Role Purpose & Context
Role Summary
The Chief Compliance_Quality_Health_Safety Officer (CCQHS Officer) defines and drives our enterprise-wide strategy for safety, health, environmental, and quality (SHEQ) management. You'll be the ultimate guardian of our global operational integrity, making sure we're not just compliant, but truly leading the way in responsible business. This role sits right at the top, influencing every decision from product design to market entry, ensuring our values around safety are baked into everything we do.
When this role is done well, we'll see a tangible reduction in incidents, fewer regulatory headaches, stronger investor confidence, and a reputation as a truly ethical and safe organisation. Get it wrong, and we're looking at catastrophic incidents, crippling fines, irreparable brand damage, and potentially even legal action against the company or its leadership. The challenge is immense: balancing aggressive growth and innovation with uncompromising safety standards across a diverse global footprint. The reward, though, is knowing you're directly protecting thousands of lives, safeguarding our environment, and securing the long-term future of the company.
Reporting Structure
- Reports to: Chief Executive Officer (CEO) and Board of Directors
- Direct reports: A global team of 100s-1000s, including regional Directors and VPs
- Matrix relationships:
VP of EHS & Risk, Global Head of Safety & Compliance, Chief Risk & Assurance Officer,
Key Stakeholders
Internal:
- CEO and Executive Leadership Team
- Board of Directors (especially Audit and Risk Committees)
- General Counsel and Legal Team
- Chief Operations Officer (COO) and regional operations leads
- Chief Financial Officer (CFO) and Finance leadership
- Chief People Officer (CPO) and HR leadership
External:
- Government Regulators (HSE, OSHA, EPA, etc. globally)
- Investors and ESG Rating Agencies
- Industry Bodies and Standard-Setting Organisations
- External Auditors and Consultants
- Customers and Supply Chain Partners
- Local Communities and Environmental Groups
Organisational Impact
Scope: This role has enterprise-wide impact, directly shaping the company's reputation, financial performance (through risk mitigation and incident avoidance), legal standing, and ability to attract and retain talent. It's about embedding a safety and quality culture that permeates every level, from the factory floor to the boardroom, ensuring long-term sustainability and shareholder value.
Performance Metrics
Quantitative Metrics
- Metric: Enterprise Total Recordable Incident Rate (TRIR)
- Desc: The overall frequency of workplace injuries and illnesses across all global operations.
- Target: Year-over-year reduction of 10-15% (or maintaining 'best-in-class' industry benchmarks)
- Freq: Quarterly and Annually
- Example: Achieving a TRIR of 0.2, significantly below the industry average of 0.8, demonstrating superior safety performance across all business units.
- Metric: Regulatory Fines & Penalties
- Desc: Total financial penalties incurred due to non-compliance with health, safety, environmental, or quality regulations globally.
- Target: Zero significant fines annually; <£50K total minor fines across the enterprise.
- Freq: Quarterly and Annually
- Example: Successfully navigating major regulatory changes in 3 key markets without incurring any fines, saving the company an estimated £2M in potential penalties.
- Metric: ESG Rating Improvement (Safety/Environmental Component)
- Desc: Our company's performance in key Environmental, Social, and Governance (ESG) ratings, specifically focusing on the safety and environmental components.
- Target: Improvement in top-tier ESG ratings (e.g., MSCI, Sustainalytics) by at least one quartile annually.
- Freq: Annually (or as ratings are updated)
- Example: Moving from the 2nd quartile to the 1st quartile in the safety component of our MSCI rating, directly impacting investor perception and access to capital.
- Metric: Cost of Poor Quality (COPQ)
- Desc: The financial cost associated with preventing, appraising, and failing to meet quality standards (e.g., recalls, warranty claims, rework, customer complaints).
- Target: Reduction of COPQ as a percentage of revenue by 0.5-1% annually.
- Freq: Quarterly
- Example: Reducing product recall costs by £1.5M in a year through improved quality control processes and supply chain assurance programmes.
- Metric: Board & Executive Risk Register Alignment
- Desc: The degree to which identified SHEQ risks are accurately reflected and prioritised on the enterprise risk register presented to the Board.
- Target: 100% alignment on top 5 SHEQ risks with Board's risk appetite statement.
- Freq: Quarterly Board Meetings
- Example: Successfully championing the inclusion of 'Global Supply Chain Ethical Sourcing Risk' as a top 3 enterprise risk, leading to a £5M investment in a new assurance programme.
Qualitative Metrics
- Metric: Safety Culture Maturity
- Desc: The observable level of proactive safety behaviour, trust, and engagement across the organisation, moving from reactive to generative.
