PLAY PODCASTS
Episode 36 - 6 Common Pitfalls of Safety Inspections
Episode 36

Episode 36 - 6 Common Pitfalls of Safety Inspections

The Occupational Safety Leadership Podcast

March 20, 202310m 14s

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 36 breaks down the six most common mistakes that weaken safety inspections and prevent them from identifying real risk. Dr. Ayers explains how inspections often drift into routine, low‑value activities — and how leaders can refocus them on meaningful hazard recognition.

The core message: A safety inspection is only as good as the hazards it actually finds.

  ❗ Pitfall 1: Focusing Only on Housekeeping and PPE

Many inspections get stuck on:

  • Trash on the floor

  • Minor clutter

  • Missing gloves or glasses

These issues matter, but they aren’t the hazards that kill people. When inspections focus only on surface‑level items, deeper risks go unnoticed.

  ❗ Pitfall 2: Using the Same Checklist Every Time

Static checklists lead to:

  • Predictable inspections

  • Blind spots

  • Missed hazards

  • “Check‑the‑box” behavior

Inspections must adapt to changing work, conditions, and risks.

  ❗ Pitfall 3: Not Engaging Employees During the Inspection

A major missed opportunity:

  • Inspectors walk through silently

  • No questions asked

  • No conversations with workers

  • No learning about real‑world conditions

Frontline employees often know where the real hazards are — but only if someone asks.

  ❗ Pitfall 4: Failing to Look for Systemic Issues

Weak inspections focus on:

  • Individual behaviors

  • Minor rule violations

While ignoring:

  • Procedure gaps

  • Training deficiencies

  • Equipment reliability issues

  • Staffing or workload problems

Systemic issues drive most serious incidents.

  ❗ Pitfall 5: Not Documenting or Following Up

A common pattern:

  • Hazards are identified

  • Notes are taken

  • And then… nothing happens

Lack of follow‑through destroys credibility and teaches employees that inspections don’t matter.

  ❗ Pitfall 6: Conducting Inspections at the Same Time and in the Same Way

Predictable inspections lead to:

  • “Inspection mode” behavior

  • Workers preparing only for the audit window

  • Hazards hidden outside the inspection schedule

Varying timing, routes, and focus areas increases effectiveness.

  🔄 Why These Pitfalls Matter

Dr. Ayers emphasizes that weak inspections:

  • Miss serious hazards

  • Create a false sense of security

  • Damage trust

  • Waste time

  • Fail to reduce risk

Inspections must be dynamic, risk‑focused, and people‑centered to be effective.

  🧑‍🏫 Leadership Responsibilities

Safety leaders must:

  • Train inspectors to recognize real hazards

  • Encourage conversations with workers

  • Update checklists regularly

  • Look for patterns and systemic issues

  • Track and close corrective actions

  • Reinforce that inspections are about learning, not blame

The episode’s core message: Great inspections find real hazards, fix real problems, and build real trust.