Role Purpose & Context
Role Summary
The Chief Compliance_Quality_Health_Safety Officer sets the overarching vision and strategy for all things safety, quality, and environmental health across the entire company. You'll be the executive driving our commitment to zero harm, ensuring our operations are not just legally sound but also ethically robust and sustainable. This means you'll sit right at the top table, advising the CEO and the Board on critical risks, opportunities, and our long-term strategy for responsible business. When this role is done exceptionally well, we'll see a tangible reduction in serious incidents, a stronger reputation with regulators and investors, and a workforce that feels genuinely cared for. If it's not, we're looking at significant regulatory fines, reputational damage that could take years to fix, and potentially tragic consequences for our people. The real challenge here is translating complex global regulations and operational realities into a coherent, actionable strategy that everyone buys into, from the factory floor to the investor presentation. The reward, though, is seeing a truly safe, sustainable, and high-quality organisation that stands as an industry leader.
Reporting Structure
- Reports to: Chief Executive Officer (CEO) or Board of Directors
- Direct reports: Directors of EHS, Regional Safety Heads, Senior Compliance Managers
- Matrix relationships:
VP of EHS & Sustainability, Group Head of Health, Safety & Environment, Chief Safety & Risk Officer,
Key Stakeholders
Internal:
- CEO and Executive Leadership Team (ELT)
- Board of Directors (especially Audit and Risk Committees)
- Legal and Corporate Governance
- Chief Operating Officer (COO) and Operations Leadership
- Chief Financial Officer (CFO) and Investor Relations
- Human Resources Leadership
External:
- Government Regulators (e.g., HSE, Environment Agency, local authorities)
- Investors and Shareholders
- Industry Associations and Standards Bodies
- External Auditors and Consultants
- Media and Public Relations
- Key Suppliers and Partners
Organisational Impact
Scope: Your decisions here ripple across the entire enterprise. You're not just preventing accidents; you're safeguarding our brand, our financial health, and our licence to operate. A robust CQHS strategy, driven by you, directly influences investor confidence, insurance premiums, and our ability to attract and retain top talent. Frankly, you're a key pillar of our long-term sustainability and ethical standing in the market.
Performance Metrics
Quantitative Metrics
- Metric: Enterprise Serious Injury & Fatality (SIF) Rate Reduction
- Desc: The rate of severe injuries or fatalities across all business units.
- Target: Achieve a 5%+ year-over-year reduction in the enterprise-wide SIF rate.
- Freq: Annually, reported quarterly to the Board.
- Example: If our SIF rate was 0.08 last year, we'd aim for 0.076 or lower this year. This is the ultimate measure of keeping our people safe.
- Metric: Workers' Compensation Claim Cost Reduction
- Desc: The total cost associated with workplace injury claims, including medical, lost wages, and administrative fees.
- Target: Deliver a 10% reduction in annual workers' compensation claim costs across the enterprise.
- Freq: Annually, reviewed quarterly with Finance.
- Example: If total claims cost £2M last year, we're looking to bring that down to £1.8M. This shows direct financial impact from better safety.
- Metric: Safety Culture Maturity Score Improvement
- Desc: Progress in our organisation's safety culture, often measured through surveys or external assessments (e.g., from 'Reactive' to 'Proactive' or 'Generative').
- Target: Improve the organisation's safety maturity score by at least one level within a 2-year period.
- Freq: Bi-annually or annually via external assessment/internal survey.
- Example: Moving from a 'Dependent' culture (where safety relies on supervision) to an 'Independent' one (where individuals take ownership). It's about shifting mindsets.
- Metric: Strategic Safety Initiative Implementation Rate
- Desc: The number of major, enterprise-wide strategic safety initiatives successfully approved, funded, and implemented.
- Target: Secure executive approval and implement 2+ major strategic safety initiatives per year.
- Freq: Annually, tracked against corporate objectives.
- Example: Successfully rolling out a new global EHS software platform or an enterprise-wide behaviour-based safety programme. These are big, transformative projects.
- Metric: Regulatory Fines & Non-Compliance Incidents
- Desc: The number and financial impact of significant regulatory fines or notices of non-compliance.
- Target: Achieve zero significant regulatory fines or major non-compliance incidents annually.
- Freq: Continuously monitored, reported quarterly to the Board.
- Example: Avoiding a £500K fine from the Environment Agency for a breach of environmental permit conditions. This is about protecting our reputation and bottom line.
Qualitative Metrics
- Metric: Board and Investor Confidence
- Desc: The level of trust and confidence the Board and investors have in our CQHS strategy and risk management.
- Evidence: You'll know you're doing well when the Board proactively seeks your input on strategic risks, when investors highlight our strong ESG performance, and when your quarterly updates are met with confidence rather than concern. It’s about being seen as a strategic partner, not just a compliance function.