- Evidence: Regularly cited positive examples in employee town halls; unsolicited feedback from employees on feeling safer; external recognition for safety culture; high participation in 'Good Catch' programmes; strong scores in independent safety culture surveys.
- Metric: Regulatory & Investor Confidence
- Desc: The perception of our company by key external parties as a responsible, compliant, and well-governed entity.
- Evidence: Positive feedback from regulators during inspections; proactive engagement with industry bodies shaping future regulations; favourable analyst reports on our ESG performance; direct feedback from major investors on our SHEQ strategy.
- Metric: Crisis Preparedness & Response
- Desc: Our ability to anticipate, prevent, and effectively manage major incidents or crises with minimal disruption and reputational damage.
- Evidence: Successful outcomes of annual crisis simulation exercises; rapid and effective response to actual incidents with minimal escalation; positive media coverage during challenging situations; clear, well-rehearsed communication plans for all major risks.
- Metric: Strategic Influence & Buy-in
- Desc: Your ability to get executive leadership and the Board to genuinely understand and commit to significant SHEQ investments and strategic shifts.
- Evidence: Board approval for major capital expenditure on safety improvements; SHEQ considerations routinely integrated into M&A due diligence and business expansion plans; other C-suite members actively championing SHEQ initiatives in their own departments; your opinions are sought out on critical business decisions.
Primary Traits
- Trait: The Unflappable Strategic Visionary
- Manifestation: You're the person who can see the inevitable risks three years down the line, not just the immediate fire. When a major incident hits, you're the calmest voice in the room, already thinking about the systemic fixes and the long-term reputational impact, not just the immediate clean-up. You can articulate a compelling future state for safety that others can rally behind, even when the present is messy.
- Benefit: At this level, you're not just reacting; you're shaping the future. The company needs someone who can anticipate regulatory shifts, technological risks, and global events, then build a robust defence. When things go wrong (and they will), your ability to remain composed and think strategically is what prevents panic and guides the entire organisation through the storm.
- Trait: The Boardroom Persuader
- Manifestation: You can take incredibly complex regulatory jargon or a detailed incident investigation report and distil it into a clear, concise message for a Board that has 20 other agenda items. You don't just present data; you tell a story that resonates, connects to the bottom line, and gets them to open their chequebooks for safety investments. You can stand your ground with conviction when challenged by the CEO or a non-executive director, always backing it up with evidence and a clear understanding of the stakes.
- Benefit: Without the Board's understanding and unwavering support, any SHEQ strategy is just words on a page. Your ability to translate technical risk into business risk, to secure buy-in for multi-million-pound investments, and to maintain trust at the highest levels is absolutely critical. You're the voice of safety at the top table.
- Trait: The Culture Architect
- Manifestation: You understand that safety isn't just about rules; it's about how people behave, think, and feel. You can design programmes that genuinely shift mindsets across thousands of employees, from the CEO to the newest hire on a remote site. You spot the subtle signs of a deteriorating safety culture (like a dip in 'Good Catch' reporting) and know exactly how to intervene. You build trust, not just compliance.
- Benefit: Regulations and procedures are only as good as the culture that supports them. At this scale, you're building a global safety conscience. Your ability to foster a proactive, reporting, and learning culture is the ultimate defence against incidents and the foundation for sustained excellence. You're building a legacy, not just managing a department.
Supporting Traits
- Trait: Ethical Compass
- Desc: You've got an unshakeable moral core, always prioritising safety and integrity, even when it's unpopular or costly. You'll never compromise on what's right.
- Trait: Politically Astute
- Desc: You can navigate complex organisational dynamics, understand unspoken power structures, and build alliances across departments to achieve safety objectives without creating unnecessary friction.
- Trait: Globally Minded
- Desc: You instinctively think about how decisions impact different cultures, regulatory landscapes, and operational realities around the world, ensuring solutions are universally applicable where possible.
- Trait: Resilient Under Fire
- Desc: When a crisis hits, or a regulator comes knocking, you don't crumble. You remain composed, focused, and capable of making tough decisions under extreme pressure, absorbing the stress so your team can execute.
Primary Motivators
- Motivator: Protecting the Organisation's Future
- Daily: You're driven by the profound responsibility of safeguarding our people, our reputation, and our financial stability. This shows up in your relentless pursuit of proactive risk mitigation and your unwavering commitment to compliance. Every strategic decision you make is filtered through a lens of long-term sustainability and resilience.
