Safety meetings, ideally, are scheduled regularly, attendance is taken and important topics are covered.Yet despite such efforts, accidents still happen — techs get injured, equipment is damaged and preventable incidents disrupt operations. It's still always a good idea to host safety meetings. The problem is how they're often conducted.Top safety meeting mistakesYou overvalue routine. Employees attend because they’re required to. They're not there to learn anything new or useful.You lecture. When supervisors simply read safety policies aloud, employees disengage. Without interaction or relevance, the information doesn’t stick.Your information is too generic. Safety meetings that focus only on broad topics fail to address
How to Hold Safety Meetings That Stick
Regular safety meetings are great as long as they’re conducted in a way that actually translates to improved safety in the field
May 04, 2026
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