- Metric: Regulatory Relationship Strength
- Desc: The quality of our working relationship with key regulatory bodies.
- Evidence: Evidence includes proactive engagement with regulators on policy changes, being invited to participate in industry working groups, and receiving positive feedback on our transparency and responsiveness during audits. They should see us as a partner, not an adversary.
- Metric: Enterprise-wide Safety Culture Engagement
- Desc: The degree to which safety is genuinely embraced and owned by all employees, from frontline to senior leadership.
- Evidence: This shows up in high participation rates in safety programmes, unsolicited suggestions for improvement from employees, visible commitment from senior leaders (e.g., participating in Gemba walks), and a general sense that safety is 'how we do business' rather than a separate activity. It's about the feel of the place.
- Metric: Strategic Influence & Thought Leadership
- Desc: Your ability to shape industry best practices and internal corporate strategy.
- Evidence: You'll be asked to speak at industry conferences, contribute to white papers, and your recommendations will directly influence major capital expenditure decisions, M&A due diligence, and new product development. You're not just following; you're leading.
Primary Traits
- Trait: Unflappable Strategic Navigator
- Manifestation: When a major incident hits the news, or a new, complex global regulation lands, you're the one who calmly assesses the situation, outlines the strategic implications for the Board, and articulates a clear path forward. You don't panic; you plan. You can explain the 'Swiss Cheese Model' to an investor without jargon, and you're thinking three steps ahead about reputational impact and legal exposure.
- Benefit: At this level, a crisis isn't just an operational problem; it's an existential threat. Your ability to remain composed, think strategically, and communicate clearly under immense pressure is critical to maintaining investor confidence, managing public perception, and ensuring the company navigates choppy waters without losing its way. A CSHO who loses their head in a crisis can sink the ship.
- Trait: Master of Executive Persuasion
- Manifestation: You can walk into a boardroom and, without being preachy or overly technical, convince a sceptical CEO to invest £5M in a new safety system. You use data, real-world examples, and a deep understanding of business drivers (not just regulations) to get buy-in. You're not just presenting facts; you're telling a compelling story about risk, return, and responsibility. You'll get the COO to agree to a temporary production slowdown for a critical safety upgrade, not because you ordered it, but because you convinced them it was the only sensible choice.
- Benefit: You have immense responsibility for enterprise risk, but often no direct operational authority. Your entire effectiveness hinges on your ability to influence, inspire, and persuade other C-suite executives and the Board to prioritise safety and compliance, even when it's expensive or inconvenient. Without this, your strategy remains just words on paper.
- Trait: Forensic & Systemic Thinker
- Manifestation: You don't just see an incident; you see the systemic failures that allowed it to happen. You're looking for the root causes hidden deep within our processes, culture, and even our organisational structure. You'll spot the subtle link between a production target and an increase in 'at-risk behaviour'. You're asking 'why' five times, then asking 'why' again, and you're not satisfied until you've uncovered the true, underlying issues, not just the obvious symptoms. This includes scrutinising M&A targets for hidden EHS liabilities.
- Benefit: At the enterprise level, incidents are rarely isolated events. They're symptoms of deeper, systemic problems. Your job is to identify and fix those underlying issues before they lead to catastrophic failures. This requires a relentless, almost forensic, pursuit of truth and a deep understanding of complex systems. Missing a systemic flaw at this level could cost us tens of millions, or worse.
Supporting Traits
- Trait: Visionary Leader
- Desc: Can articulate a compelling, long-term vision for safety and sustainability that inspires the entire organisation and positions us as an industry leader.
- Trait: Ethical Compass
- Desc: Possesses an unwavering commitment to ethical conduct and integrity, especially when faced with difficult trade-offs or pressure to cut corners.
- Trait: Organisational Transformer
- Desc: Has a proven track record of driving large-scale cultural and operational change across complex organisations.
- Trait: Global Perspective
- Desc: Understands and navigates diverse international regulatory landscapes and cultural nuances in safety practices.
Primary Motivators
- Motivator: Leaving a Legacy of Safety & Integrity
- Daily: You'll spend your days shaping corporate policy, influencing board decisions, and driving cultural change, knowing that your work directly contributes to saving lives and building a truly responsible company. It's about building something enduring.
- Motivator: Navigating Complex, High-Stakes Challenges
- Daily: You thrive on the intellectual challenge of interpreting ambiguous global regulations, managing major crises, and balancing commercial pressures with ethical imperatives. It's never boring; it's always high-stakes.
- Motivator: Shaping Enterprise Culture & Strategy
- Daily: You'll be at the forefront of defining how our company operates, influencing everything from our M&A strategy to our employee engagement programmes. You're a key architect of our corporate identity.
