Director/VP Level (16-20 years)

Director of EHS

As our Director of EHS, you'll be the architect of our entire environmental, health, and safety strategy across the business. This isn't just about ticking boxes; it's about embedding safety into the very fabric of how we operate, from our sprawling property portfolio to our daily facilities management. You'll be the person the C-suite looks to when it comes to protecting our people, our assets, and our reputation. Frankly, it's a big job with serious accountability.

Job ID
JD-RFMA-DIREHS-006
Department
Realestate Facilities Management
NOS Level
Level 8
OFQUAL Level
Level 8
Experience
Director/VP Level (16-20 years)

Role Purpose & Context

Role Summary

The Director of EHS sets the overarching strategy for environmental, health, and safety across our entire property and facilities management portfolio. You'll work closely with the C-suite and the Board, making sure our approach to safety isn't just compliant, but truly world-leading and integrated into our business goals. This role directly impacts our operational resilience, our financial performance (think insurance premiums and regulatory fines), and, most importantly, the well-being of everyone who works in or visits our properties. When this role is done well, we see a tangible reduction in incidents, a strong safety culture, and a solid reputation as a responsible landlord and employer. When it's not, we're looking at serious incidents, hefty fines, reputational damage, and potentially even criminal charges. The challenge is balancing rigorous compliance with operational realities, often needing to influence without direct authority over every site. The reward? Knowing you've built a safer environment for thousands of people and helped secure the business's future.

Reporting Structure

Key Stakeholders

Internal:

External:

Organisational Impact

Scope: This role drives enterprise-level transformation in EHS, directly impacting our operational licence to operate, our public image, and our financial stability. Your decisions will shape how we manage risk across a multi-million-pound property portfolio and influence the safety behaviour of hundreds, if not thousands, of people daily. You're essentially the ultimate guardian of our physical and human assets.

Performance Metrics

Quantitative Metrics

  1. Metric: Lost Time Injury Frequency Rate (LTIFR)
  2. Desc: The number of lost time injuries per 100,000 hours worked across our entire portfolio.
  3. Target: Year-on-year reduction of 15-20%
  4. Freq: Monthly, reported quarterly to the Board.
  5. Example: Reducing our overall LTIFR from 0.8 to 0.64 in the next financial year, demonstrating a tangible improvement in workplace safety.
  6. Metric: Regulatory Compliance & Enforcement Actions
  7. Desc: The number of significant regulatory breaches, enforcement notices, or fines received from bodies like the HSE or local councils.
  8. Target: Zero significant enforcement actions or fines annually.
  9. Freq: Ongoing, reviewed quarterly by Legal and the Board.
  10. Example: Successfully navigating a major HSE audit without any improvement notices or prosecutions, proving our systems are robust.
  11. Metric: EHS Audit Programme Effectiveness
  12. Desc: The percentage of internal and external EHS audits completed on schedule, and the closure rate of high-risk findings within agreed timescales.
  13. Target: 100% audit completion; 95% of high-risk findings closed within 30 days.
  14. Freq: Quarterly review of audit schedule and action tracker.
  15. Example: Completing all 50 planned site audits for the year, with only two high-risk findings remaining open beyond the 30-day target, showing strong follow-through.
  16. Metric: EHS Budget Adherence & ROI
  17. Desc: Managing the EHS departmental budget effectively and demonstrating the return on investment for key safety initiatives (e.g., through insurance premium reductions).
  18. Target: Within 5% of allocated budget; demonstrate a 2:1 ROI on proactive safety investments.
  19. Freq: Monthly budget review; annual ROI analysis.
  20. Example: Implementing a new fall protection system at a cost of £150K, which directly contributed to a £300K reduction in our employer liability insurance premium over two years.

Qualitative Metrics

  1. Metric: Board & Executive Confidence
  2. Desc: The level of trust and confidence the Board and executive team have in the EHS function's ability to manage risk and provide strategic guidance.
  3. Evidence: You'll be proactively invited to strategic planning sessions, your opinions will be sought on major property acquisitions or developments, and your quarterly Board reports will be seen as essential, not just a formality. They'll trust your judgement in a crisis.
  4. Metric: Safety Culture Maturity
  5. Desc: The observable shift towards a more proactive, interdependent safety culture across the organisation, where safety is seen as a shared value.
  6. Evidence: Increased voluntary near-miss reporting, employees at all levels challenging unsafe acts, positive feedback from employee surveys on safety engagement, and managers actively championing safety initiatives without prompting from your team.
  7. Metric: Strategic EHS Integration
  8. Desc: How well EHS considerations are integrated into core business decisions, from property acquisitions to contractor selection and new project development.
  9. Evidence: EHS is a standing agenda item in property development meetings, procurement automatically includes EHS criteria in tender documents, and business cases for new initiatives routinely include EHS risk assessments from the outset, not as an afterthought.
  10. Metric: Crisis Preparedness & Response
  11. Desc: The organisation's ability to effectively prepare for and respond to major EHS incidents, protecting people, assets, and reputation.
  12. Evidence: Successful, calm management of simulated crisis exercises, clear and effective communication during actual incidents, minimal reputational damage post-incident, and robust post-incident learning processes that prevent recurrence.

