Safety on Purpose

Joseph Garcia

Safety on Purpose is a leadership-focused safety podcast dedicated to transforming how organizations think about workplace safety, culture, and people. Hosted by safety leader Joe Garcia, this podcast goes beyond rules, checklists, and compliance to explore what truly keeps people safe at work. Each episode dives into safety leadership, psychological safety, human factors, operational empathy, Just Culture, behavior-based safety, and the future of the safety profession. Through real-world stories, practical insights, and honest conversations, Safety on Purpose helps safety professionals, leaders, and frontline supervisors move from compliance to commitment. You’ll hear episodes on: Safety culture and leadership developmentHuman-centered safety and risk perceptionCoaching vs. controlling leadership stylesMental health, fatigue, and human performanceTechnology, AI, and the human factorCulture change, trust, and accountabilityLessons learned from real safety experiences Plus, monthly Mentor Moments bonus episodes deliver bite-sized wisdom for young and emerging safety professionals, while special episodes challenge outdated thinking and spark meaningful change. Whether you’re a safety professional, operations leader, HR partner, supervisor, or executive, Safety on Purpose equips you with the mindset and tools to lead safer, stronger, and more resilient organizations—on purpose. New episodes released bi-weekly Subscribe wherever you get your podcasts

  1. 12h ago

    Near Misses Matter

    Send us Fan Mail Your facility can go weeks without a serious injury and still be sitting on a pile of warning signs. Near misses are those warnings: the dropped wrench that lands inches away, the forklift that stops just in time, the slip that “doesn’t count,” the frayed cord someone quietly avoids. When those moments stay unreported, you do not have a clean record, you have missing data. We dig into what near misses really mean in workplace safety and why near miss reporting is often far lower than the true number of close calls. We talk candidly about fear of blame, learned futility when “nothing ever changes,” the friction of clunky reporting systems, cultural pressure to keep production moving, and how risk becomes so normal that people stop seeing it. Then we spell out the true cost of silence: lost predictive power, hidden patterns, accepted hazards, and a higher chance that the first visible event is a severe one. From there, we get practical. We share how to build psychological safety, simplify hazard reporting with fast options like QR codes, cards, mobile or verbal reports, and why speed and feedback matter so much for trust. We also cover how to make it stick: supervisors set the tone, real examples help people recognize risks, and tracking trends turns near misses into action through engineering controls, risk assessments, and smarter safety KPIs. If you want fewer injuries, start by learning faster. Subscribe for more real-world EHS and safety culture insights, share this with a leader who needs it, and leave a quick review if it helped. What is the biggest barrier to near miss reporting where you work? Hosted by: Joe Garcia, Safety Leader & Culture Advocate New Episodes Every Other Tuesday  Safety on Purpose Follow & Connect: 🔸 Instagram: Instagram 🔸 LinkedIn: Joe Garcia 🔸 Spotify | Apple | Podcasts: Search "Safety on Purpose"

    14 min
  2. May 26

    Stop Calling It Human Error

    Send us Fan Mail “Human error” is the fastest way to end an incident report and the surest way to learn almost nothing. We dig into the question that actually prevents repeat events: why did it make sense for someone to do what they did in that moment? When you can answer that honestly, you stop hunting for a villain and start finding the system conditions that made the outcome likely.  We talk through the difference between compliance thinking and systems thinking, then break down what human error really includes: slips and lapses, decision errors, and violations. From there, we get concrete about the drivers that push good workers toward bad outcomes, including production pressure, mixed incentives, unclear supervision signals, and “workarounds” that quietly become normal. We also challenge the default corrective action of retraining, especially when the person already knows the rule but the environment makes compliance harder than drifting.  Design and human factors matter just as much as policy. We explore why you cannot out-train poor equipment usability, why engineering controls reduce risk at scale, and how fatigue, stress, and cognitive load make certain mistakes predictable. Finally, we share a better investigation model built around mapping conditions, identifying pressures, examining equipment and reinforcement patterns, and asking the employee what made sense at the time.  If you want fewer injuries, stronger incident reporting, and a healthier safety culture, listen through the end, then subscribe, share this with a leader or investigator on your team, and leave a review with the question your workplace needs to start asking. Hosted by: Joe Garcia, Safety Leader & Culture Advocate New Episodes Every Other Tuesday  Safety on Purpose Follow & Connect: 🔸 Instagram: Instagram 🔸 LinkedIn: Joe Garcia 🔸 Spotify | Apple | Podcasts: Search "Safety on Purpose"

