An assessment of the effectiveness of behaviour-based safety systems in establishing organisational culture / J. Cronje

People, processes and teams form the basis of organisational success. Therefore the understanding and prediction of people and their behaviour- both individual and in a team - is a critical management activity. Behaviour of people are influenced by internal factors such as personality, abilities and...

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Main Author: Cronje, Jennifer
Language:en
Published: North-West University 2012
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10394/7388
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spelling ndltd-NWUBOLOKA1-oai-dspace.nwu.ac.za-10394-73882014-04-17T03:56:39ZAn assessment of the effectiveness of behaviour-based safety systems in establishing organisational culture / J. CronjeCronje, JenniferAssessmenteffectivenessbehaviour basedsafety systemsestablishingorganisational culturePeople, processes and teams form the basis of organisational success. Therefore the understanding and prediction of people and their behaviour- both individual and in a team - is a critical management activity. Behaviour of people are influenced by internal factors such as personality, abilities and skills, perception, beliefs and motives as well as by external factors from the environment in which the individual operates. Understanding these forces and their influence on the individual is paramount if one is to understand how to canalise these behaviours to achieve any given organisational goal. Another concept important to understand, is that of organisational culture which is regarded as beliefs, values and learned ways of coping with experience. Organisational culture develops during the course of an organisation's history, and has become a more and more important concept in organisations, due to its strategic nature and impact on business. The culture of an organisation can be influenced and changed naturally over time, or by using deliberate, carefully designed cultural change interventions. The maturity of an organisation's HSEC systems and processes and related improvement in performance, is related to the prevailing HSEC culture evident in the organisation. It is evident that as an organisation moves from a reactive safety culture to an interdependent safety culture, so does the HSEC performance and lagging indicators of the organisation increase. Behaviour-based safety processes endeavour to influence the individual employee's behaviour in order to improve the safety performance of an organisation. The benefits of behaviour-based safety programs are numerous and lead to reduced injuries and improved levels of safe behaviour amongst employees. Metalloys has selected behaviour-based safety as one of the tools to entrench a culture of zero harm in the organisation and to establish an empowered and enabled workforce. The effectiveness of this approach was assessed during this study The empirical research conducted for this study revealed that both the average response rate per construct and the responses per question within the various constructs reflect a positive response to the elements tested. It is evident from the results that a large proportion of the employees are of the opinion that communication processes are effectively established, employees are involved on a personal level, that there is sufficient supervisor support and that leadership exhibits visible leadership in the organisation. These are all constructs testing the elements required to effectively establish the culture of the organisation. In addition, a large proportion of the employees felt that HSEC systems are well entrenched and that facilities and equipment are of such a standard, as to ensure the safety of employees and that these are maintained at high levels.Thesis (M.B.A.)--North-West University, Vaal Triangle Campus, 2010North-West University2012-09-12T08:34:52Z2012-09-12T08:34:52Z2010Thesishttp://hdl.handle.net/10394/7388en
collection NDLTD
language en
sources NDLTD
topic Assessment
effectiveness
behaviour based
safety systems
establishing
organisational culture
spellingShingle Assessment
effectiveness
behaviour based
safety systems
establishing
organisational culture
Cronje, Jennifer
An assessment of the effectiveness of behaviour-based safety systems in establishing organisational culture / J. Cronje
description People, processes and teams form the basis of organisational success. Therefore the understanding and prediction of people and their behaviour- both individual and in a team - is a critical management activity. Behaviour of people are influenced by internal factors such as personality, abilities and skills, perception, beliefs and motives as well as by external factors from the environment in which the individual operates. Understanding these forces and their influence on the individual is paramount if one is to understand how to canalise these behaviours to achieve any given organisational goal. Another concept important to understand, is that of organisational culture which is regarded as beliefs, values and learned ways of coping with experience. Organisational culture develops during the course of an organisation's history, and has become a more and more important concept in organisations, due to its strategic nature and impact on business. The culture of an organisation can be influenced and changed naturally over time, or by using deliberate, carefully designed cultural change interventions. The maturity of an organisation's HSEC systems and processes and related improvement in performance, is related to the prevailing HSEC culture evident in the organisation. It is evident that as an organisation moves from a reactive safety culture to an interdependent safety culture, so does the HSEC performance and lagging indicators of the organisation increase. Behaviour-based safety processes endeavour to influence the individual employee's behaviour in order to improve the safety performance of an organisation. The benefits of behaviour-based safety programs are numerous and lead to reduced injuries and improved levels of safe behaviour amongst employees. Metalloys has selected behaviour-based safety as one of the tools to entrench a culture of zero harm in the organisation and to establish an empowered and enabled workforce. The effectiveness of this approach was assessed during this study The empirical research conducted for this study revealed that both the average response rate per construct and the responses per question within the various constructs reflect a positive response to the elements tested. It is evident from the results that a large proportion of the employees are of the opinion that communication processes are effectively established, employees are involved on a personal level, that there is sufficient supervisor support and that leadership exhibits visible leadership in the organisation. These are all constructs testing the elements required to effectively establish the culture of the organisation. In addition, a large proportion of the employees felt that HSEC systems are well entrenched and that facilities and equipment are of such a standard, as to ensure the safety of employees and that these are maintained at high levels. === Thesis (M.B.A.)--North-West University, Vaal Triangle Campus, 2010
author Cronje, Jennifer
author_facet Cronje, Jennifer
author_sort Cronje, Jennifer
title An assessment of the effectiveness of behaviour-based safety systems in establishing organisational culture / J. Cronje
title_short An assessment of the effectiveness of behaviour-based safety systems in establishing organisational culture / J. Cronje
title_full An assessment of the effectiveness of behaviour-based safety systems in establishing organisational culture / J. Cronje
title_fullStr An assessment of the effectiveness of behaviour-based safety systems in establishing organisational culture / J. Cronje
title_full_unstemmed An assessment of the effectiveness of behaviour-based safety systems in establishing organisational culture / J. Cronje
title_sort assessment of the effectiveness of behaviour-based safety systems in establishing organisational culture / j. cronje
publisher North-West University
publishDate 2012
url http://hdl.handle.net/10394/7388
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