E74 This Simple Safety Assessment Could Save Your Career
Feeling overwhelmed by OSHA compliance and not sure where to focus first as a safety manager? This video will show you why most workplace safety programs fail — and the simple safety assessment process that changes everything. In this episode, I break down how busy and new safety managers can stop trying to “do everything” and finally focus on what actually matters most. We cover how to conduct a safety assessment, identify real workplace hazards, review OSHA logs, improve safety programs, and build a system that helps you go from overwhelmed to OSHA-ready. If you work in manufacturing, food processing, or industrial environments and feel buried under OSHA requirements, safety training, inspections, and paperwork, this video will help you create clarity, prioritize the right actions, and build a stronger workplace safety culture. ✅ In this video, you’ll learn: Why most safety managers stay overwhelmed even when working nonstop The 4 critical parts of a complete safety assessment How to use OSHA 300 logs and accident history to identify real risks The difference between OSHA compliance and true safety leadership How your own strengths and weaknesses impact your safety program success 🎯 FREE RESOURCES TO HELP YOU BECOME OSHA-READY: 👉 Watch the FREE Stress-Free Safety Workshop: https://www.helpwithosha.com/masterclass 👉 Download the FREE OSHA Audit Checklist: https://www.helpwithosha.com/opt-in 💬 QUESTION FOR YOU: What’s the biggest challenge you’re dealing with right now as a safety manager — OSHA compliance, training, buy-in, inspections, or something else? Drop a comment below and let me know. And if you want practical safety management strategies that actually work in the real world, subscribe to the channel. 🔗 RESOURCES & RELATED VIDEOS: Free OSHA Audit Checklist Stress-Free Safety Workshop Safety Assessment & Coaching Resources More workplace safety training at HelpWithOSHA.com #OSHA #SafetyManager #WorkplaceSafety #EHS #SafetyTraining #ManufacturingSafety #OSHACompliance #IndustrialSafety #SafetyCulture #SafetyLeadership