Potential Demotivators
Honestly, this role isn't for everyone. You'll face immense pressure from all sides—operational leaders pushing for speed, investors focused purely on profit, and regulators demanding perfection. You'll have to deliver bad news to the Board, potentially shut down entire operations if the risk is too high, and deal with the fallout of serious incidents, which can be emotionally draining. You'll sometimes feel like you're fighting an uphill battle against complacency or short-term thinking.
Common Frustrations
- Dealing with executive 'lip service' to safety that doesn't translate into genuine resource allocation or behavioural change.
- Navigating complex political landscapes within the organisation where safety might be seen as secondary to production or profit.
- The emotional toll of managing significant incidents, especially when there are serious injuries or fatalities.
- Trying to implement global standards in diverse cultural contexts, facing resistance or misunderstanding.
- The constant battle against complacency and the 'it won't happen to me' mindset, even at senior levels.
- Managing the reputational fallout and legal complexities of major non-compliance events.
What Role Doesn't Offer
- A quiet, predictable routine with minimal pressure.
- The ability to avoid difficult conversations or unpopular decisions.
- A role where you're solely focused on technical details without broader business impact.
- A 'hands-on' operational safety role; you're leading the strategy, not conducting daily inspections.
ADHD Positives
- The high-stakes, dynamic nature of crisis management and strategic problem-solving can be highly engaging and stimulating, tapping into hyperfocus.
- The need for innovative, big-picture thinking to solve complex enterprise-level safety challenges can be a significant strength.
- Ability to quickly pivot between diverse, high-priority issues (e.g., regulatory changes, incident response, board presentations) can be well-suited.
ADHD Challenges and Accommodations
- The sheer volume of complex information and the need for meticulous, long-term strategic planning might require structured approaches and executive assistant support for organisation.
- Managing multiple, concurrent, long-term strategic programmes could be challenging; breaking down large initiatives into smaller, manageable phases with clear milestones helps.
- Accommodations might include dedicated support for administrative tasks, flexible meeting schedules to allow for deep work, and clear, concise communication of strategic priorities.
Dyslexia Positives
- Often possess strong spatial reasoning and pattern recognition, which is invaluable for identifying systemic risks and designing intuitive safety systems.
- Excellent verbal communication skills can be a huge asset in influencing the Board, engaging regulators, and leading crisis communications.
- Strategic, holistic thinking can help in seeing the 'big picture' of enterprise risk and developing innovative solutions.
Dyslexia Challenges and Accommodations
- Reading and interpreting dense regulatory documents or preparing detailed written reports for the Board could be challenging; use of text-to-speech software, proofreading support, and reliance on visual aids for presentations are key.
- Ensuring accuracy in complex legal and compliance documentation requires robust review processes and potentially dedicated support for written outputs.
- Accommodations include providing documents in accessible formats, allowing for verbal briefings over written reports where appropriate, and offering tools like Grammarly or dedicated proofreaders.
Autism Positives
- A deep commitment to logical, systematic problem-solving is invaluable for designing robust safety management systems and conducting thorough root cause analyses.
- Exceptional attention to detail can be critical in identifying subtle risks or compliance gaps that others might miss, especially in complex global operations.
- A strong sense of integrity and adherence to rules and standards aligns perfectly with the core mission of compliance and safety leadership.
Autism Challenges and Accommodations
- Navigating complex organisational politics, subtle social cues in board meetings, and informal networking might be challenging; clear communication of expectations and social norms is helpful.
- The need for frequent, nuanced stakeholder engagement and persuasion requires conscious effort; structured communication frameworks and pre-briefings for important meetings can assist.
- Accommodations might include clear agendas for all meetings, direct and unambiguous communication, a predictable work environment where possible, and support for understanding unspoken social dynamics.
Sensory Considerations
This is a C-suite role, so expect a professional office environment, but also significant travel to diverse operational sites (factories, construction sites, etc.) which can be noisy, visually complex, and socially demanding. There will be high-pressure situations, including crisis rooms with intense activity and media scrutiny. You'll need to be comfortable in varied, sometimes unpredictable, sensory environments.
Flexibility Notes
While the role demands significant presence and travel, we're committed to providing flexibility where possible, especially around deep work time and administrative tasks. The focus is on impact and outcomes, not strict hours. We can discuss specific needs during the interview process.
Key Responsibilities
Experience Levels Responsibilities
- Level: Chief Compliance_Quality_Health_Safety Officer (C-Suite)
- Responsibilities: Define and articulate the enterprise-wide CQHS vision, strategy, and long-term roadmap, ensuring it aligns with our overall business objectives and values. This means looking 3-5 years out, not just next quarter.
- Provide expert counsel and strategic guidance to the CEO, Board of Directors, and Executive Leadership Team on all significant CQHS risks, opportunities, and emerging regulatory trends—you're the ultimate authority here.
- Lead the design, implementation, and continuous improvement of our global CQHS management systems, making sure they're robust enough to handle our scale and complexity (think ISO 45001/14001, but at an enterprise level).