- Motivator: Shaping Global Standards and Best Practice
- Daily: You're not content with just meeting minimum requirements; you want to set the bar higher. This means actively engaging with industry bodies, influencing policy, and driving internal innovation to create truly world-leading safety and quality programmes. You'll find satisfaction in seeing our company's practices adopted as industry benchmarks.
- Motivator: Building a Legacy of Safety and Trust
- Daily: You're motivated by the idea of leaving a lasting positive impact on the company's culture and its people. You'll invest heavily in talent development, mentorship, and creating an environment where everyone feels empowered to speak up about safety. Seeing a thriving, safe workforce is your ultimate reward.
Potential Demotivators
Honestly, this role isn't for those who thrive on quick wins or expect every recommendation to be immediately adopted. You'll face significant resistance to change, especially when it involves cost or disrupts established ways of working. You'll have to fight budget battles, justify every penny for safety improvements, and sometimes, despite your best efforts, incidents will still happen. If you need constant validation or can't handle the political dance of a large, complex organisation, you'll find this incredibly frustrating.
Common Frustrations
- Executive lip service to safety that doesn't translate into genuine investment or behavioural change.
- The slow, grinding pace of cultural transformation in a global enterprise.
- Having to constantly justify the 'cost' of safety against revenue-generating projects.
- Navigating complex international regulations that often conflict or are ambiguous.
- Investigating preventable incidents that stem from ignored warnings or systemic failures you've highlighted before.
- Dealing with the aftermath of a major incident, including intense media scrutiny and regulatory investigations.
What Role Doesn't Offer
- A quiet, predictable work schedule; crises don't respect office hours.
- A role where you're always popular; sometimes you have to deliver tough messages.
- Complete control over every aspect of safety; you'll influence, but ultimate execution rests with operations.
- A job where you can avoid the spotlight; you'll be the public face of safety, good or bad.
ADHD Positives
- The broad, strategic scope of this role can be highly engaging for an ADHD profile, offering constant novelty and intellectual challenge.
- Excellent crisis management skills: the ability to hyperfocus and make rapid decisions under pressure, often seeing patterns and solutions others miss.
- Innovative problem-solving: thinking 'outside the box' to design novel safety programmes and risk mitigation strategies.
- High energy and drive to push through complex, multi-year initiatives.
ADHD Challenges and Accommodations
- Managing the sheer volume of information and competing priorities can be overwhelming; strong executive support for delegation and prioritisation is crucial.
- The need for meticulous documentation and regulatory reporting can be tedious; support from administrative or analytical staff for detail-oriented tasks would be beneficial.
- Long, static board meetings might be challenging; incorporating breaks or allowing for discreet movement could help.
Dyslexia Positives
- Strong 'big picture' thinking and strategic pattern recognition, essential for identifying systemic risks and opportunities.
- Excellent verbal communication and storytelling abilities, critical for influencing the Board and external stakeholders.
- Often highly creative in developing solutions and visualising complex systems, which is invaluable for designing effective safety programmes.
Dyslexia Challenges and Accommodations
- Extensive reading of dense regulatory documents and drafting detailed reports can be taxing; access to text-to-speech software, proofreading support, and AI-assisted summarisation tools would be key.
- Ensuring clarity and precision in written communications, particularly for legal and regulatory submissions; having a dedicated comms or legal review function is important.
- Providing information in multiple formats (visual, auditory, written) for internal communications to ensure broad understanding.
Autism Positives
- Exceptional ability to identify and analyse complex systems, processes, and potential failure points with incredible depth and logic.
- Unwavering commitment to rules, standards, and ethical principles, which is paramount in a compliance role.
- Direct and honest communication style, which can be highly effective in delivering critical safety messages and challenging non-compliance.
- Strong focus on data and evidence, leading to highly objective risk assessments and decision-making.
Autism Challenges and Accommodations
- Navigating the highly political and nuanced social dynamics of C-suite interactions and boardrooms can be challenging; a mentor or executive coach could provide invaluable guidance.
- The need for constant, spontaneous social engagement and networking might be draining; allowing for scheduled, purposeful interactions and providing quiet spaces for focused work.
- Dealing with ambiguity and emotional responses during crisis management; clear protocols and data-driven decision frameworks are helpful.
Sensory Considerations
This role primarily operates in a professional office environment, but you'll also be visiting diverse operational sites (factories, construction sites, remote facilities) globally. Expect varied noise levels, visual stimuli, and social interactions depending on the location. Board meetings are typically quiet and formal. During a crisis, the environment can become high-pressure, fast-paced, and intense. We aim to provide quiet spaces for focused work and flexibility where possible.
