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Episode 38 - Negative Attributes of a Safety Audit
Episode 38

Episode 38 - Negative Attributes of a Safety Audit

The Occupational Safety Leadership Podcast

March 22, 20238m 2s

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Show Notes

Episode 38 explores the common pitfalls and negative attributes that undermine the value of safety audits. Dr. Ayers explains that while audits are essential for continuous improvement, they can easily become counterproductive when poorly designed, poorly executed, or misaligned with organizational culture.

The core message: A bad audit does more harm than no audit.

  🧭 What a Safety Audit Should Be

Before diving into the negatives, the episode reinforces that a good audit should:

  • Identify system weaknesses

  • Drive improvement

  • Reinforce expectations

  • Build trust

  • Provide actionable insights

When audits drift from these goals, they become obstacles instead of tools.

  ❌ Negative Attribute #1: Audits That Focus Only on Compliance

Many audits become:

  • Checklist exercises

  • Focused on paperwork, not performance

  • Obsessed with minor infractions

  • Blind to real operational risk

This leads to a false sense of security — “passing the audit” replaces “being safe.”

  ❌ Negative Attribute #2: Audits That Create Fear

Audits can unintentionally:

  • Punish workers for honesty

  • Discourage reporting

  • Create anxiety and resentment

  • Lead to hiding issues instead of fixing them

A fear‑based audit culture destroys transparency.

  ❌ Negative Attribute #3: Audits Done Without Context

Dr. Ayers highlights audits that:

  • Don’t understand the work

  • Don’t consider operational realities

  • Apply generic standards to unique environments

  • Fail to involve frontline employees

These audits produce irrelevant findings and erode credibility.

  ❌ Negative Attribute #4: Audits That Ignore Systemic Issues

Poor audits focus on:

  • Individual behavior

  • Minor PPE issues

  • Housekeeping observations

While ignoring:

  • Engineering controls

  • Staffing levels

  • Training quality

  • Procedure accuracy

  • Leadership behaviors

This shifts blame to workers instead of addressing root causes.

  ❌ Negative Attribute #5: Audits With No Follow‑Through

One of the most damaging patterns:

  • Findings are documented

  • Reports are written

  • Action items are assigned

  • And then… nothing happens

Lack of follow‑through teaches employees that audits don’t matter.

  ❌ Negative Attribute #6: Audits That Are Too Infrequent or Too Frequent

Too infrequent:

  • Issues go unnoticed

  • Trends are missed

  • Risk grows silently

Too frequent:

  • Audit fatigue sets in

  • Findings become repetitive

  • Teams stop taking audits seriously

Balance is essential.

  ❌ Negative Attribute #7: Audits That Aren’t Objective

Audits lose value when:

  • Auditors lack training

  • Auditors have conflicts of interest

  • Findings are influenced by personalities

  • Leadership pressures auditors to “look good”

Objectivity is the backbone of a credible audit.

  🔄 How These Negative Attributes Harm Safety Culture

Dr. Ayers emphasizes that poor audits:

  • Reduce trust

  • Discourage reporting

  • Create compliance theater

  • Undermine continuous improvement

  • Damage relationships between workers and leadership

  • Shift focus away from real risk

A bad audit culture is a risk multiplier.

  🧑‍🏫 Leadership Responsibilities

Safety leaders must:

  • Ensure audits are fair, objective, and risk‑focused

  • Train auditors thoroughly

  • Involve frontline employees

  • Prioritize systemic issues over minor infractions

  • Follow through on findings

  • Use audits to learn, not punish

  • Reinforce that audits are tools for improvement

The episode’s core message: Audits should build trust, reveal risk, and drive improvement — not fear, frustration, or paperwork.