- Oversee and direct major incident response and crisis management programmes for enterprise-level events, acting as the primary executive spokesperson and strategic decision-maker during critical situations.
- Drive a proactive, generative safety culture across the entire organisation, moving beyond mere compliance to genuine ownership and accountability at every level. This involves significant cultural transformation work.
- Manage relationships with key external stakeholders, including top-tier regulators, government bodies, industry associations, and investors, often representing the company publicly on CQHS matters.
- Conduct comprehensive CQHS due diligence for all major mergers, acquisitions, and divestitures, identifying and mitigating significant risks before they become our problem.
- Develop and manage the overall enterprise CQHS budget, ensuring resources are allocated effectively to strategic priorities and high-risk areas. We're talking about multi-million pound budgets here.
- Mentor, develop, and lead a high-performing team of CQHS Directors and Managers, building a strong talent pipeline and fostering a culture of excellence within the function.
- Stay ahead of the curve on emerging technologies (like AI in safety) and global best practices, assessing their potential impact and integrating them into our enterprise strategy where appropriate.
- Supervision: You'll be largely autonomous, reporting directly to the CEO or Board. Your performance is reviewed against enterprise-level strategic objectives and overall company performance. You're expected to set your own agenda, drive your own initiatives, and manage your own team with full strategic oversight.
- Decision: Full strategic authority for the CQHS function across the enterprise. This includes defining global policies, approving multi-million pound budgets for safety initiatives (typically £1M-£10M+), making go/no-go decisions on high-risk operations, and influencing M&A activity. You'll make significant decisions that directly impact our P&L and reputation. Board-level decisions will require alignment with the CEO and Board.
- Success: Success means a demonstrable, sustained reduction in enterprise SIF rates, a significant improvement in our safety culture maturity, zero major regulatory fines, and a strong, positive reputation with investors and external bodies regarding our ESG performance. You'll be a trusted advisor to the Board, and our CQHS function will be seen as a strategic enabler, not just a cost centre.
Decision-Making Authority
- Type: Enterprise CQHS Strategy & Policy
- Entry: N/A (no involvement)
- Mid: N/A (no involvement)
- Senior: N/A (no involvement)
- Type: Major Incident Response & Crisis Management
- Entry: N/A (no involvement)
- Mid: N/A (no involvement)
- Senior: N/A (no involvement)
- Type: CQHS Budget Allocation (Enterprise)
- Entry: N/A (no involvement)
- Mid: N/A (no involvement)
- Senior: N/A (no involvement)
- Type: M&A Due Diligence & Integration
- Entry: N/A (no involvement)
- Mid: N/A (no involvement)
- Senior: N/A (no involvement)
ID:
Tool: Enterprise Risk Aggregation & Anomaly Detection
Benefit: AI models can sift through millions of data points from all our sites – incident reports, audit findings, sensor data, near-misses – to spot emerging patterns and anomalies that human eyes would miss. It'll flag a subtle increase in a specific type of 'at-risk behaviour' in one region that could signal a broader systemic issue before it becomes a major incident. This gives you a truly holistic, predictive view of enterprise risk.
ID:
Tool: Strategic Risk Forecasting & Scenario Planning
Benefit: Use AI to run 'what-if' scenarios. What's the impact of a new climate regulation on our supply chain EHS risks? How would a major geopolitical event affect our global compliance footprint? AI can model these complex interactions, giving you data-driven insights to inform your strategic planning and board presentations. It's like having a crystal ball, but with data.
ID:
Tool: Global Regulatory Intelligence & Impact Analysis
Benefit: New regulations are always popping up, and they're often hundreds of pages long. Feed them to an LLM and ask: 'Summarise the key changes in the new EU chemical directive that impact our manufacturing operations in Germany and provide a bulleted list of necessary strategic adjustments.' Get a concise, actionable summary in minutes, not days. This keeps you ahead of the curve.
ID: ✍️
Tool: Executive Communication & Crisis Response Drafting
Benefit: When a crisis hits, every word matters. Use AI to draft initial holding statements, internal communications to employees, or even first-pass responses to investor queries about an EHS event. Prompt: 'Draft a message to all employees from the CSHO about the importance of reporting near-misses, emphasising psychological safety, for our global intranet.' It saves critical time when seconds count.
20-30 hours weekly
Weekly time savings potential
AI tools like advanced LLMs (e.g., GPT-4, Claude), specialised EHS AI platforms, and integrated BI tools can drive this efficiency.
Typical tool investment
Competency Requirements
Foundation Skills (Transferable)
At the C-suite level, foundation skills aren't just about personal effectiveness; they're about leading and inspiring an entire organisation. You're expected to embody these traits and cultivate them in your leadership team.
- Category: Executive Leadership & Vision
- Skills: Strategic Vision Setting: Ability to define and articulate a compelling, long-term vision for enterprise CQHS that aligns with corporate strategy and values.