Flexibility Notes
We understand that executive roles demand significant dedication, but we're committed to supporting our leaders. While global travel is essential, we offer flexibility around work location when not travelling and encourage a focus on outcomes rather than strict hours. We're open to discussing individual needs to ensure you can perform at your best.
Key Responsibilities
Experience Levels Responsibilities
- Level: C-Suite / Executive
- Responsibilities: Define and articulate the enterprise-wide SHEQ vision, strategy, and long-term objectives for the entire global organisation, ensuring alignment with overall business goals and values.
- Serve as the primary SHEQ advisor to the CEO and Board of Directors, presenting comprehensive risk assessments, performance updates, and strategic recommendations at board meetings and committee sessions.
- Develop and maintain a robust enterprise risk management framework for SHEQ, identifying emerging global risks (e.g., climate change impact, AI safety, new regulatory regimes) and designing proactive mitigation strategies.
- Lead and mentor a global team of SHEQ Directors and VPs, fostering a culture of excellence, accountability, and continuous improvement across all regions and business units.
- Represent the company externally as the principal spokesperson on SHEQ matters, engaging with government regulators, industry bodies, investors, and major customers to shape policy and enhance our reputation.
- Oversee the SHEQ aspects of all major corporate initiatives, including mergers, acquisitions, divestitures, and new market entries, ensuring thorough due diligence and seamless integration.
- Drive the continuous improvement of our global SHEQ management systems, ensuring they're fit for purpose, effectively implemented, and regularly audited for effectiveness and compliance.
- Champion a proactive, learning safety culture across thousands of employees globally, moving beyond mere compliance to embed safety as a core value in every decision and action.
- Supervision: Fully autonomous on execution within the strategic framework set by the Board and CEO. You'll lead your global team, providing strategic direction and holding them accountable for performance. Your work is subject to Board governance and CEO oversight for strategic alignment and major capital allocation.
- Decision: Full enterprise-wide strategic and operational authority for all SHEQ matters. This includes: setting global policies and standards; allocating budgets (typically £10M+); approving major capital expenditure for SHEQ improvements; making final decisions on significant incident responses; leading organisational design for the SHEQ function; and representing the company in high-stakes regulatory negotiations. Board-level decisions require CEO and Board alignment.
- Success: A demonstrable track record of reducing enterprise-wide incidents and regulatory non-compliances, significant improvement in ESG ratings for safety and environment, strong investor confidence in our risk management, and a globally recognised, proactive safety culture. Ultimately, it's about protecting our people, our planet, and our licence to operate, while enabling sustainable business growth.
Decision-Making Authority
- Type: Enterprise SHEQ Strategy & Vision
- Entry: N/A
- Mid: N/A
- Senior: N/A
- Type: Global Policy & Standard Setting
- Entry: N/A
- Mid: N/A
- Senior: N/A
- Type: Major Capital Expenditure for SHEQ (e.g., £5M+ system upgrades)
- Entry: N/A
- Mid: N/A
- Senior: N/A
- Type: Response to Catastrophic Incidents
- Entry: N/A
- Mid: N/A
- Senior: N/A
- Type: Organisational Design of SHEQ Function
- Entry: N/A
- Mid: N/A
- Senior: N/A
ID: ⚖️
Tool: Automated Regulatory Horizon Scanning
Benefit: Imagine an AI assistant constantly monitoring thousands of global regulatory updates, legal journals, and industry standards. It doesn't just flag changes; it summarises their potential impact on our specific operations, giving you a tailored, actionable brief every week. This means you're always ahead of the curve, anticipating compliance challenges before they even become an issue.
ID:
Tool: Predictive Risk Modelling & Scenario Planning
Benefit: Use AI to analyse historical incident data, audit findings, and external risk factors to predict potential systemic failures or emerging hazards. This isn't just about reporting past incidents; it's about proactively running 'what-if' scenarios, identifying high-probability, high-impact risks, and testing mitigation strategies in a digital environment. It gives you a crystal ball for enterprise risk.
ID:
Tool: AI-Assisted Board Report Drafting
Benefit: Forget spending hours synthesising data from various regional reports into a concise board-ready presentation. Generative AI can take structured performance data, key findings, and strategic updates, then draft initial summaries, executive talking points, and even visualisations. You'll spend your time refining the narrative and focusing on the strategic implications, not wrestling with formatting.
ID:
Tool: Intelligent Crisis Communication Support
Benefit: In the event of a major incident, AI can rapidly analyse incoming information, draft initial internal and external communication statements (based on pre-approved templates and legal guidelines), and even simulate media responses. This allows you to focus on the operational response and strategic decision-making, knowing your communications are being rapidly prepared and reviewed.