Primary Traits

Supporting Traits

Primary Motivators

  1. Motivator: Driving Enterprise-Wide Transformation
  2. Daily: You'll spend your days crafting multi-year EHS strategies, engaging with the Board on risk, and overseeing the implementation of new, company-wide safety programmes. You'll get a real kick out of seeing your vision translate into tangible improvements across hundreds of properties and thousands of employees.
  3. Motivator: Protecting People and Assets at Scale
  4. Daily: The core of your motivation will be knowing that your strategic decisions directly contribute to preventing serious injuries, environmental damage, and property losses across a vast and diverse estate. You'll be driven by the moral imperative of keeping people safe.
  5. Motivator: Shaping Organisational Culture
  6. Daily: You'll be a key voice in shaping the company's values, especially around safety. This means designing initiatives that foster a proactive, 'speak up' culture, where safety is everyone's responsibility, not just yours. You'll enjoy seeing a genuine shift in employee behaviour and attitudes towards EHS.

Potential Demotivators

Honestly, this role isn't for everyone. If you're someone who thrives on direct, hands-on control over every single detail, you might find this frustrating. You'll be leading a large team, influencing at a strategic level, and sometimes, the pace of change at an enterprise level can feel slow. You'll often be dealing with complex, ambiguous problems where there isn't a clear-cut 'right' answer, just the best option given the circumstances.

Common Frustrations

  1. Dealing with executive-level 'lip service' to safety, where the words are right but the actions (or budget allocations) don't follow through.
  2. Navigating complex organisational politics to get buy-in for critical safety initiatives, especially when they impact operational efficiency or cost.
  3. Managing the aftermath of a serious incident, knowing that despite all your efforts, sometimes things still go wrong, and you're ultimately accountable.
  4. The sheer volume of regulatory changes and keeping abreast of them all, while also translating them into practical, company-wide policies.
  5. Working with legacy systems or ingrained behaviours that are resistant to change, even when the safety case is clear.

What Role Doesn't Offer

  1. Daily, hands-on site inspections or direct incident investigation (you'll oversee these, not perform them yourself).
  2. A quiet, predictable nine-to-five. Major incidents don't respect office hours.
  3. The ability to unilaterally impose changes without building consensus and demonstrating business value.
  4. A role where you can avoid public scrutiny or engagement with external regulatory bodies.

ADHD Positives

  1. The strategic, high-level nature of the role, with its constant need to solve complex, novel problems, can be highly engaging and stimulating.
  2. The ability to hyper-focus on critical incidents or strategic projects, driving rapid and decisive action.
  3. The need for innovative thinking to develop new EHS strategies and overcome organisational inertia can be a strong fit.

ADHD Challenges and Accommodations

  1. Managing a vast scope and numerous strategic initiatives simultaneously might require robust organisational tools and executive assistant support to maintain focus and track progress.
  2. The requirement for extensive, detailed documentation and reporting to the Board could be challenging; delegating and streamlining these processes will be key.
  3. We can provide flexible scheduling for deep work, support for executive coaching on prioritisation, and ensure administrative support for routine tasks.

Dyslexia Positives

  1. The big-picture, strategic thinking required to connect EHS to overall business goals often comes naturally to dyslexic thinkers.
  2. Strong verbal communication and persuasive skills, essential for influencing the Board and senior leaders, are common strengths.
  3. Excellent problem-solving abilities, especially for non-linear, complex issues, are highly valued in this role.

Dyslexia Challenges and Accommodations

  1. The role involves significant reading of complex legislation, policy documents, and writing detailed Board reports; access to assistive technologies (e.g., text-to-speech, dictation software) and proofreading support will be readily available.
  2. We'll ensure all critical documents are available in accessible formats and provide tools for summarisation and clarity. We can also offer coaching on written communication strategies.