- Organisational Transformation: Proven capability to drive large-scale cultural and operational change across diverse business units and geographies.
- Executive Presence: Commands respect and credibility with the Board, C-suite peers, regulators, and external stakeholders.
- Inspirational Leadership: Motivates and empowers a global team of safety professionals and influences the broader workforce towards a shared safety culture.
- Category: Strategic Communication & Influence
- Skills: Board-Level Communication: Ability to present complex CQHS risks and strategies clearly, concisely, and persuasively to the Board of Directors and investors.
- Crisis Communication: Expertly manages internal and external communications during high-stakes incidents, protecting reputation and maintaining trust.
- Negotiation & Persuasion: Skilled at gaining buy-in from senior executives and external bodies on critical CQHS initiatives and investments, even when faced with resistance.
- Stakeholder Management (Executive): Builds and maintains strong, credible relationships with top-tier regulators, industry leaders, and investor groups.
- Category: Enterprise Risk Management & Governance
- Skills: Holistic Risk Assessment: Capability to identify, assess, and mitigate enterprise-level CQHS risks, including strategic, operational, financial, and reputational exposures.
- Governance Framework Design: Designs and implements robust governance structures, policies, and internal controls to ensure compliance and ethical conduct across the organisation.
- Ethical Decision-Making: Consistently makes sound, ethical judgments, especially when confronted with complex trade-offs between safety, cost, and operational demands.
- Regulatory Foresight: Anticipates future regulatory changes and geopolitical impacts on CQHS, proactively adjusting strategy and preparing the organisation.
- Category: Financial Acumen & Business Integration
- Skills: P&L Management: Understands the financial implications of CQHS decisions, manages multi-million pound budgets, and demonstrates ROI for safety investments.
- Business Integration: Seamlessly integrates CQHS considerations into core business processes, including M&A due diligence, capital projects, and product development.
- ESG Reporting & Strategy: Leads the development and reporting of environmental, social, and governance (ESG) metrics related to CQHS, enhancing investor relations.
- Operational Excellence Linkage: Connects CQHS performance directly to operational efficiency, quality, and overall business performance.
Functional Skills (Role-Specific Technical)
You'll need a profound, enterprise-level understanding of CQHS methodologies and how they apply across diverse operations. This isn't about doing the work, but about setting the standards, auditing the systems, and leading the global implementation.
Technical Competencies
- Skill: Enterprise Risk Management (ERM) Frameworks
- Desc: Deep expertise in designing and implementing ERM frameworks that integrate CQHS risks into the broader corporate risk profile, ensuring a holistic view for the Board.
- Level: Expert
- Skill: Global Regulatory Interpretation & Compliance Strategy
- Desc: Ability to interpret complex international EHS regulations (e.g., EU Directives, OSHA, EPA, local country laws) and develop a cohesive, enterprise-wide compliance strategy. This means understanding how regulations in Germany impact operations in Brazil.
- Level: Expert
- Skill: Safety Culture Transformation & Behavioural Science
- Desc: Mastery of organisational psychology and behavioural science principles to design and drive large-scale safety culture change programmes across a diverse global workforce. It's about changing hearts and minds, not just rules.
- Level: Expert
- Skill: M&A EHS Due Diligence & Integration
- Desc: Expertise in leading EHS due diligence for multi-million pound acquisitions, identifying material liabilities, and developing robust integration plans to harmonise safety standards and systems post-merger.
- Level: Expert
- Skill: Incident Command & Enterprise Crisis Management
- Desc: Proven experience in leading the executive response to major, enterprise-level incidents (e.g., fatalities, environmental disasters, widespread product recalls), managing internal and external communications, and overseeing investigations.
- Level: Expert
- Skill: Management Systems Auditing & Certification (ISO 45001/14001/9001)
- Desc: Strategic oversight of the design, implementation, and certification of integrated management systems (Safety, Environmental, Quality) across multiple sites and business units, ensuring global consistency and compliance.
- Level: Expert
Digital Tools
- Tool: EHS Management Suite (e.g., Intelex, VelocityEHS, Cority, Enablon)
- Level: Strategic
- Usage: Leads platform selection, defines enterprise-wide data standards, integrates EHS data with business intelligence platforms for executive dashboards and strategic reporting. You're not using it daily, but you're defining how the organisation uses it.
- Tool: Data Analytics & Reporting (e.g., Power BI, Tableau, Qlik Sense)
- Level: Expert
- Usage: Connects multiple global data sources, creates interactive, executive-level dashboards for the Board, uses advanced analytics to forecast future enterprise risks, and justifies strategic investments based on data-driven insights. You're consuming and directing, not building from scratch.
- Tool: Learning Management System (LMS) (e.g., Cornerstone OnDemand, Workday Learning)
- Level: Strategic
- Usage: Defines the enterprise safety training strategy, selects global content providers, and links training effectiveness to enterprise-wide incident reduction and culture metrics. You're setting the direction for how we educate our workforce.
