A common pitfall in health and safety management is mistaking action plans for strategy. Jumping into ‘solution mode’ without a structured framework often overlooks organisational needs and misses the opportunity to make meaningful decision.
A strategy involves understanding the trade-offs when making strategic choices of what to do vs. what not to do!
Leadership | Engagement | Focus | Balance | Adaptability
Self-Guided: Do it Yourself – Access to our S4S templates and resources to design and implement your own health and safety strategy at your own pace. Perfect for businesses ready to take the lead.
Guided: Coaching & Collaboration – Work alongside our expert consultants through individual or group coaching sessions. Collaborate with like-minded professionals to refine your approach and overcome challenges
Complete: Full-service Support – Leverage our full expertise with tailored solutions
“Companies with a structured safety strategy reduce workplace incidents by 30% and insurance premiums by 15%, significantly lowering operational risks and costs.”
(Source: National Safety Council, 2021)
Explore FEFO’s Strategy for Safety (S4S) and learn practical ways to refine your approach. Download our brochure below.
A safety strategy is a long-term, structured plan that outlines how an organisation will manage health and safety risks while improving performance over time.
It aligns safety objectives with overall business goals, moving beyond compliance to focus on prevention, capability building, and measurable outcomes.
A safety strategy sets the direction and priorities (the “what” and “why”), while a safety plan outlines the specific actions and timelines (the “how” and “when”).
The strategy is typically multi-year and organisation-wide, whereas plans are more detailed and operational.
A strong safety strategy typically includes:
Many organisations align their strategy with standards like ISO 45001.
Success is measured using a mix of:
Increasingly, organisations focus on whether systems are preventing serious events, not just reducing minor injuries.
Best practice suggests:
Regular reviews ensure the strategy remains relevant and responsive to emerging risks and business needs.