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ADVANCING YOUR PROFESSIONAL SAFETY PRACTICE. Roger L. Brauer, Ph.D., CSP, PE Executive Director Board of Certified Safety Professionals. GOALS. Review Trends in Practice Review Factors Affecting Pay What Makes a Difference in a Career . TRENDS IN PRACTICE. TRENDS IN PRACTICE.
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ADVANCING YOUR PROFESSIONAL SAFETY PRACTICE Roger L. Brauer, Ph.D., CSP, PE Executive Director Board of Certified Safety Professionals
GOALS • Review Trends in Practice • Review Factors Affecting Pay • What Makes a Difference in a Career
TRENDS IN PRACTICE • Convergence of Safety, Health, Environment and Ergonomics • Generalist vs. specialist • Source for this trend • Safety professionals don’t just do safety • Specialized methods apply to general practice
TRENDS IN PRACTICE • Consulting • 1980s: Less than 7% • 1990s: Doubled to about 15% • Recently: Slow continued growth
TRENDS IN PRACTICE • Reasons for Safety • Morality • Compliance • Cost • Business value • Link Safety to Business • Bottom line • Business metrics
TRENDS IN PRACTICE • Pushing Safety Deeper into an Organization • Old: • Safety professional directed, taught, led, cheered • Safety department: Focus for safety • New: • Safety integral with business units, tied to metrics • Safety a part of business culture • Safety leaders: managers, supervisors, workers • Safety Department: coordinator, special help
OLD: Work Execution Identify & correct hazards Conduct training Direct NEW: Leadership Train others to identify & correct hazards Training requirements, manage delivery, & assess effectiveness Coordinate, assist TRENDS IN PRACTICE
TRENDS IN PRACTICE • Old: Bachelor’s degree or less • 1980: 25% had less than a bachelors degree • New: Advanced degree is strong trend • 2000 • 44% of CSPs had advanced degree • < 6% have less than a bachelor’s degree • 2004 • 50% or greater with advanced degrees
TRENDS IN PRACTICE • Quality in Credentials through Accreditation • Academic • Institutional accreditation • Program accreditation • Certification • Growth in designations (240 in SHE&E in U.S.) • Few meet certification accreditation (~ 15) • (NCCA, CESB, ANSI/ISO/IEC 17024)
SALARIES IN GENERAL • 1998 ISHN 609 $46,000 • 1998 ASSE 977 $68,056 • 2000 BCSP 4,800 $75,291 • 2003 NSC 478 $64,665 • 2004 BCSP 106 $84,245
SALARY FACTORS • Leadership (supervising other professionals) • Dual certification/licensure • Longevity • Age, years in profession, years certified • Education • Degree level and degree field
CORE COMPETENCIES • The Core Competencies (Functions, tasks, knowledge & skills) • ASSE: Scope and Functions of the Professional Safety Position • CSP Job Analysis Study • CSP Examination Guide: Examination Blueprint • BCSP Technical Report 2001-1 • Other studies
LEADERSHIP SKILLS • Technical path • Leadership path • Theories and principles • Techniques of leadership • Creating a vision • Guide, direct, mentor, coach • Shared leadership • Servant leadership
COMMUNICATION SKILLS • Written • Verbal • Listening & understanding • Foreign language
LEVERAGING TECHNOLOGY • The “New Tool Box” • Visual media • Data capture and analysis • Data management • Data and information sharing/transfer • Training and training management • “Leap ahead” technologies
THINKING IN BUSINESS TERMS • Metrics • Global • By organizational unit • Leading vs trailing • Safety is not an “add on” • Convert to business jargon • Convert to business metrics
VISIONING • Think With a Vision • Think Long Term (Where are you going?) • Act Short Term (How to get there)
WEARING OTHERS’ SHOES • Understand others • Flexible roles • Changing work groups • Involve others • None of us alone is as smart as we are collectively