Last Updated MAY 2022
Last Updated MAY 2022
Last Updated MAY 2022
Safety at work is important when it comes to improving productivity and efficiency. Keeping your employees engaged gives them ownership and makes them more accountable when it comes to being safe in the workplace.
“There are attitudinal barriers around building a culture of safety-based behavior,” says Lena Heidel, global industrial business manager for Kimberly-Clark Professional. “Companies fear that it will harm operational results, not improve them.” For example, a production manager may overlook safety measures fearing that they might disrupt productivity or increase costs.
“We continue to see a need to change safety-based behaviors in the manufacturing environment,” says Mazen Kachlan, Global KleenGuard Brand Leader for Kimberly-Clark Professional. “There is a belief that employee safety and operational results are mutually exclusive and therefore a production manager may prioritize operational results over safety. We find that the contrary is true, instilling a strong safety culture leads to greater efficiency and better business results."
"If anything, emphasizing safety and optimizing performance leads to greater efficiency in the workplace", Heidel says.
For years, the Kimberly-Clark facility in Corinth, Mississippi, maintained a strong safety record. Then suddenly the facility started reporting notable incidents, like minor injuries and an increase in property damage. For Shannon Ross, a plant manager in the Kimberly-Clark Consumer Division, he knew that for the Corinth plant to be world-class in safety, it had to create a new safety culture.
“To accomplish this, we pulled together a cross-functional team to complete a four-step problem-solving session to analyze safety incidents that occurred during this time frame and get to the root cause,” Ross says.
During the session, Ross and his team discovered that employees didn’t feel engaged or accountable and didn’t have a sense of ownership in the workplace.
As a solution, Ross says "plant management encouraged every team member to commit to Kimberly-Clark’s Three Safety Obligations:
Everyone holds each other and themselves accountable for their safety.” This includes holding leadership accountable.
To foster behavior, change, the plant instituted five initiatives:
“Our team members were empowered and more invested in making sure that they and their co-workers were able to return home safely to their families each day,” Ross says.
The result: The Corinth plant emerged safer than before and even received Kimberly-Clark’s inaugural Corinthian Award for going 365 days without any major or minor injuries. The plant also significantly improved its efficiency. It realized year-over-year productivity gains of 9.5 percent and 7.9 percent in its folded and rolled wiper production lines, respectively.
In the end, the Corinth facility learned that by enacting incremental changes, encouraging open dialogue and taking a holistic approach to reinvigorate workplace culture, it could improve productivity and efficiency without sacrificing safety.