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Episode 239 - Don't expect results without getting your hands dirty
Episode 239

Episode 239 - Don't expect results without getting your hands dirty

The Occupational Safety Leadership Podcast

March 3, 20254m 23s

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Show Notes

Dr. Ayers uses a gardening analogy to explain a fundamental truth of safety leadership: You cannot grow a strong safety program from a distance. You must get involved, stay engaged, and do the unglamorous work.

Just like a garden needs consistent care, attention, and protection, a safety program only thrives when leaders are willing to “get their hands dirty.”

  🧠 Key Themes 1. Safety Programs Are Like Vegetable Gardens
  • Gardens need light, water, protection, and weeding.

  • Safety programs need training, resources, hazard control, and constant cleanup of small issues.

  • Neglect in either one leads to predictable failure.

2. Leadership Requires Active Participation
  • You can’t delegate everything and expect excellence.

  • Leaders must be present in the field, talking to workers, removing obstacles, and reinforcing expectations.

  • Real improvement comes from hands‑on engagement, not paperwork or dashboards alone.

3. Problems Don’t Fix Themselves
  • Weeds grow if you don’t pull them.

  • Small hazards grow into big incidents if you don’t address them.

  • Consistency beats intensity — small daily actions matter more than occasional big pushes.

  🚀 Leadership Takeaways
  • Show up. Your presence is a safety control.

  • Do the unglamorous work. Hazard correction, coaching, and follow‑up are where results come from.

  • Protect your “garden.” Remove obstacles, shield your team from distractions, and nurture the environment.

  • Stay patient. Growth takes time, but neglect shows quickly.