0-2 years

Chief Compliance, Quality, Health & Safety Officer

This isn't just a job; it's about being the ultimate guardian of our organisation's reputation, people, and planet. You'll sit at the executive table, ensuring our operations are not only compliant but also world-leading in safety and quality. Honestly, you're the one who keeps the CEO awake at night (in a good way, by mitigating risks), and the one who ensures our employees go home safe every day. It's a massive remit, covering everything from global regulatory shifts to the daily safety of our frontline teams.

Job ID
JD-CQHS-CEHS-001
Department
Compliance Quality Health Safety
NOS Level
Strategic Leadership
OFQUAL Level
3-4
Experience
0-2 years

Role Purpose & Context

Role Summary

The Chief Compliance, Quality, Health & Safety Officer (CCQHS Officer) defines and governs the enterprise-wide strategy for all things EHS and operational risk. You'll be the ultimate authority on how we manage safety, quality, and regulatory adherence across every single one of our global operations, which directly impacts our licence to operate, our brand's trust, and, most importantly, the well-being of our thousands of employees. You'll work at the intersection of regulatory bodies, investor expectations, and operational realities, translating complex external pressures into actionable, company-wide programmes. When this role is done well, we avoid catastrophic incidents, maintain an impeccable reputation, and our people feel genuinely safe and valued. When it's not, well, the consequences can be devastating: fines, legal action, irreparable brand damage, and, tragically, injuries or fatalities. The challenge is immense, balancing global regulatory complexity with diverse operational needs and competing business priorities, all while fostering a culture where safety is truly everyone's business. The reward is knowing you're protecting lives, building a sustainable business, and shaping an ethical enterprise for the long haul.

Reporting Structure

Key Stakeholders

Internal:

External:

Organisational Impact

Scope: This role is absolutely critical to our enterprise's long-term viability and reputation. You'll shape our entire risk posture, influence multi-million-pound investment decisions in safety infrastructure, and define the ethical backbone of our operations. Your decisions directly affect our social licence to operate, our ability to attract and retain top talent, and our standing in the global market. Frankly, you're responsible for ensuring we don't just survive, but thrive responsibly.

Performance Metrics

Quantitative Metrics

  1. Metric: Enterprise TRIR & LTIFR
  2. Desc: Total Recordable Incident Rate (TRIR) and Lost Time Injury Frequency Rate (LTIFR) across the entire global organisation.
  3. Target: Year-over-year reduction of 10-15% for both, aiming for industry best-in-class levels.
  4. Freq: Monthly and Quarterly, reported to the Board.
  5. Example: Reduced global TRIR from 1.2 to 0.9 over 12 months, preventing approximately 30 serious injuries across the workforce.
  6. Metric: Regulatory Fines & Penalties
  7. Desc: Total value of fines, penalties, and legal costs incurred due to EHS and compliance breaches.
  8. Target: Zero significant fines (>£100K) annually, <£50K total minor fines.
  9. Freq: Quarterly, reviewed by Legal and Finance.
  10. Example: Avoided a potential £2M fine by proactively identifying and remediating a widespread air emissions non-conformance across 5 sites before regulatory inspection.
  11. Metric: EHS Management System Maturity Score
  12. Desc: Internal or external assessment score reflecting the robustness and effectiveness of our EHS management systems (e.g., ISO 45001, ISO 14001 alignment).
  13. Target: Achieve 'Optimised' or 'Leading' status in all key EHS management system elements within 3 years.
  14. Freq: Annual external audit and internal self-assessment.
  15. Example: Improved our ISO 45001 maturity score from 3.2 to 4.5 by implementing a global audit programme and standardising CAPA processes.
  16. Metric: ESG Safety & Compliance Rating
  17. Desc: Our external Environmental, Social, and Governance (ESG) ratings specifically related to safety, labour practices, and ethical conduct.
  18. Target: Improve our position by at least one quartile in relevant ESG benchmarks (e.g., MSCI, Sustainalytics) within 2 years.
  19. Freq: Annually, following rating agency updates.
  20. Example: Moved from the 3rd quartile to the 2nd quartile in the Sustainalytics 'Occupational Health & Safety' category, enhancing investor confidence.
  21. Metric: Board & Executive EHS Engagement
  22. Desc: Frequency and quality of EHS-related discussions and decisions at Board and Executive Leadership Team meetings.
  23. Target: EHS to be a standing agenda item at all Board Risk Committee meetings, with at least 3 strategic EHS decisions made annually by the ELT.
  24. Freq: Tracked via meeting minutes and action logs.
  25. Example: Secured Board approval for a £5M investment in advanced safety technology, demonstrating strong executive buy-in to the EHS vision.