- Tool: Chemical & SDS Management (e.g., Chemwatch, Sphera, Verisk 3E)
- Level: Strategic
- Usage: Sets corporate policy on global chemical management, oversees enterprise-wide regulatory reporting (e.g., REACH, GHS), and manages strategic vendor relationships for chemical safety solutions. You're ensuring global consistency and compliance.
- Tool: Microsoft Office Suite (Word, Excel, PowerPoint, Teams)
- Level: Expert
- Usage: Prepares compelling board presentations, drafts executive communications, manages complex budgets, and collaborates seamlessly with global teams and external partners. This is your daily workhorse for communication and strategy.
Industry Knowledge
- Area: Global Supply Chain EHS Risks
- Desc: Deep understanding of EHS risks throughout complex global supply chains, including supplier auditing, ethical sourcing, and managing third-party contractor safety.
- Area: ESG (Environmental, Social, Governance) Principles
- Desc: Expert knowledge of ESG frameworks, reporting standards, and how CQHS performance contributes to our overall sustainability profile and investor appeal.
- Area: Industrial Hygiene & Occupational Health
- Desc: Strategic understanding of key industrial hygiene principles (e.g., exposure monitoring, ventilation, ergonomics) and occupational health programmes across diverse operational settings.
- Area: Process Safety Management (PSM)
- Desc: Strategic oversight of PSM programmes for high-hazard processes, including Process Hazard Analyses (PHAs), Management of Change (MOC), and mechanical integrity programmes.
Regulatory Compliance Regulations
- Reg: Health and Safety at Work etc. Act 1974 (UK)
- Usage: Ensures enterprise-wide compliance with fundamental UK health and safety law, understanding its implications for directors' duties and corporate liability. Sets the benchmark for our UK operations.
- Reg: Control of Substances Hazardous to Health (COSHH) Regulations (UK)
- Usage: Oversees the strategic management of hazardous substances across all UK operations, ensuring robust risk assessments, control measures, and employee training programmes are in place.
- Reg: Environmental Permitting (England and Wales) Regulations 2016
- Usage: Ensures enterprise-wide compliance with environmental permits, managing relationships with the Environment Agency, and mitigating risks of pollution incidents and fines. This is about protecting our planet and our licence to operate.
- Reg: EU Directives on Safety & Health at Work (e.g., Framework Directive 89/391/EEC)
- Usage: Provides strategic oversight and ensures compliance with foundational EU directives across our European operations, influencing national implementation strategies where applicable.
- Reg: OSHA Regulations (USA)
- Usage: Ensures enterprise-wide compliance with US Occupational Safety and Health Administration (OSHA) standards, particularly relevant for any US-based operations or supply chain partners. This means understanding a different legal landscape.
- Reg: REACH Regulation (EU)
- Usage: Oversees strategic compliance with the Registration, Evaluation, Authorisation and Restriction of Chemicals (REACH) regulation for all products and chemicals used or manufactured within the EU, managing global chemical inventory and risk.
Essential Prerequisites
- Extensive experience (20+ years) in senior EHS leadership roles within complex, multi-site or global organisations, with a significant portion at Director or VP level.
- Proven track record of successfully leading large-scale safety culture transformation programmes and achieving measurable improvements in enterprise-wide safety performance.
- Demonstrable experience in managing multi-million pound CQHS budgets and demonstrating clear ROI for strategic safety investments.
- Direct experience advising and presenting to Boards of Directors and C-suite executives on critical risk, compliance, and sustainability matters.
- Expertise in navigating complex international regulatory landscapes and managing relationships with top-tier government and regulatory bodies.
- Significant experience in leading crisis management and major incident response for enterprise-level events, including media and public relations aspects.
Career Pathway Context
You're not just stepping into this role; you're bringing a wealth of executive-level experience and a proven ability to lead and influence at the highest levels of an organisation. This isn't a learning curve; it's about applying your mastery to our unique challenges.
Qualifications & Credentials
Emerging Foundation Skills
- Skill: AI Ethics & Governance for Safety Data
- Why: As we use more AI to predict risks and automate safety processes, ethical questions around data privacy, algorithmic bias (e.g., in predictive analytics identifying 'risky' demographics), and the 'black box' nature of some AI models become critical. You'll need to navigate these complex ethical and governance challenges to maintain trust and ensure responsible AI use.
- Concepts: [{'concept_name': 'Data privacy and GDPR compliance in AI systems', 'description': 'Data privacy and GDPR compliance in AI systems'}, {'concept_name': 'Algorithmic fairness and bias detection in predict', 'description': 'Algorithmic fairness and bias detection in predictive models'}, {'concept_name': 'Transparency and explainability of AI safety decis', 'description': 'Transparency and explainability of AI safety decisions'}, {'concept_name': 'Human oversight and accountability in AI-driven pr', 'description': 'Human oversight and accountability in AI-driven processes'}, {'concept_name': 'Developing internal AI governance policies for CQH', 'description': 'Developing internal AI governance policies for CQHS applications'}]
- Prepare: This quarter: Engage with our Legal and Data Privacy teams to understand current corporate AI policies and identify potential gaps for CQHS.