    16 min
  3. May 12

    Hard Conversations Build Safety Leadership

    Send us Fan Mail Hard conversations are the real job description for safety leadership. The moments that shape your reputation aren’t the spreadsheets or the audit scores, they’re the private talks where you challenge production pressure, address shortcuts, and reset expectations without turning the room into a fight. We dig into how to speak up when the stakes are high and the power dynamic is real, so you build credibility instead of becoming “the compliance cop.”  We walk through practical approaches for tough conversations with senior leaders: leading with data and patterns like near miss trends during overtime, translating risk into business impact like downtime and turnover, and using strategic questions that force reflection. We also cover what to do when you hit defensiveness such as “we’ve always done it this way,” including how to acknowledge pressure, reframe the goal, and re-anchor to shared values so the conversation stays productive.  Then we get into the supervisor layer where culture lives or dies day to day. We explain why public correction backfires, how “help me understand” lowers defenses, and how to clarify expectations while making accountability shared. For frontline workers, we focus on curiosity first, separating the person from the behavior, and balancing dignity with firm standards around PPE, tie-off, and procedures.  Finally, we talk emotional intelligence, preparation, and follow-through: reading the room, slowing down, using silence, planning your objective and evidence, and checking back after the conversation so change sticks. If you want a stronger workplace safety culture, better OSHA compliance outcomes, and leaders who own risk instead of dodging it, this is your playbook. Subscribe, share this with a safety pro who needs it, and leave a review with the hardest conversation you’re facing right now. Hosted by: Joe Garcia, Safety Leader & Culture Advocate New Episodes Every Other Tuesday  Safety on Purpose Follow & Connect: 🔸 Instagram: Instagram 🔸 LinkedIn: Joe Garcia 🔸 Spotify | Apple | Podcasts: Search "Safety on Purpose"

    15 min
  4. Apr 28

    From Compliance Cop To Trusted Advisor

    Send us Fan Mail We challenge the uncomfortable truth that many safety leaders get seen as rule enforcers, then lay out how to earn the reputation of a trusted advisor who gets called before problems escalate. We break down the mindset, language, and leadership habits that build influence, improve operations, and strengthen safety culture without leaning on fear.  • why safety gets labeled the enforcer and how the pattern becomes self-reinforcing  • the difference between positional authority and relational influence  • language swaps that move conversations from compliance to problem solving  • building relational equity by showing up before incidents  • connecting safety to operational KPIs like downtime, quality, and turnover  • replacing fear-based messaging with purpose and risk context  • learning the business model to quantify safety value  • running investigations that increase reporting and protect dignity  • credibility through consistency, follow-through, and professionalism  • separating ego from identity to increase humility and influence  • executive communication using options, tradeoffs, and recommendations  • a simple framework: ask before instruct, align goals, offer solutions, follow up visibly, reinforce early engagement  Hosted by: Joe Garcia, Safety Leader & Culture Advocate New Episodes Every Other Tuesday  Safety on Purpose Follow & Connect: 🔸 Instagram: Instagram 🔸 LinkedIn: Joe Garcia 🔸 Spotify | Apple | Podcasts: Search "Safety on Purpose"