10-15 hours weekly
Weekly time savings potential
Leveraging 3-5 core AI-powered platforms
Typical tool investment
Competency Requirements
Foundation Skills (Transferable)
At the C-Suite level, foundation skills aren't just about personal effectiveness; they're about your ability to lead, influence, and shape the entire organisation. These are the bedrock behaviours that enable you to drive enterprise-wide change and manage complex, high-stakes situations.
- Category: Strategic Leadership & Vision
- Skills: Ability to define and articulate a compelling, long-term SHEQ vision that aligns with business objectives and inspires a global workforce.
- Expertise in translating complex regulatory environments and emerging risks into clear, actionable strategic priorities for the Board.
- Capacity to lead through ambiguity and complexity, making high-stakes decisions with incomplete information.
- Category: Board-Level Communication & Influence
- Skills: Exceptional ability to communicate complex technical and risk information clearly, concisely, and persuasively to non-technical executive and board audiences.
- Mastery of negotiation and diplomacy to secure buy-in and resources for critical SHEQ initiatives from diverse stakeholders.
- Presence and gravitas to represent the company authoritatively with regulators, investors, and in public forums.
- Category: Organisational Design & Talent Development
- Skills: Proven ability to design, build, and optimise a high-performing global SHEQ organisation, including talent acquisition, development, and retention strategies.
- Expertise in succession planning and mentoring future SHEQ leaders across all levels.
- Capacity to foster a culture of accountability, continuous learning, and psychological safety within your global team.
- Category: Crisis Leadership & Resilience
- Skills: Demonstrated ability to lead effectively under extreme pressure during major incidents or regulatory crises, maintaining composure and guiding rapid, decisive action.
- Exceptional problem-solving skills for novel, enterprise-level challenges with significant financial and reputational stakes.
- Personal resilience and adaptability to navigate constant change, political complexities, and the inherent stresses of a C-suite role.
Functional Skills (Role-Specific Technical)
Your functional skills at this level are about architecting and overseeing the entire SHEQ system, not just executing individual tasks. You'll need a deep, holistic understanding of all elements and how they interconnect across a global enterprise.
Technical Competencies
- Skill: Enterprise Risk Management (ERM)
- Desc: Expertise in integrating SHEQ risks into the broader enterprise risk framework, understanding methodologies for risk identification, assessment, mitigation, and reporting at a global, strategic level.
- Level: Expert
- Skill: Global SHEQ Management Systems (ISO 45001, 14001, 9001)
- Desc: Deep, strategic understanding of international management system standards, including their implementation, certification, and continuous improvement across diverse operational contexts.
- Level: Expert
- Skill: M&A Due Diligence & Integration (SHEQ)
- Desc: Proven ability to lead SHEQ due diligence for mergers and acquisitions, identifying environmental liabilities, safety risks, and cultural integration challenges, then developing robust integration plans.
- Level: Advanced
- Skill: ESG Strategy & Reporting
- Desc: Expertise in developing and executing ESG strategies, particularly the 'E' (Environmental) and 'S' (Social/Safety) components, and overseeing accurate, transparent reporting to investors and rating agencies.
- Level: Advanced
- Skill: Incident & Crisis Management (Enterprise Level)
- Desc: Strategic leadership in developing and implementing enterprise-wide incident response plans, including communication protocols, stakeholder management, and post-incident learning frameworks for major events.
- Level: Expert
Digital Tools
- Tool: VelocityEHS / Intelex / Cority (EHS Management Platforms)
- Level: Strategic
- Usage: Defining enterprise requirements for platform functionality, overseeing global implementation, interpreting high-level dashboards for strategic insights, and approving major system upgrades or integrations.
- Tool: ServiceNow GRC / Archer (GRC / Enterprise Risk Platforms)
- Level: Strategic
- Usage: Managing the enterprise EHS risk register within the GRC platform, ensuring alignment with financial and operational risk, and presenting consolidated risk views to the Board.
- Tool: Power BI / Tableau (Advanced Data Visualisation)
- Level: Advanced
- Usage: Interpreting complex global SHEQ performance data, identifying critical trends and anomalies, and presenting executive-level dashboards to the Board and leadership team.
- Tool: LexisNexis Regulatory Compliance / BSI Standards Subscription (Regulatory Intelligence)
- Level: Strategic
- Usage: Setting the strategy for proactive compliance across multiple regions, engaging with industry bodies and regulators, and interpreting the strategic implications of major regulatory shifts.