- Next 6 months: Participate in industry forums or webinars on AI ethics in safety and risk management.
- Next 12 months: Lead the development of our internal ethical AI guidelines specifically for CQHS applications.
- Next 18 months: Evaluate vendor AI solutions for ethical compliance and transparency before procurement.
- QuickWin: Start by asking critical ethical questions when evaluating any new AI-driven safety tool: 'How was this model trained?', 'Could it produce biased outcomes?', 'Who is accountable if the AI makes a mistake?'
- Skill: Climate Change Adaptation & Resilience Planning
- Why: Climate change isn't just an environmental issue; it's a direct safety and operational risk. Extreme weather events, rising sea levels, and resource scarcity will increasingly impact our facilities, supply chains, and employee safety. As CSHO, you'll need to integrate climate resilience into our enterprise risk management and business continuity plans.
- Concepts: [{'concept_name': 'Physical climate risks (e.g., floods, heatwaves, e', 'description': 'Physical climate risks (e.g., floods, heatwaves, extreme storms)'}, {'concept_name': 'Transition climate risks (e.g., policy changes, ma', 'description': 'Transition climate risks (e.g., policy changes, market shifts)'}, {'concept_name': 'Climate risk assessment methodologies (e.g., TCFD ', 'description': 'Climate risk assessment methodologies (e.g., TCFD recommendations)'}, {'concept_name': 'Integrating climate data into site-specific risk a', 'description': 'Integrating climate data into site-specific risk assessments'}, {'concept_name': 'Developing climate-resilient operational procedure', 'description': 'Developing climate-resilient operational procedures and infrastructure plans'}]
- Prepare: This quarter: Review our current enterprise risk register to identify climate-related gaps.
- Next 6 months: Collaborate with Operations and Facilities to conduct a preliminary climate vulnerability assessment for our most critical sites.
- Next 12 months: Engage a climate risk consultant to help develop a robust climate adaptation strategy for CQHS.
- Next 18 months: Present a comprehensive climate resilience plan to the Board, outlining key risks and mitigation strategies.
- QuickWin: Start by incorporating climate considerations into your regular hazard identification processes. For example, 'How does increased rainfall affect this site's drainage and potential for slips/falls?'
Advancing Technical Skills
- Skill: Digital Twin & Simulation for Enterprise Safety
- Why: Digital twins – virtual replicas of our physical operations – are moving beyond engineering to become powerful tools for safety. You'll need to understand how to use these to simulate incident scenarios, test new safety protocols, and optimise facility layouts for safety, all without disrupting real-world operations.
- Concepts: [{'concept_name': 'Real-time data integration from IoT sensors and EH', 'description': 'Real-time data integration from IoT sensors and EHS systems'}, {'concept_name': 'Predictive modelling of operational risks within t', 'description': 'Predictive modelling of operational risks within the digital twin'}, {'concept_name': 'Virtual reality (VR) for immersive safety training', 'description': 'Virtual reality (VR) for immersive safety training and incident walkthroughs'}, {'concept_name': 'Optimisation of facility design for safety and erg', 'description': 'Optimisation of facility design for safety and ergonomics'}, {'concept_name': 'Scenario planning for emergency response and disas', 'description': 'Scenario planning for emergency response and disaster recovery'}]
- Prepare: This quarter: Research leading examples of digital twin applications in industrial safety.
- Next 6 months: Identify a pilot project within one of our high-risk facilities to explore digital twin capabilities for safety.
- Next 12 months: Work with IT and Operations to develop a business case for enterprise-wide digital twin adoption for safety.
- Next 18 months: Oversee the initial implementation and evaluate the ROI of a digital twin for safety improvements.
- QuickWin: Explore simple 3D modelling software to visualise a high-risk process or area, even if it's not a full digital twin. It helps you think spatially about risk.
- Skill: Advanced Predictive Analytics & Machine Learning for Risk
- Why: Moving beyond basic trend analysis, advanced ML models can identify complex, non-obvious correlations between seemingly unrelated data points (e.g., specific shifts, weather conditions, production targets) to predict where and when incidents are most likely to occur. You'll need to direct the development and deployment of these models to enable truly proactive, preventative strategies.
