How can Sir Alex Ferguson help you with health and safety?
12 September 2022
Birketts’ Francesca Reason looks to the tactics of sports psychology to change the way we implement Health and Safety, turning it into a culture – not the rules!
For a time, health and safety was viewed by many as an afterthought, a box to be ticked for insurance purposes. In some quarters it was felt to be an inhibitor of efficiency or productivity, driven by misleading press articles and ultimately, because deep down, none of us expect the worst to happen.
Thankfully, there has been a significant evolution in recent years. Business owners understand that safe work-place behaviours and attitudes, do directly correlate with financial improvement. Businesses care about their workers, ensuring that they have the right policies and procedures in place to facilitate safe working.
This begs the obvious question: how can you ensure that your business remains compliant, productive and your people work safely? Thankfully, I don’t believe the answer is to bury your Quality, Health, Safety, and Environment (QHSE) team in more paperwork.
On the contrary, the biggest challenge for most companies is not establishing the paperwork that they need to show ‘compliance’ but rather translating what is written on those pieces of paper into a second-nature workplace culture.
Changing behaviour
Perhaps, at this stage, you might be inclined to instigate a one-off but well intentioned training session, or send a group email reminding employees where on the intranet they can find the health and safety policies. However, as little as 5% of what we learn at work comes from formal training, compared with a staggering 80% which is learned from our peers. 1
And this is where the lessons of Sir Alex Ferguson, Sir Clive Woodward and Ole Gunnar Solskjear come in.
Teamship
Sir Clive Woodward’s methods, most famously credited for securing the England rugby success of 2003 and since employed by British military leaders, feature what he calls his ‘Teamship rules’. Woodward approaches his leadership from the angle that rule-based culture does not evoke loyalty and almost always results in some form of rebellion.
Instead, he asked his team to agree a collection of non-negotiable behaviours to which they would all consistently adhere, ranging from what time they agree to get on the coach for an away game, to how much they would divulge about colleagues in a press interview.2 The method is powerful not least because not only do the people expected to follow the rules understand the reasoning behind them, they were the ones who had devised them in the first place.
Now, putting aside any admiration for Sir Clive for a moment, you might be wondering how his methods, arguably aimed a group of fifteen men could practically be disseminated to potentially hundreds of workers.
Cultural Architects
For the answer, we turn to Sir Alex Ferguson who championed the importance of small trade mark behaviours in driving success. Reportedly, when a new player stepped onto the ground, they rarely, if ever were told what to do by the boss himself, rather, the other players set the tone for what was acceptable and more importantly, unacceptable at Old Trafford.
Is this not the holy grail of safety culture in the workplace? That rather than senior figures dusting off the old risk assessment folder in the aftermath of a major event to refresh the memory as to what they cover, your workers actually exhibit safe working practices so engrained that they have become second nature having learned them from their peers?
If this sounds appealing, Ole Gunnar Solskjear recommends identifying who your ‘cultural architects’ are. These are the employees with the confidence to influence others and thus shift the company culture, by extending company values when you’re not around because as most of us know, ‘culture is what happens when your leader isn’t in the room, which is of course, most of the time.’3
So, if you want to effect change in your health and safety practices maybe the wisdom of sports psychology is a good place to start;
- Begin with crystal clear health and safety objectives that your team can buy in to, and then,
- Create conditions for the team members that will reinforce your desired behaviours to emerge, thrive and disseminate those objectives, and
- Recognise, reward and respect the small habitual changes that will ultimately lead to a safer environment.
If you’d like to discuss any matters concerning health and safety matters or how best to communicate health and safety messages to your workforce, please contact Francesca Reason in our Regulatory and Corporate Defence Team.
- Dr Tim Marsh, Talking Health Safety and Wellbeing 3rd Edition.
- High Performance, Jake Humphrey and Professor Damian Hughes.
- Professor Damian Hughes, The Barcelona Way
Services
The content of this article is for general information only. It is not, and should not be taken as, legal advice. If you require any further information in relation to this article please contact the author in the first instance. Law covered as at September 2022.