
The Occupational Safety Leadership Podcast Episode 129 - Safety Coach or Safety Cop
Episode 129 tackles a question every safety professional eventually faces: Are you acting like a safety coach… or a safety cop? Dr. Ayers uses this episode to highlight how your approach directly affects hazard identification, employee engagement, and the overall credibility of the safety function.
Core MessageSafety leaders who act like coaches uncover more hazards, build more trust, and create stronger safety cultures than those who act like cops. The mindset you bring to interactions determines whether employees hide problems or bring them forward.
Key Points from the Episode 1. The Safety Cop Mindset-
Focuses on catching people doing something wrong.
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Relies on authority, enforcement, and compliance pressure.
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Creates fear, avoidance, and minimal communication.
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Employees hide hazards to avoid getting in trouble.
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Short‑term compliance improves, but long‑term risk increases.
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Focuses on helping people succeed, not punishing mistakes.
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Builds relationships, trust, and open communication.
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Encourages employees to report hazards early.
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Uses questions, curiosity, and collaboration.
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Drives long‑term improvement and stronger hazard identification.
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Employees feel safe sharing concerns, near‑misses, and system weaknesses.
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Workers volunteer information that inspections alone would never reveal.
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Coaching uncovers the why behind unsafe conditions or behaviors.
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Leaders gain insight into real‑world challenges, not just checklist items.
Safety Cop:
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“Why did you do that?”
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Writes people up quickly.
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Focuses on rules more than people.
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Shows up only when something goes wrong.
Safety Coach:
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“Help me understand what happened.”
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Looks for system causes, not blame.
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Reinforces positive behaviors.
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Is present, approachable, and consistent.
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Coaching builds a culture where hazards surface early.
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Employees become partners in safety, not targets.
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Trust increases, reporting increases, and risk decreases.
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Leaders gain credibility and influence.
You can’t identify hazards effectively if people are afraid to talk to you. When safety leaders shift from policing to coaching, employees open up, communication improves, and the organization uncovers risks long before they turn into incidents.