Autism Positives

  1. A deep, analytical understanding of complex EHS regulations and systems, with a focus on logical consistency and adherence to standards, is a significant asset.
  2. The ability to identify patterns and systemic risks that others might miss, leading to highly effective preventative strategies.
  3. Directness and honesty in communication, especially when presenting critical safety information to senior leaders, is highly valued.

Autism Challenges and Accommodations

  1. The constant need for nuanced social interaction, political navigation, and informal networking at an executive level might require deliberate energy management. We can support with clear communication protocols and opportunities for structured interaction.
  2. Unexpected changes or high-pressure crisis situations can be intense; clear protocols, pre-briefings, and a supportive team structure can help. We'll ensure you have a quiet space for focused work and clear expectations for all interactions.

Sensory Considerations

This role is primarily office-based, but you'll be spending a fair bit of time in Boardrooms, meeting rooms, and occasionally visiting various property sites, which can range from quiet offices to active construction zones. The office environment is typically open-plan but with plenty of quiet spaces available for focused work or calls. Expect a moderate level of social interaction, but we're big on clear communication and respecting individual needs for concentration.

Flexibility Notes

We offer significant flexibility around working patterns and location, understanding that a role of this seniority requires results, not rigid hours. We're open to discussing hybrid working arrangements that best support your productivity and well-being. We believe in empowering our leaders to work in a way that suits them best.

Key Responsibilities

Experience Levels Responsibilities

  1. Level: Director of EHS (16-20 years experience)
  2. Responsibilities: Define and drive the overarching EHS strategy for the entire organisation, ensuring it aligns with our business goals, legal obligations, and ESG commitments (this means looking at everything from property acquisitions to contractor management).
  3. Report directly to the Board of Directors and C-suite on EHS performance, risks, and strategic initiatives. You'll need to translate complex safety data into clear, actionable insights that influence top-level decisions.
  4. Lead the development, implementation, and continuous improvement of our enterprise-wide EHS Management System (think ISO 45001 and ISO 14001, but tailored to our specific property portfolio).
  5. Oversee and direct the company's response to major EHS incidents, regulatory investigations, and crises, acting as the primary point of contact for external bodies like the HSE and media (yes, it's intense).
  6. Manage a substantial EHS budget (typically £2M-£10M+), making strategic investment decisions in technology, training, and risk reduction programmes that deliver measurable value.
  7. Build, mentor, and develop a high-performing team of EHS professionals (25-100+ people, including managers), fostering a culture of excellence, collaboration, and continuous learning.
  8. Represent the organisation externally on EHS matters, engaging with industry bodies, regulators, and key stakeholders to influence policy and promote best practice.
  9. Integrate EHS considerations into all major business processes, including M&A due diligence, capital projects, procurement, and property development, ensuring safety is designed in from the start.
  10. Supervision: You'll be fully autonomous on execution within the agreed strategic framework. Your work will be reviewed at a strategic level by the COO and Board on a quarterly or as-needed basis for major decisions. You're expected to lead, not just manage.
  11. Decision: Full strategic authority for EHS within the business unit; P&L responsibility for £2M-£10M+ EHS budget; hiring and organisational design for the EHS function; significant input into M&A due diligence and major capital expenditure decisions. Board-level decisions will require alignment with the CEO and COO.
  12. Success: Achieving significant year-on-year reductions in LTIFR and other key lagging indicators. Successfully navigating major regulatory changes without incident. Building a demonstrably proactive safety culture. Delivering a positive ROI on EHS investments. Maintaining a strong, positive relationship with regulators and the Board.

Decision-Making Authority

Save 10-15 hours weekly: Supercharge your Strategic EHS Leadership with AI

Let's be real, leading EHS across a huge property portfolio means drowning in data, regulations, and reports. But what if you could cut through the noise and focus on what truly matters: strategic risk reduction, culture change, and Board-level engagement? That's where AI comes in. It's not about replacing your expertise; it's about giving you superpowers.

ID:

Tool: Automated Policy & Regulatory Analysis

Benefit: Use AI to ingest new H&S legislation, environmental regulations, or internal policy updates. It'll instantly summarise key changes, cross-reference against our existing policies, and even draft a first-pass impact analysis, saving you days of legal review and policy rewriting.

ID:

Tool: Predictive Enterprise Risk Modelling

Benefit: Feed incident, near-miss, audit, and even property maintenance data into AI models. It'll identify complex patterns and predict which sites, asset types, or operational activities are at the highest risk of future incidents, allowing you to deploy resources proactively and prevent major issues before they happen.

