ABSTRACT

At the core of The Relationship Factor in Safety Leadership are eight beliefs about human nature that are common to leaders who successfully communicate that safety is important while meeting business results. Using stories and business language the book explains how to create and recover important stakeholder relationships by setting priorities and taking action based on these beliefs.

The beliefs are based on the author’s 25 years of experience supporting operational and safety leaders with successful and unsuccessful change efforts in pharmaceutical, nuclear, mining, manufacturing and power generation. The author also offers compelling evidence from many social and scientific disciplines that support the conclusion that satisfying our need for relationship is a major motivator.

The Five Orientations Model offers a perspective on solving complex problems when confronted with multiple demands. The book provides managers and supervisors with the motivation to build relationships and points to the conditions needed for success. It also describes a process to take united action but retain the flexibility to change course as necessary.

 The book is written for managers and leaders, at all levels, concerned with occupational health and safety, and wishing to learn how to leverage relationships to achieve higher employee engagement and performance.

chapter 2|23 pages

Review of relationship-based research

chapter 4|12 pages

Trust: Recovering, creating and holding on

chapter 5|7 pages

Problem solving in a relational world

chapter 6|3 pages

Unification

chapter 7|4 pages

Penetration

chapter 8|3 pages

Resolution

chapter 9|3 pages

Enactment

chapter 10|3 pages

Perseverance

chapter 11|4 pages

Conclusion