- Concepts: [{'concept_name': 'Machine learning algorithms for anomaly detection ', 'description': 'Machine learning algorithms for anomaly detection and risk scoring'}, {'concept_name': 'Integration of diverse datasets (HR, operations, E', 'description': 'Integration of diverse datasets (HR, operations, EHS, external factors)'}, {'concept_name': 'Interpretable AI models for actionable insights (a', 'description': "Interpretable AI models for actionable insights (avoiding 'black box' issues)"}, {'concept_name': 'Establishing data governance and quality standards', 'description': 'Establishing data governance and quality standards for predictive models'}, {'concept_name': 'Measuring the effectiveness and ROI of predictive ', 'description': 'Measuring the effectiveness and ROI of predictive safety interventions'}]
- Prepare: This quarter: Meet with our Data Science team to understand their current capabilities and how they could be applied to CQHS.
- Next 6 months: Commission a proof-of-concept project using advanced analytics to predict risk in a specific high-risk area.
- Next 12 months: Develop an enterprise roadmap for integrating predictive analytics into our CQHS strategy.
- Next 18 months: Oversee the deployment of a new predictive risk dashboard for executive leadership.
- QuickWin: Challenge your current data analytics team to find a 'hidden' correlation in your existing incident data using more advanced statistical methods. You might be surprised what they find.
Future Skills Closing Note
Your leadership in these emerging areas will define our competitive advantage and our ability to protect our people and planet in an increasingly complex world. This isn't just about staying current; it's about setting the standard for the future of CQHS.
Education Requirements
- Level: Minimum
- Req: A Bachelor's degree in Occupational Health & Safety, Environmental Science, Engineering, or a related technical field.
- Alts: We're pragmatic. If you've got exceptional, demonstrable executive-level experience (25+ years) in a highly regulated industry, we'll absolutely consider that as equivalent. Show us what you've done, not just where you studied.
- Level: Preferred
- Req: A Master's degree (e.g., MSc in Occupational Health & Safety, Environmental Management) or an MBA from a reputable institution.
- Alts: An MBA is particularly helpful for understanding the broader business context and financial implications of CQHS strategy, which is crucial at this level.
Experience Requirements
You'll need at least 20 years of progressive experience in Compliance, Quality, Health, and Safety roles, with a minimum of 10-15 years spent in senior leadership positions (Director/VP level or above) within a complex, multi-national organisation. This isn't a role for someone still learning the ropes; you need to have navigated significant challenges and led large teams. We're looking for a proven executive, not just a subject matter expert.
Preferred Certifications
- Cert: ISO 45001 Lead Auditor / Lead Implementer
- Prod: Various accredited bodies (e.g., BSI, LRQA)
- Usage: Demonstrates deep expertise in designing and auditing enterprise-level safety management systems, which is critical for global consistency and compliance.
- Cert: Certified Safety Professional (CSP) / Chartered Safety and Health Practitioner (CMIOSH)
- Prod: Board of Certified Safety Professionals (BCSP) / Institution of Occupational Safety and Health (IOSH)
- Usage: Indicates a high level of professional competence and commitment to the safety profession, recognised internationally.
- Cert: Certified Environmental Professional (CEP)
- Prod: Academy of Board Certified Environmental Professionals (ABCEP)
- Usage: Useful if the role has a strong environmental component, demonstrating expertise in environmental management and compliance.
Recommended Activities
- Regularly attend and speak at major international CQHS conferences and industry summits (e.g., Safety & Health Expo, NSC Congress, AIHA Connect).
- Participate in executive leadership programmes focused on governance, risk management, and organisational transformation.
- Engage with global regulatory bodies and industry associations to influence policy and stay ahead of legislative changes.
- Mentor emerging leaders within the CQHS function and across the organisation, building a strong talent pipeline.
- Publish articles or thought leadership pieces in reputable industry journals, positioning yourself and the company as leaders in the field.
Career Progression Pathways
Entry Paths to This Role
- Path: Director of EHS (Large Multinational)
- Time: 5-8 years as Director
- Path: VP of Operations (with strong EHS focus)
- Time: 8-10 years in Operations leadership
- Path: Senior Regulatory Affairs Leader (Highly Regulated Industry)
- Time: 10-15 years in Regulatory Affairs
Career Progression From This Role
- Pathway: Board Member (Non-Executive Director)
- Time: 3-5 years post-CSHO
- Pathway: Chief Executive Officer (CEO) - for smaller/mid-sized companies
- Time: 5-7 years post-CSHO
Long Term Vision Potential Roles
- Title: Global EHS & Sustainability Advisor (Private Equity)
- Time: 5-10 years post-CSHO
- Title: Industry Association President / CEO
- Time: 7-12 years post-CSHO
- Title: University Professor / Research Fellow (Safety Leadership)
- Time: 10-15 years post-CSHO
Sector Mobility
Your expertise in enterprise risk management, governance, and cultural transformation is highly transferable. You could move into C-suite roles in other highly regulated sectors (e.g., pharmaceuticals, energy, aerospace) or leverage your ESG knowledge in the financial services sector. The core skills of protecting an organisation are universal.
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.