ID: ✍️

Tool: Executive Report & Board Presentation Drafting

Benefit: Generate first drafts of your quarterly Board reports, executive summaries, and strategic EHS updates in minutes. AI can pull key metrics, highlight trends, and even suggest narrative points, giving you a solid foundation to refine and add your strategic insights, rather than starting from scratch.

ID: ️

Tool: Crisis Communication & Scenario Planning

Benefit: Use AI to simulate various crisis scenarios (e.g., major fire, serious injury, environmental spill). It can help draft initial internal and external communication plans, media statements, and stakeholder messaging, ensuring you're prepared for the worst and can respond swiftly and appropriately.

10-15 hours weekly Weekly time savings potential
£50-£200/month (for enterprise-grade LLM access and specialised EHS AI tools) Typical tool investment
Explore AI Productivity for Director of EHS →

12-15 specific tools & techniques with implementation guides

Competency Requirements

Foundation Skills (Transferable)

At this level, your foundation skills are about leading, influencing, and shaping the entire organisation's approach to EHS. It's less about doing the grunt work and more about setting the direction and empowering your teams.

Functional Skills (Role-Specific Technical)

You'll need a deep, almost innate understanding of EHS principles, but your focus shifts from direct application to strategic oversight and system design. You're the expert who sets the standards and ensures they're met across the business.

Technical Competencies

Digital Tools

Industry Knowledge

Regulatory Compliance Regulations

Essential Prerequisites

Career Pathway Context

You'll have likely progressed through various senior EHS management roles, perhaps as a Regional H&S Manager or Head of EHS for a significant business unit, before stepping into this enterprise-level Director position. This isn't a role for someone who's only managed a single site or a small team; it requires a breadth of experience and a strategic mindset.

Qualifications & Credentials

Emerging Foundation Skills

Advancing Technical Skills

Future Skills Closing Note

The future of EHS leadership isn't just about compliance; it's about leveraging cutting-edge technology and strategic foresight to build truly resilient, safe, and sustainable operations. Your role will be at the forefront of this evolution, ensuring we remain a leader in the Real Estate Facilities Management sector.

Education Requirements

Experience Requirements

You'll need at least 16-20 years of progressive experience in Health, Safety, and Environmental roles, with a minimum of 8-10 years spent in senior leadership positions (e.g., Head of EHS, Regional EHS Manager) within a large, multi-site organisation, ideally in the real estate, facilities management, or a similarly complex industry. We're looking for someone who has genuinely driven EHS strategy at an enterprise level, not just managed a team.

Preferred Certifications

Recommended Activities

Career Progression Pathways

Entry Paths to This Role

Career Progression From This Role

Long Term Vision Potential Roles

Sector Mobility

Your expertise in enterprise-level EHS strategy, risk management, and regulatory compliance is highly transferable. You could move into other asset-intensive industries like manufacturing, energy, logistics, or even public sector infrastructure, where protecting people and assets is paramount.

How Zavmo Delivers This Role's Development

DISCOVER Phase: Skills Gap Analysis

Zavmo maps your current competencies against all requirements in this job description through conversational assessment. We evaluate your foundation skills (communication, strategic thinking), functional skills (CRM expertise, negotiation), and readiness for career progression.

Output: Personalised skills gap heat map showing strengths and priorities, estimated time to competency, neurodiversity accommodations.

DISCUSS Phase: Personalised Learning Pathway

Based on your DISCOVER results, Zavmo creates a personalised learning plan prioritised by impact: foundation skills first, then functional skills. We adapt to your learning style, pace, and neurodiversity needs (ADHD, dyslexia, autism).

Output: Week-by-week schedule, each module linked to specific job responsibilities, checkpoints and milestones.

DELIVER Phase: Conversational Learning

Learn through conversation, not boring modules. Zavmo uses 10 conversation types (Socratic dialogue, role-play, coaching, case studies) to build competence. Practice difficult QBR presentations, negotiate tough renewals, and handle churn conversations in a safe AI environment before facing real clients.

Example: "For 'Stakeholder Mapping', Zavmo will guide you through analysing a complex enterprise account, identifying key decision-makers, and building an engagement strategy."

DEMONSTRATE Phase: Competency Assessment

Zavmo automatically builds your evidence portfolio as you learn. Every conversation, practice scenario, and application example is captured and mapped to NOS performance criteria. When ready, your portfolio supports OFQUAL qualification claims and demonstrates competence to employers.

Output: Competency matrix, evidence portfolio (downloadable), qualification readiness, career progression score.

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