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Episode 262 - Ken Reed - Root Cause Analysis (RCA)
Episode 262

Episode 262 - Ken Reed - Root Cause Analysis (RCA)

The Occupational Safety Leadership Podcast

May 30, 202524m 27s

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Show Notes

Episode 262 features a conversation between Dr. Ayers and Ken Reed, Vice President at TapRooT, focusing on the real purpose and power of Root Cause Analysis (RCA). The discussion emphasizes that incidents are painful enough—what matters most is learning from them so they never happen again.

  🔍 What the Episode Covers 1. Why Root Cause Analysis Matters

Reed explains that RCA is about peeling back the onion to uncover the true underlying causes of an incident—not the superficial or convenient explanations. The goal is to understand why the failure occurred so organizations can prevent recurrence.

2. “Never Blame the Employee”

A major theme is rejecting the outdated mindset of blaming workers. Reed stresses that incidents almost always stem from systemic issues, not individual fault. Blame prevents learning and shuts down honest reporting.

3. RCA + Incident Investigation = A Complete Picture

The episode highlights how RCA works hand‑in‑hand with incident investigation.

  • Investigation gathers facts

  • RCA interprets those facts to identify root causes Together, they create a structured, repeatable approach to learning from failure.

4. Practical Guidance for Safety Professionals

Reed shares actionable insights for those new to incident investigations, including:

  • How to approach interviews

  • How to avoid assumptions

  • How to use structured RCA tools

  • How to communicate findings without blame

The episode is positioned as a starter guide for safety pros wanting to improve their investigation skills.

  ⭐ Key Takeaways for Safety Leaders
  • Incidents are painful—but failing to learn from them is worse.

  • RCA is about systems thinking, not fault‑finding.

  • A structured approach leads to better corrective actions.

  • Psychological safety is essential for honest investigations.

  • The goal is always the same: make sure it never happens again.