    17 min
  5. Mar 17

    A Safety Program Works Only When It Fits Real Work

    Send us Fan Mail We challenge the idea that a clean audit, full training records, and polished policies equal real protection on the job. We break down why “good looking” safety programs fail in practice and how to rebuild something workers trust and actually use. • what “looks good” usually means in safety and why it can still fail • why safety designed from a desk clashes with real work • the gap between work as imagined and work as actually done • why noncompliance often signals a poor fit, not bad attitudes • how overusing training becomes noise instead of a solution • why common safety metrics can hide risk and reward perception • the deeper failure points: safety added on, leadership inconsistency, selective accountability, safety owning everything • what a practical, adaptive safety program looks like in the real world • how to start fixing the system by observing work and closing gaps So if this episode resonated with you, share it with another safety professional who's frustrated by doing everything right and still seeing the same results. And if you want more real conversations about what safety actually looks like, make sure you subscribe to Safety on Purpose. Hosted by: Joe Garcia, Safety Leader & Culture Advocate New Episodes Every Other Tuesday  Safety on Purpose Follow & Connect: 🔸 Instagram: Instagram 🔸 LinkedIn: Joe Garcia 🔸 Spotify | Apple | Podcasts: Search "Safety on Purpose"

    12 min
  6. How Safety Pros Recover From Common Early-Career Errors

    Mar 3

    How Safety Pros Recover From Common Early-Career Errors

    Send us Fan Mail Mistakes in safety feel different. The stakes are human, the pressure is real, and the urge to prove yourself can outrun the trust you need to lead. We open up about six early-career traps that almost every safety professional encounters and share practical ways to recover without losing credibility or heart. We start with the rush to act—rewriting policies, correcting behaviors, rolling out training—before we’ve earned influence. Then we tackle a classic habit: hiding behind OSHA and leading with rules instead of risk. Along the way, we challenge the illusion that perfect paperwork equals a safe workplace, and we show how to leave the office, watch real work, and rebuild programs around what actually happens under pressure. You’ll hear how to address unsafe conditions without chasing popularity, how to meet production pushback with curiosity instead of defensiveness, and how to transform a painful mistake into a foundation for mature, respected leadership. If you’re early in your safety career, you’ll gain a clear map of what to avoid and how to respond when you stumble. If you’re a seasoned pro, you’ll recognize the patterns—and maybe share this with someone who needs it today. Expect straight talk on trust, risk, compliance, workarounds, conflict, and the power of humble recovery. Subscribe for more Mentor Moments, share this with a colleague who could use a reset, and leave a review with the one lesson you’ll put to work this week. Hosted by: Joe Garcia, Safety Leader & Culture Advocate New Episodes Every Other Tuesday  Safety on Purpose Follow & Connect: 🔸 Instagram: Instagram 🔸 LinkedIn: Joe Garcia 🔸 Spotify | Apple | Podcasts: Search "Safety on Purpose"

    10 min
5
out of 5
8 Ratings

About

Safety on Purpose is a leadership-focused safety podcast dedicated to transforming how organizations think about workplace safety, culture, and people. Hosted by safety leader Joe Garcia, this podcast goes beyond rules, checklists, and compliance to explore what truly keeps people safe at work. Each episode dives into safety leadership, psychological safety, human factors, operational empathy, Just Culture, behavior-based safety, and the future of the safety profession. Through real-world stories, practical insights, and honest conversations, Safety on Purpose helps safety professionals, leaders, and frontline supervisors move from compliance to commitment. You’ll hear episodes on: Safety culture and leadership developmentHuman-centered safety and risk perceptionCoaching vs. controlling leadership stylesMental health, fatigue, and human performanceTechnology, AI, and the human factorCulture change, trust, and accountabilityLessons learned from real safety experiences Plus, monthly Mentor Moments bonus episodes deliver bite-sized wisdom for young and emerging safety professionals, while special episodes challenge outdated thinking and spark meaningful change. Whether you’re a safety professional, operations leader, HR partner, supervisor, or executive, Safety on Purpose equips you with the mindset and tools to lead safer, stronger, and more resilient organizations—on purpose. New episodes released bi-weekly Subscribe wherever you get your podcasts