Industry Knowledge
- Area: Global Regulatory Landscape
- Desc: Deep understanding of major international health, safety, environmental, and quality regulations (e.g., OSHA, HSE, EPA, REACH, EU Directives, national labour laws) and their complex interplay across diverse jurisdictions. You'll need to know how to navigate these without getting bogged down in every minor detail, focusing on strategic compliance.
- Area: Supply Chain SHEQ Assurance
- Desc: Expertise in assessing and managing SHEQ risks within complex global supply chains, including ethical sourcing, labour practices, and environmental impact, ensuring our partners meet our standards.
- Area: Emerging Technologies & SHEQ Risks
- Desc: A keen awareness of how new technologies (e.g., AI, automation, IoT, novel materials) introduce new SHEQ risks and how to proactively develop controls and policies for their safe deployment.
Regulatory Compliance Regulations
- Reg: Occupational Health & Safety (e.g., UK HSE, US OSHA, EU Directives)
- Usage: Setting enterprise-wide policies and standards that meet or exceed global requirements, ensuring robust management systems are in place for compliance and risk reduction across all operations.
- Reg: Environmental Protection (e.g., UK EA, US EPA, EU Environmental Law)
- Usage: Developing and overseeing global environmental management programmes, ensuring compliance with emissions, waste, water, and chemical regulations, and managing environmental liabilities.
- Reg: Product Quality & Safety Standards (e.g., ISO 9001, industry-specific product standards)
- Usage: Establishing and maintaining a global quality management system that ensures product integrity, minimises recalls, and meets customer and regulatory requirements across all markets.
- Reg: Data Protection & Privacy (e.g., GDPR, CCPA, PIPA) for EHS Data
- Usage: Ensuring the lawful and ethical collection, storage, and processing of sensitive health and safety data (e.g., medical records, incident reports) across all jurisdictions, working closely with Legal and IT.
- Reg: International Labour Organisation (ILO) Conventions
- Usage: Guiding the company's approach to fundamental labour rights, working conditions, and social responsibility across its global operations and supply chain, particularly in high-risk regions.
Essential Prerequisites
- A minimum of 20 years of progressive leadership experience in Compliance, Quality, Health, Safety, or Environmental roles within large, complex, and ideally global organisations.
- Proven experience leading a significant SHEQ function (e.g., as a Director or VP) for at least 5-7 years, with direct accountability for strategic outcomes and team management.
- A demonstrable track record of successfully influencing and presenting to Boards of Directors and Executive Leadership Teams on high-stakes SHEQ matters.
- Extensive experience in managing major incidents or crises, including regulatory investigations and public relations aspects.
- Deep expertise in designing, implementing, and auditing global SHEQ management systems (e.g., ISO 45001, 14001, 9001).
- A strong understanding of enterprise risk management principles and how to integrate SHEQ risks into a broader business context.
- Experience leading SHEQ due diligence and integration for significant mergers and acquisitions.
Career Pathway Context
You'll have already built a career defined by significant impact and leadership, likely having held roles such as Director of EHS, VP of Risk, or Global Head of Compliance. This role is the culmination of that experience, demanding a holistic, enterprise-level perspective and the ability to operate at the highest echelons of corporate governance.
Qualifications & Credentials
Emerging Foundation Skills
- Skill: AI Ethics & Governance in SHEQ
- Why: As AI becomes embedded in everything from hazard detection (computer vision) to predictive maintenance and regulatory analysis, understanding its ethical implications—bias, privacy, accountability—is paramount. We need to ensure AI enhances safety without inadvertently creating new risks or legal exposures.
- Concepts: [{'concept_name': 'Algorithmic bias detection and mitigation', 'description': 'Identifying and addressing biases in AI models used for safety assessments or employee monitoring to ensure fairness and prevent discrimination.'}, {'concept_name': 'AI accountability frameworks', 'description': 'Defining who is responsible when an AI system makes a decision that leads to an incident or non-compliance.'}, {'concept_name': 'Data privacy in AI-driven monitoring', 'description': 'Balancing the benefits of AI surveillance for safety with employee privacy rights and data protection regulations.'}, {'concept_name': 'Human-in-the-loop validation', 'description': 'Ensuring human oversight and critical judgment remain central, even with highly autonomous AI systems.'}]
- Prepare: This quarter: Engage with industry thought leaders and legal experts on AI ethics in industrial settings.
- Next 6 months: Develop internal guidelines for the ethical deployment of AI tools within our SHEQ functions.
- Next 12 months: Oversee the implementation of an AI governance framework that includes SHEQ-specific ethical considerations.
- Ongoing: Participate in relevant conferences and working groups to stay at the forefront of this evolving field.
