Inside a bucket lift, a new lineman was working nervously near a utility pole. From below, his supervisor began yelling. One wrong move and a hazardous situation can turn deadly, and by adding unnecessary pressure, such as in the example above, supervisors can wind up making things worse. This ultimately affects the entire workplace culture, in which the attitude of each worker contributes. There are ways to improve that culture for better efficiency and safety.
These days, shouting and poor behavior is less tolerated. A study by the Workplace Bullying Institute shows that 35% of American workers say they have experienced "repeated mistreatment" at work and 72% of those incidents came from their bosses. When a boss yells, workers can become more stressed. This type of leadership discourages workers, prevents communication, and produces a hostile work environment.
"Hearing, observing, or being the target of yelling in the workplace can be emotionally draining and can make it difficult to be productive so that you can meet your daily work expectations," writes Anne Kinsey, a business management professional in North Carolina.
How workplace leaders act can have a great impact on workers and safety culture. Good interpersonal skills help build trust, cooperation, respect, and create solid employee retention.
"There's a very big difference between managing and leading," said Michelle Ray, a workplace motivational speaker in Canada. Ray says top-level management on down needs to see managing beyond a transaction and make it more motivational. "Be a transformational leader with the vision to rise above challenges."
Is everyone in the workplace doing what it takes to stay safe? An effective workplace safety culture uses accountability, behavioral changes, communication, and safety training tools. Building a better workplace culture and maintaining it is part of continuous improvement. This in turn helps to drive business growth, which is among many benefits of building a company culture around safety.
Get a reference guide to individual safety-related programs, regulatory requirements, and more in our free EHS Managers Guide.