PLAY PODCASTS
Episode 298 - The most overlooked hazard-assumptions
Episode 298

Episode 298 - The most overlooked hazard-assumptions

The Occupational Safety Leadership Podcast

March 29, 20266m 30s

Audio is streamed directly from the publisher (mcdn.podbean.com) as published in their RSS feed. Play Podcasts does not host this file. Rights-holders can request removal through the copyright & takedown page.

Show Notes

Episode 298 focuses on a subtle but dangerous hazard that shows up in every workplace, every day: assumptions. Dr. Ayers explains that assumptions quietly undermine safety because they bypass verification, distort decision‑making, and create blind spots that lead to serious incidents.

The core message: Most incidents don’t happen because people don’t know — they happen because people assume.

  ⚠️ What Makes Assumptions So Dangerous

Assumptions are hazardous because they:

  • Replace verification with guessing

  • Create false confidence

  • Normalize shortcuts

  • Hide system drift

  • Prevent workers from asking questions

  • Lead leaders to believe work is being done “the right way” when it isn’t

Assumptions are invisible until something goes wrong — and by then, it’s too late.

  🔍 Common Assumptions That Lead to Incidents

Dr. Ayers highlights several patterns:

• “They already checked that.”

Tasks get skipped because everyone thinks someone else handled it.

• “We’ve done this a hundred times.”

Familiarity breeds complacency.

• “The equipment is fine.”

No one verifies because it “usually works.”

• “The plan is clear.”

Leaders assume understanding instead of confirming it.

• “If there was a problem, someone would say something.”

Silence is misinterpreted as safety.

These assumptions quietly erode safeguards.

  🧭 How to Counter Assumptions

The episode introduces simple leadership tools to replace assumptions with clarity:

1. Ask workers to “show me.”

Not to catch them — but to understand reality.

2. Verify critical steps.

Especially those tied to serious injury potential.

3. Encourage questions.

Make it normal to pause and clarify.

4. Slow down high‑risk moments.

Assumptions spike when people feel rushed.

5. Use closed‑loop communication.

Have workers repeat back instructions to confirm understanding.

These small behaviors dramatically reduce risk.

  🧰 Where Assumptions Hide in Daily Work

Dr. Ayers points out that assumptions often appear in:

  • Pre‑task briefings

  • Equipment setup

  • Confined space entry

  • Lockout/tagout

  • Contractor coordination

  • Shift handoffs

  • Maintenance tasks

Anywhere communication or verification is weak, assumptions fill the gap.

  🧑‍🏫 Leadership Takeaways
  • Assumptions are one of the most overlooked — and most dangerous — hazards

  • Leaders must model verification, not guesswork

  • Asking questions is a sign of strength, not weakness

  • The antidote to assumptions is clarity, curiosity, and confirmation

  • Eliminating assumptions prevents incidents long before they happen

The episode’s core message: Safety improves when leaders challenge assumptions, not people.