- QuickWin: Start a dialogue with our Legal and IT teams about the ethical implications of any AI tools currently in use or planned for deployment in operations.
- Skill: Climate Risk Integration into ERM
- Why: Climate change isn't just an environmental issue; it's a fundamental business risk. Extreme weather events, resource scarcity, and supply chain disruptions directly impact operational safety, asset integrity, and business continuity. Integrating climate risk into our Enterprise Risk Management (ERM) framework is no longer optional.
- Concepts: [{'concept_name': 'Physical climate risks', 'description': 'Assessing the impact of rising sea levels, extreme heat, floods, and droughts on our physical assets, supply chains, and employee safety.'}, {'concept_name': 'Transition climate risks', 'description': 'Understanding the risks associated with shifting to a low-carbon economy, including policy changes, market shifts, and technological disruptions.'}, {'concept_name': 'TCFD (Task Force on Climate-related Financial Disclosures)', 'description': 'Applying the TCFD framework to assess and report on climate-related financial risks and opportunities, crucial for investor relations.'}, {'concept_name': 'Climate adaptation and resilience strategies', 'description': 'Developing plans to adapt our operations and supply chains to the unavoidable impacts of climate change.'}]
- Prepare: This quarter: Work with the CFO and Head of Sustainability to assess our current climate risk exposure.
- Next 6 months: Develop a roadmap for integrating climate risk into our existing ERM framework and SHEQ strategic planning.
- Next 12 months: Oversee the development of climate adaptation plans for our most vulnerable assets and supply chains.
- Ongoing: Regularly report on climate-related risks and opportunities to the Board and investors.
- QuickWin: Review our current business continuity plans to explicitly include climate-related extreme weather scenarios and their impact on safety and operations.
Advancing Technical Skills
- Skill: Digital Twin for SHEQ Risk Simulation
- Why: The ability to create virtual replicas of our physical assets and processes (digital twins) allows us to simulate changes, test safety protocols, and predict failure points without risking real-world operations. This will revolutionise how we design for safety and manage operational risk.
- Concepts: [{'concept_name': 'Real-time data integration (IoT sensors)', 'description': "Understanding how data from sensors feeds into the digital twin to create an accurate, live representation of a facility's safety status."}, {'concept_name': 'Predictive analytics for asset failure', 'description': 'Using the digital twin to predict when equipment might fail, allowing for proactive maintenance and preventing safety incidents.'}, {'concept_name': 'Scenario testing and incident simulation', 'description': "Running 'what-if' scenarios within the digital twin to test emergency response plans, evacuation routes, and the impact of process changes on safety."}, {'concept_name': 'Virtual reality (VR) for safety training', 'description': 'Leveraging digital twin data to create immersive VR training environments for high-risk tasks, reducing the need for physical training.'}]
- Prepare: This quarter: Research leading digital twin applications in our industry for SHEQ benefits.
- Next 6 months: Sponsor a pilot project for a digital twin implementation in one of our high-risk facilities.
- Next 12 months: Develop a business case for broader digital twin adoption, focusing on ROI for safety and operational efficiency.
- Ongoing: Engage with technology partners and internal IT teams to understand the capabilities and limitations of digital twin technology.
- QuickWin: Identify a specific high-risk process or piece of equipment and explore how a basic digital twin could be used to simulate a safety improvement.
- Skill: Advanced Supply Chain EHS & Ethical Assurance
- Why: Increased scrutiny from consumers, investors, and regulators demands absolute transparency and assurance across our entire global supply chain. This goes beyond basic audits to include real-time monitoring, advanced analytics for ethical sourcing, and deep dives into subcontractor practices.
- Concepts: [{'concept_name': 'Blockchain for supply chain transparency', 'description': 'Exploring how blockchain can provide immutable records of product origin, labour practices, and environmental compliance throughout the supply chain.'}, {'concept_name': 'Satellite imagery and geospatial analytics', 'description': 'Using these tools to monitor environmental compliance (e.g., deforestation, pollution) and labour conditions in remote supplier locations.'}, {'concept_name': 'Human rights due diligence frameworks', 'description': 'Implementing robust processes to identify, prevent, and mitigate human rights risks (e.g., forced labour, child labour) in the supply chain.'}, {'concept_name': 'Circular economy principles in supply chain design', 'description': 'Designing supply chains that minimise waste, maximise resource efficiency, and reduce environmental impact, aligning with our sustainability goals.'}]
- Prepare: This quarter: Review our current supply chain EHS assurance programme and identify key gaps against emerging best practices.