Qualitative Metrics

  1. Metric: Culture of Proactive Risk Management
  2. Desc: The extent to which risk identification, reporting, and mitigation are embedded in daily operations and decision-making at all levels.
  3. Evidence: You'll see it when business unit leaders proactively bring EHS risks to your attention before they become issues, when near-miss reporting is consistently high (meaning people feel safe reporting), and when investment in preventative measures is seen as a business imperative, not a cost. We'd expect to see EHS considerations integrated into strategic planning documents and M&A due diligence.
  4. Metric: Regulatory Foresight & Preparedness
  5. Desc: Our ability to anticipate, understand, and prepare for upcoming regulatory changes, rather than reacting to them.
  6. Evidence: This looks like us being ahead of the curve on new legislation, having robust impact assessments completed before new laws take effect, and our internal policies being updated well in advance. You'd be regularly consulted by the Legal team on emerging regulatory landscapes and asked to present on these to the Board. We won't be caught flat-footed by new rules.
  7. Metric: Crisis Response & Resilience
  8. Desc: The effectiveness of our enterprise-level response to major incidents (e.g., environmental spills, serious accidents, product recalls).
  9. Evidence: We'd measure this by post-incident reviews showing clear, well-rehearsed protocols were followed, minimal disruption to business continuity, and rapid, transparent communication with all stakeholders. You'd lead these reviews and ensure lessons learned are systematically applied across the organisation. It's about how quickly we get back on our feet and learn from the tough stuff.
  10. Metric: Trust & Credibility with External Bodies
  11. Desc: The perception of our organisation by regulators, industry groups, and local communities as a responsible and trustworthy entity.
  12. Evidence: This means regulators see us as partners, not adversaries; they're more likely to offer guidance than issue fines. We'd be invited to participate in industry best practice forums, and local communities would view our operations positively. You'd be the public face of our EHS commitment, building and maintaining these crucial relationships.

Primary Traits

Supporting Traits

Primary Motivators

  1. Motivator: Protecting People and Planet
  2. Daily: You'll wake up every day driven by the fundamental purpose of ensuring our employees go home safely and our operations don't harm the environment. This shows up in your relentless pursuit of incident reduction, your advocacy for better safety controls, and your commitment to sustainable practices. It's not just a job; it's a deep-seated belief.
  3. Motivator: Shaping Enterprise Strategy & Governance
  4. Daily: You thrive on influencing the highest levels of the organisation, seeing your EHS vision integrated into the company's overall business strategy. This means actively participating in executive meetings, presenting to the Board, and ensuring EHS is a core consideration in every major business decision, from M&A to new product launches.
  5. Motivator: Building a Legacy of Ethical Operations
  6. Daily: You're motivated by the idea of leaving the organisation in a fundamentally better, safer, and more responsible state than you found it. This involves building robust, sustainable EHS management systems, developing future leaders, and fostering a culture of continuous improvement that outlasts your tenure.

Potential Demotivators

Honestly, this role isn't for the faint-hearted. You'll constantly face trade-offs between business speed and safety rigour. You'll have to deliver bad news to senior leaders, and sometimes, despite your best efforts, incidents will happen. You'll be the one explaining why to the Board, to regulators, and sometimes, to the media. If you need constant positive reinforcement or can't handle intense scrutiny and the weight of immense responsibility, you'll struggle. The reality is, you'll often feel like you're pushing a very large, stubborn rock uphill.

Common Frustrations

  1. Getting pushback from business units on EHS investments, even when the data clearly shows the risk.
  2. Dealing with the aftermath of an incident that could have been prevented if earlier warnings had been heeded.
  3. Navigating complex, often conflicting, international regulatory requirements.
  4. The sheer volume of information and the constant need to stay updated on global EHS trends and legislation.
  5. The occasional perception that EHS is a 'cost centre' rather than a value protector and enabler.

What Role Doesn't Offer

  1. A quiet, predictable 9-to-5 existence – expect urgent calls, global travel, and crisis management.
  2. A role where you can avoid confrontation – challenging the status quo is central to your success.
  3. A position where you're solely focused on one specific technical area – your scope is enterprise-wide and highly strategic.
  4. A job without intense public and regulatory scrutiny – you're often in the spotlight.

ADHD Positives

  1. The fast-paced, high-stakes nature of crisis management and strategic problem-solving can be incredibly engaging and stimulating, tapping into hyperfocus.
  2. The need to quickly pivot between diverse, enterprise-level challenges (e.g., regulatory changes, incident response, strategic planning) can suit a mind that thrives on variety.
  3. Strong ability to connect disparate pieces of information and foresee big-picture risks, often a strength in ADHD, is crucial for enterprise risk management.

