1 It’s easy to be misled – lessons from the United Kingdom and Europe 2 A toolbox of principles 3 Plan to finish 4 Risk assessment friend or foe 5 Risk assessment tricks and techniques 6 Prioritisation provides freedom and clarity 7 Finding solutions 8 Culture, involvement, behaviour and values 9 Reactive safety 10 The view from the top 11 Creating desire and managing change
Duncan is the Head of Advice & Practice at the Institution of
Occupational Safety & Health; the worlds leading membership body
for safety professionals. His more recent experience includes being
responsible for health & safety governance in the John Lewis
Partnership and the Safety Manager for the Waitrose Division. This
included responsibility for retail, distribution, head office
functions, leisure and for the Leckford farming estate. Duncan’s
previous experience includes a short military career, being the
director of an outdoor adventure centre, a college lecturer and a
safety risk consultant. In this capacity his work was in large
multiple site and complex organisations in the High Street retail,
distribution, social housing, manufacturing and public service
sectors (police, military & health care) at home and abroad. Duncan
regularly writes magazine articles and makes presentations at
conferences that challenge people to think again about their
approach to safety risk management.
Chris began his safety career in the foundries of South Yorkshire
having spent his formative years in production management. Schooled
largely by the EEF in Sheffield, Chris saw the move from the rule
driven regime of the Factories Act to the more modern risk led
approach offered by the Management Regulations. Where many may have
seen risk assessment as a burden, Chris took this new requirement
as an opportunity realising at a very early stage that being
risk-centric was the way forward. Moving from heavy industry, Chris
spent several years in consultancy and training working right
across Europe and into the Far East, during which time he had the
opportunity to see how various risk models worked; the keys to
their success and the common pitfalls too. Joining John Lewis in
2005, Chris had the perfect opening to put into practice all that
he had learned, benefiting from all of the support of a renowned
and forward looking business. After a brief period as Group Head
for Safety for the bookmaker Ladbrokes Coral, Chris is now working
in partnership with Professor Tim Marsh and Jason Anker MBE in
their new venture. Chris has built his reputation on being
forthright, often moving where others fear to tread. Chris’ drive
is to do things pragmatically and is brave enough to do things
differently to achieve it.
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