- Next 6 months: Partner with Procurement and Legal to develop a strategy for enhanced supply chain transparency and ethical sourcing.
- Next 12 months: Pilot new technologies (e.g., blockchain-based tracking) for critical high-risk components or materials.
- Ongoing: Engage with NGOs and ethical sourcing experts to continuously improve our supply chain practices.
- QuickWin: Select one high-risk supplier and conduct an enhanced due diligence review, including on-site visits and independent third-party assessments, focusing on both EHS and ethical practices.
Future Skills Closing Note
Your role is to be the strategic orchestrator, not the technician. However, a deep conceptual understanding of these emerging technical capabilities will allow you to ask the right questions, challenge assumptions, and guide your teams to deploy these tools effectively. It's about vision and oversight, ensuring we harness innovation safely and responsibly.
Education Requirements
- Level: Minimum
- Req: A Master's degree in Occupational Health & Safety, Environmental Management, Engineering, Law, or a related field from a reputable institution.
- Alts: An exceptional track record of 25+ years in senior SHEQ leadership roles, combined with relevant professional certifications and demonstrable strategic impact, may be considered in lieu of a Master's degree.
- Level: Preferred
- Req: An MBA or a PhD in a relevant scientific or engineering discipline is highly desirable, demonstrating advanced business acumen or deep technical expertise.
- Alts: N/A
Experience Requirements
You'll need a minimum of 20 years of progressive experience in Compliance, Quality, Health, Safety, or Environmental leadership roles, with at least 7-10 years operating at a Director or VP level within a large, multinational organisation. This isn't a role for someone still learning the ropes; you should have a proven history of shaping enterprise-level strategy, managing significant global teams, and successfully navigating complex regulatory landscapes and major crises. Experience presenting to and influencing Boards of Directors is non-negotiable.
Preferred Certifications
- Cert: Chartered Environmentalist (CEnv) or equivalent
- Prod: Society for the Environment (or equivalent national body)
- Usage: Demonstrates advanced expertise and commitment to environmental sustainability, crucial for our ESG strategy and environmental compliance.
- Cert: Certified Quality Engineer (CQE) or equivalent
- Prod: ASQ (or equivalent national body)
- Usage: Signifies a deep understanding of quality management principles and systems, essential for overseeing our global quality programmes.
- Cert: Certified Risk Management Professional (CRMP) or similar
- Prod: Various professional bodies
- Usage: Highlights expertise in enterprise risk management, aligning SHEQ risks with broader business objectives and board-level reporting.
- Cert: Lead Auditor for ISO Management Systems (e.g., ISO 45001, 14001, 9001)
- Prod: IRCA or similar accredited bodies
- Usage: While you won't be auditing, this demonstrates a deep, practical understanding of management system implementation and effectiveness, crucial for overseeing global compliance.
Recommended Activities
- Regular participation in executive leadership programmes focused on global business strategy, governance, and crisis management.
- Active engagement with leading industry bodies (e.g., IOSH, AIHA, NAEM) and regulatory forums to influence policy and stay abreast of emerging trends.
- Continuous learning in areas such as AI ethics, climate science, sustainable supply chain management, and advanced data analytics for risk.
- Mentoring future SHEQ leaders, which is a fantastic way to solidify your own knowledge and give back to the profession.
- Publishing thought leadership articles or speaking at major conferences to position yourself and the company as an industry leader.
Career Progression Pathways
Entry Paths to This Role
- Path: Global Director / VP of EHS & Risk
- Time: 5-7 years at this level before C-Suite
- Path: Head of Compliance / Chief Risk Officer (CRO) (with strong SHEQ background)
- Time: 7-10 years in these roles before C-Suite
Career Progression From This Role
- Pathway: Chief Executive Officer (CEO)
- Time: 5-10 years post-CCQHS Officer
- Pathway: Board Member / Non-Executive Director (NED)
- Time: 3-5 years post-CCQHS Officer
Long Term Vision Potential Roles
- Title: Chief Risk Officer (CRO) for a major corporation
- Time: 5-10 years post-CCQHS Officer
- Title: Senior Advisor / Consultant to Governments or International Bodies
- Time: 5-15 years post-CCQHS Officer
- Title: Academic / Thought Leader in SHEQ & ESG
- Time: 10-20 years post-CCQHS Officer
Sector Mobility
Your expertise as a CCQHS Officer is highly transferable across a wide range of industries, particularly those with complex operational risks (e.g., manufacturing, energy, chemicals, pharmaceuticals, logistics). The principles of enterprise risk management, regulatory compliance, and cultural leadership are universal, making you a valuable asset in almost any sector.
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.