ADHD Challenges and Accommodations

  1. The extensive, detailed documentation and governance requirements might be challenging; we can provide administrative support for report consolidation and tracking.
  2. Maintaining focus during long, formal board meetings or detailed regulatory reviews could be difficult; we can ensure breaks are built in and key information is presented concisely.
  3. Managing a very large, diverse team with many moving parts might require strong organisational systems; we can support with executive assistants and project management tools.

Dyslexia Positives

  1. Often excels at 'big picture' thinking and identifying patterns in complex data, which is vital for enterprise risk identification and strategic EHS programme design.
  2. Strong verbal communication and storytelling skills, common in dyslexia, are essential for influencing diverse stakeholders and presenting to the Board.
  3. Innovative problem-solving approaches can be highly valuable when developing novel solutions to complex global EHS challenges.

Dyslexia Challenges and Accommodations

  1. The sheer volume of written regulatory documents, reports, and governance papers could be daunting; we can provide access to text-to-speech software and dedicated proofreading support.
  2. Ensuring accuracy in detailed policy drafting or complex legal reviews might require additional support; we can pair you with legal counsel for review and offer dictation software.
  3. Meeting minutes and formal written communications can be supported by an executive assistant to ensure clarity and conciseness.

Autism Positives

  1. A deep, analytical focus on systems, processes, and regulatory frameworks can be a significant asset in designing robust, auditable EHS management systems.
  2. A strong commitment to logic, fairness, and integrity aligns perfectly with the ethical demands of this role, especially when upholding standards against pressure.
  3. Exceptional ability to identify inconsistencies or gaps in policies and procedures, which is critical for preventing systemic risks.

Autism Challenges and Accommodations

  1. Navigating complex organisational politics and unspoken social dynamics at the executive level might be challenging; we can provide a mentor to help decode these nuances.
  2. The constant need for impromptu, high-stakes verbal communication and public speaking (e.g., media, board presentations) might require specific coaching and preparation support.
  3. Sensory overload during large-scale incident responses or busy operational site visits could be an issue; we can ensure quiet spaces are available and provide noise-cancelling equipment.

Sensory Considerations

This is a C-suite role, so your primary environment will be a modern, professional office setting, often with open-plan elements, and frequent meetings (both in-person and virtual). Expect regular global travel to diverse operational sites (factories, construction sites, offices), which can involve varying noise levels, temperatures, and social interactions. During crisis situations, the environment can become high-stress and fast-paced. We're committed to discussing and implementing reasonable adjustments to ensure your comfort and effectiveness.

Flexibility Notes

While this is a demanding role, we offer flexibility where possible, especially around working hours for deep work or personal appointments, provided core responsibilities and global time zone demands are met. Remote work is possible for a portion of the week, but regular presence at HQ and global travel are essential for executive engagement and oversight.

Key Responsibilities

Experience Levels Responsibilities

  1. Level: Chief Compliance, Quality, Health & Safety Officer (C-Suite)
  2. Responsibilities: Define the enterprise-wide EHS and operational risk strategy, ensuring it aligns with our overall business objectives, regulatory obligations, and ESG commitments (this means looking 3-5 years out, not just next quarter).
  3. Govern the global EHS management systems, policies, and standards, ensuring consistency, effectiveness, and continuous improvement across all business units and geographies.
  4. Lead the executive EHS Council, driving accountability and resource allocation for critical safety and compliance programmes across the entire organisation.
  5. Represent the organisation to the Board of Directors, investors, key regulators, and the media on all significant EHS, quality, and operational risk matters (you're the public face of our commitment).
  6. Drive a proactive, preventative safety culture across hundreds of thousands of employees globally, moving beyond compliance to genuine care and ownership at every level.
  7. Oversee and approve the enterprise-wide EHS budget (P&L typically £10M+), ensuring optimal investment in risk reduction, technology, and talent development.
  8. Lead the organisation's response to major EHS incidents or crises, acting as the ultimate decision-maker and ensuring transparent communication and robust lessons learned processes.
  9. Integrate EHS and quality considerations into all major business decisions, including M&A due diligence, new product development, and supply chain management (no new venture without your sign-off).
  10. Mentor and develop a high-performing global team of EHS, Quality, and Compliance Directors and VPs, building a strong leadership pipeline for the future.
  11. Supervision: You're fully autonomous on enterprise EHS strategy and execution, reporting directly to the CEO and having governance oversight from the Board. Your leadership style will be crucial in empowering your direct reports (VPs and Directors) to execute the strategy.
  12. Decision: Full enterprise-wide strategic authority for EHS, Quality, and Compliance. This means owning a P&L of £10M+, approving major capital investments in safety infrastructure, making final decisions on regulatory responses, and setting the global EHS talent strategy. You'll make decisions that impact thousands of employees and millions of pounds in revenue and risk. Board-level governance decisions will require alignment with the CEO and Board.
  13. Success: Success looks like a demonstrable, sustained reduction in enterprise-wide incident rates, zero significant regulatory fines, a leading position in ESG safety ratings, and a deeply embedded, proactive safety culture. Ultimately, it's about protecting our people, our planet, and our licence to operate, all while contributing to long-term shareholder value.

