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Episode 59 - Dr. Drew Hinton - What makes a great Occupational Safety Trainer
Episode 59

Episode 59 - Dr. Drew Hinton - What makes a great Occupational Safety Trainer

The Occupational Safety Leadership Podcast

May 17, 202327m 32s

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Show Notes

Episode 59 features Dr. Drew Hinton, who breaks down what separates average safety training from high‑impact, behavior‑changing safety training. The conversation focuses on communication, adult learning, engagement strategies, and the mindset required to truly influence workers.

  ⭐ The Core Message

Great safety trainers don’t just deliver information — they change how people think, feel, and act about risk.

Dr. Hinton emphasizes that training must be practical, relevant, and engaging, or it will never translate into safer behavior on the job.

  🧠 What Makes a Great Safety Trainer 1. Understanding Adult Learning Principles

Adults learn best when training is:

  • Relevant to their job

  • Immediately applicable

  • Interactive

  • Respectful of their experience

  • Problem‑centered, not theory‑centered

Dr. Hinton stresses that adults don’t want lectures — they want solutions.

  2. Engagement Over Information Dumping

Great trainers:

  • Ask questions

  • Use real examples

  • Encourage discussion

  • Use demonstrations and hands‑on activities

  • Break up long content with interaction

The episode highlights that engagement drives retention, not slides.

  3. Storytelling as a Training Superpower

Stories make safety real.

Dr. Hinton explains that stories:

  • Create emotional connection

  • Make lessons memorable

  • Help workers visualize consequences

  • Build credibility

A powerful story can change behavior more effectively than a regulation citation.

  4. Credibility and Real‑World Experience

Workers respond to trainers who:

  • Understand the work

  • Respect frontline experience

  • Speak the language of the job

  • Avoid jargon and over‑complication

Credibility is earned through authenticity, not titles.

  5. Practical, Job‑Specific Content

Generic training fails.

Effective training:

  • Uses examples from the workers’ actual tasks

  • Addresses real hazards they face

  • Shows how controls apply to their environment

  • Connects safety concepts to productivity and quality

Workers must see the “why” behind the rule.

  6. Energy, Passion, and Presence

Dr. Hinton emphasizes that delivery matters:

  • Energy keeps attention

  • Passion builds trust

  • Presence commands the room

  • Humor (used well) increases engagement

A trainer’s enthusiasm signals that the topic matters.

  7. Feedback and Continuous Improvement

Great trainers:

  • Ask for feedback

  • Adjust based on audience response

  • Continuously refine their material

  • Stay current on standards and best practices

Training is a skill — and skills require practice.

  🧰 Practical Examples from the Episode

Dr. Hinton shares scenarios such as:

  • A trainer who reads slides vs. one who uses hands‑on demos

  • A class that tunes out because the content feels irrelevant

  • A session that transforms because the trainer connects safety to personal stories

These examples illustrate how small changes dramatically improve training impact.

  🧑‍🏫 Leadership Takeaways

To build great safety trainers, leaders should:

  • Invest in trainer development

  • Encourage storytelling and real‑world examples

  • Provide time for preparation and practice

  • Evaluate training based on behavior change, not attendance

  • Support trainers with resources and feedback

The episode’s core message: Great safety training is not about compliance — it’s about influence.