advocates for:

  • Humor

  • Hands‑on demonstrations

  • Interactive discussions

  • Movement instead of sitting

  • Showing real equipment and real hazards

Energy creates memory — and memory creates safer behavior.

  4. Orientation Sets the Tone for Culture

The first day is a culture‑defining moment. A fun, engaging orientation communicates:

  • “We care about you.”

  • “Safety matters here.”

  • “You’re part of something important.”

This builds trust and commitment early.

  🚀 Leadership Takeaways
  • Orientation is your first chance to shape safety culture — make it count.

  • Engagement, not information overload, drives retention.

  • Energy, humor, and interaction make safety memorable.

  • A great orientation builds trust and sets expectations for the long haul.