Decision-Making Authority

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ID: ⚖️

Tool: Global Regulatory Foresight & Impact Analysis

Benefit: AI scans thousands of global regulatory updates from bodies like HSE, OSHA, EPA, and local authorities. It doesn't just summarise; it cross-references these changes with our enterprise-wide operational footprint and flags specific business units or processes that will be impacted, even suggesting policy adjustments. This means you're always ahead of the curve, not reacting to it.

ID:

Tool: Enterprise Risk Prediction & Scenario Modelling

Benefit: Forget reactive incident analysis. AI models analyse vast datasets—incident reports, near misses, audit findings, even external economic and climate data—to predict which sites or operations are at the highest risk of a major EHS event in the next 6-12 months. It can also run 'what-if' scenarios, helping you model the impact of different risk mitigation strategies on our overall risk profile and P&L.

ID:

Tool: Board & Investor Report Generation

Benefit: Your AI assistant can ingest raw EHS performance data, audit summaries, and ESG metrics, then generate a comprehensive first-draft Board report or investor briefing. It can highlight key trends, articulate strategic recommendations, and even tailor the language for different audiences, saving you hours of tedious drafting and allowing you to refine the narrative.

ID: ️

Tool: Executive Communication & Stakeholder Messaging

Benefit: Need to draft a sensitive internal memo about a new safety policy or prepare talking points for a media inquiry after an incident? AI can help. It can generate initial drafts, suggest empathetic language, and ensure consistency in messaging across various internal and external communications, allowing you to focus on the human element and strategic delivery.

10-15 hours weekly Weekly time savings potential
Leveraging 3-5 core AI tools and platforms Typical tool investment
Explore AI Productivity for Chief Compliance, Quality, Health & Safety Officer →

12-15 specific tools & techniques with implementation guides

Competency Requirements

Foundation Skills (Transferable)

At the C-suite, foundation skills aren't just about personal effectiveness; they're about leading an entire function and influencing the whole organisation. You'll need to demonstrate mastery in strategic communication, complex problem-solving, and executive leadership.

Functional Skills (Role-Specific Technical)

Your functional skills need to be at an enterprise architecture level. You're not just an expert in one area; you're the architect of the entire EHS and operational risk framework.

Technical Competencies

Digital Tools

Industry Knowledge

Regulatory Compliance Regulations

Essential Prerequisites

Career Pathway Context

To even be considered for this role, you'll have already spent years honing your leadership and technical skills, likely as a Director or VP of EHS for a significant business unit or even a global function. You've seen the good, the bad, and the ugly of EHS management, and you've learned from it. This isn't a role you 'grow into' from a manager position; it's a culmination of a distinguished career in safety and compliance leadership.

Qualifications & Credentials

Emerging Foundation Skills

Advancing Technical Skills

Future Skills Closing Note

Your role isn't to be the deepest technical expert in every single one of these areas, but to be the strategic orchestrator. You need to understand the 'what' and the 'why' well enough to guide your teams, challenge vendors, and make sound, forward-looking decisions that protect our enterprise from both current and future risks. It's about vision, not just execution.

Education Requirements

Experience Requirements

You'll need at least 20+ years of progressive experience in Compliance, Quality, Health & Safety roles, with a significant portion (at least 10 years) in senior leadership positions (Director/VP level) within a large, complex, multinational organisation. We're looking for someone who has successfully managed global EHS programmes, led large teams, and consistently delivered measurable improvements in safety performance and compliance. Experience in a highly regulated industry (e.g., manufacturing, chemicals, energy, pharmaceuticals) is essential. You'll also need a proven track record of engaging with and presenting to Boards of Directors and executive leadership teams.

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 risk management, governance, and large-scale operational oversight is highly transferable across almost any industry, particularly those with significant operational footprints or regulatory complexity (e.g., energy, pharmaceuticals, logistics, heavy manufacturing, technology hardware). Your C-suite experience will open doors globally.

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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