The Innovative Brain Archive
|
A New & Improved Twist on Safety— For the Body, Heart, and MindPlay safe! Be safe! Safety first! Every time a kid leaves the house they are reminded to be safe. Don’t forget to wear your seatbelt! Your helmet! Your tooth guard! Steel toed shoes! Think about all of the attire and paraphernalia that are produced to support people’s safety. Think about all of the professionals that are serving our safety interests — police, firefighters, safety professionals, etc. Safety is integral to everything we do.
Typically, when we think of safety at work, we think about physical safety, and we think about industrial environments where employees wear hardhats and operate large equipment and handle complex electrical challenges. We think about OSHA requirements. Most organizations commit significant resources to being safe and have dedicated safety professionals on staff. And, all of the focus is given to physical safety and wellness. Physical safety is crucial; there is no question about that. However, we submit that we might be missing an opportunity to apply similar resources to preventing emotional and cognitive safety issues as well. At New & Improved, we’re very interested in helping organizations foster an organizational climate for creativity and innovation. We already know that this is dependent on creating a climate that feels emotionally safe — a place where new ideas are welcomed and win/win relationships are valued. Over the past couple of years, N&I has been working with a utility company that does complicated electrical and mechanical maintenance in the field and at their headquarters. Nearly a third of their employees are professionals working in offices. The organization has a robust safety program and a pretty good safety record. But, it is not perfect and perfection is their goal. So, they contracted us to help a cross-functional group of employees create a new safety vision for the organization. The group came up with a vision that was compelling to all of them. In the vision, they made reference to helping employees manage safety in all aspects of their lives. The core value that underlies the vision is caring. So, whether an employee is at work or at home or in the car — caring for the well-being and safety of self and others all of the time is really the goal. What they came to realize was that there were lots of resources dedicated to physical safety and no resources dedicated to emotional safety or cognitive safety. It became apparent to us that there were far more instances of
Research on managing for creativity by Theresa Amabile at Harvard clearly shows that in many organizations, appearing critical of others ideas can make you seem smarter to your boss, and potentially enhance your own career at the others expense. The downside: it kills creativity dead. As leaders, we need to foster an environment that follows the concept of “Praise First” and reward those who follow this particular “Creativity & Safety SOP.” There are no statistical measures posted publicly for the number of emotional safety mishaps like there are for physical injuries. Paying more attention to developing emotional intelligence in the workplace will more than likely result in happier employees, more caring, and interestingly, also fewer physical accidents. (Many accidents are caused by the distraction that accompanies emotional turmoil.) All of us feel unsafe when we experience our ideas being
One way we have helped this organization to promote cognitive and emotional safety is by helping them learn to manage meetings more productively. When solving problems they have learned to separate divergent and convergent thinking. We have taught thinking and decision making tools that promote dialogue, consensus, and action. When practiced, these kinds of tools and principles encourage people to think creatively and feel cognitively and emotionally safe. While it is important to always reinforce physical safety and train employees to perform their job safely, it might also be important to provide them with emotional and cognitive training. To be effective in relationships, it is important to learn how to listen with empathy, to confront in a productive way, and resolve conflict in a win/win way. To manage ideas productively, training in Creative Problem Solving provides employees with a common language and a common set of thinking tools and principles. There are many possible ways to develop emotional and cognitive skills and we think it is important to be deliberate about doing something to foster an environment that expands safety to these realms.
Though we can approach physical, emotional, and cognitive safety separately, we know that, in practice, they are interdependent. Our physical well-being effects our emotional well-being which effects our cognitive functioning etc. The bottom line — Safety is integral to everything we do. It is a value that many of us hold and it is a practice that needs regular attention. Safety is about caring about and looking out for self and others. It is about physical safety, no question, and it is also about emotional and cognitive safety. It is our belief that if we would apply the resources to emotional and intellectual safety that we do to physical safety that we would prevent accidents and injuries and improve the organizational climate for creative thinking and innovative output.
|
© 2008, New & Improved®, LLC. <www.newandimproved.com> <info@newandimproved.com>.— No part of this newsletter may be reproduced without the entire copyright information intact. Violators will be made to work without their safety equipment and without a net.