12-16 years

Chief Quality & Safety Officer (CQSO)

Honestly, this is the top job for quality and safety. You're the ultimate guardian, responsible for setting the enterprise-wide vision for how we operate safely, ethically, and to the highest quality standards. You'll be the primary voice for compliance at the executive table and with the board, ensuring our reputation is rock solid and our operations are sound. It's about protecting the company, its people, and its future.

Job ID
JD-CQHS-CQSO-005
Department
Compliance Quality Health Safety
NOS Level
Level 8
OFQUAL Level
7-8
Experience
12-16 years

Role Purpose & Context

Role Summary

The Chief Quality & Safety Officer (CQSO) is here to define and drive our entire enterprise-wide quality and safety strategy. This isn't about checking boxes; it's about embedding a culture where quality and safety are just how we do business, from the factory floor to the boardroom. You'll sit squarely at the intersection of business strategy, operational excellence, and regulatory compliance, making sure our ambition doesn't outrun our ability to deliver safely and reliably. When this role is done well, we're not just compliant; we're seen as a leader in our industry for our robust quality systems and our unwavering commitment to safety. Our brand reputation is strong, and our operational risks are proactively managed, not just reacted to. When it's not, well, the consequences can be catastrophic—think regulatory fines, product recalls, serious incidents, and a damaged reputation that takes years to rebuild. The challenge? Getting everyone, from the newest hire to the most seasoned executive, to truly own quality and safety, especially when commercial pressures are high. The reward, though, is knowing you're protecting our people, our customers, and the long-term viability of the entire organisation. It's a huge responsibility, but incredibly impactful.

Reporting Structure

Key Stakeholders

Internal:

External:

Organisational Impact

Scope: This role holds ultimate accountability for the organisation's overall compliance posture, quality performance, and safety record. Your decisions directly influence brand reputation, regulatory standing, operational efficiency, and ultimately, the company's financial performance and shareholder value. You're essentially the company's insurance policy against major quality and safety failures, driving the culture and systems that prevent them.

Performance Metrics

Quantitative Metrics

  1. Metric: Major Regulatory Non-Conformances
  2. Desc: Number of significant findings or enforcement actions from external regulatory bodies or certification audits.
  3. Target: Zero major non-conformances annually.
  4. Freq: Annually, with real-time tracking of any potential issues.
  5. Example: Avoiding any 'Major' findings during our annual ISO 9001 recertification audit or any enforcement notices from the HSE.
  6. Metric: Cost of Non-Quality (CoNQ) Reduction
  7. Desc: Measurable reduction in costs associated with quality failures, including scrap, rework, warranty claims, customer complaints, and regulatory fines.
  8. Target: 5-10% year-on-year reduction in total CoNQ as a percentage of revenue.
  9. Freq: Quarterly and Annually.
  10. Example: Reducing our total CoNQ from £5M to £4.5M in a year, or decreasing warranty claims by 15% across our product lines.
  11. Metric: Enterprise QMS Maturity Score
  12. Desc: Improvement in the overall maturity level of our Quality Management System (QMS) based on an established industry framework (e.g., CMMI, EFQM).
  13. Target: Advance QMS maturity by one level every 2-3 years (e.g., from Level 3 to Level 4).
  14. Freq: Annually, via internal or external assessment.
  15. Example: Moving our QMS from a 'Managed' (Level 3) to an 'Optimising' (Level 4) state, indicating proactive, data-driven improvement.
  16. Metric: Lost Time Injury Frequency Rate (LTIFR)
  17. Desc: The number of lost time injuries occurring per 1,000,000 hours worked across the enterprise.
  18. Target: Year-on-year reduction, striving for best-in-class industry benchmarks (e.g., <0.5).
  19. Freq: Monthly, reported quarterly to the Board.
  20. Example: Reducing our LTIFR from 0.8 to 0.6 over 12 months, indicating a safer working environment for our employees.

Qualitative Metrics

  1. Metric: Board Confidence & Strategic Counsel
  2. Desc: The Board and Executive Leadership proactively seek your input on strategic decisions that have quality, safety, or compliance implications, trusting your judgment.
  3. Evidence: Regular invitations to Board strategy sessions; your recommendations are consistently adopted; positive feedback from Board members on your reports and presentations; you're the first call when a major risk emerges.
  4. Metric: Proactive Risk Identification & Mitigation
  5. Desc: Your function consistently identifies emerging quality and safety risks before they become critical issues, presenting clear mitigation strategies to the executive team.
  6. Evidence: Implementation of predictive risk models; executive team relies on your risk reports for strategic planning; successful prevention of potential major incidents identified by your team; early warning systems are effective.
  7. Metric: Culture of Quality & Safety
  8. Desc: The organisation genuinely embraces quality and safety as shared values, evidenced by employee engagement, incident reporting, and proactive improvement initiatives from all levels.
  9. Evidence: High rates of near-miss reporting (indicating trust, not just incidents); positive results in employee safety culture surveys; observable 'speak up' culture around quality concerns; cross-functional teams initiating quality improvement projects without direct mandate.
  10. Metric: External Reputation & Thought Leadership
  11. Desc: The company is recognised externally as an industry leader in quality and safety, contributing to best practices and influencing regulatory discussions.
  12. Evidence: Invitations to speak at industry conferences; positive mentions in trade publications; active participation in standard-setting bodies; strong relationships with key regulatory officials; positive feedback from major customers on our QMS.

Primary Traits

Supporting Traits

Primary Motivators

  1. Motivator: Protecting the Enterprise & its People
  2. Daily: You'll spend your days thinking about systemic risks, reviewing incident reports, and strategising how to prevent harm to employees, customers, and the company's reputation. It's about being the ultimate guardian.
  3. Motivator: Shaping Organisational Culture
  4. Daily: You're constantly working to embed quality and safety into the company's DNA, influencing behaviours and mindsets across all levels. This means designing programmes, communicating vision, and being a visible champion.
  5. Motivator: Strategic Influence & Board Impact
  6. Daily: You'll regularly present to the Board, shaping their understanding of risk and compliance, and influencing major strategic decisions. Your advice directly impacts the company's direction.

Potential Demotivators

Honestly, this role isn't for everyone. You'll face constant tension between commercial objectives and compliance requirements. You might have to say 'no' to profitable ventures if they pose unacceptable risks. You'll spend a lot of time on governance, reporting, and ensuring accountability across a vast organisation, which can feel bureaucratic at times. The reality is, you're often the bearer of bad news or the voice of caution, which isn't always popular. If you need constant external validation for your work or prefer to avoid conflict, you'll struggle here.

Common Frustrations

  1. Executive leadership not fully appreciating the long-term value of robust quality and safety systems until a crisis hits.
  2. Fighting for adequate resources (budget, headcount) to proactively manage risks, especially when profit margins are tight.
  3. Dealing with business units who view compliance as a 'check-the-box' exercise rather than a strategic imperative.
  4. The sheer volume of regulatory changes and the constant need to adapt enterprise-wide systems to new requirements.
  5. The challenge of embedding a consistent quality and safety culture across diverse global operations with varying local regulations and cultural norms.

What Role Doesn't Offer

  1. A quiet, predictable routine—expect constant challenges and shifting priorities.
  2. Immediate gratification from individual project delivery; your impact is systemic and long-term.
  3. A role where you can avoid difficult conversations or challenging senior leadership.
  4. The ability to personally audit every process; your influence is through your team and the systems you build.

ADHD Positives

  1. The need for quick, decisive action during crises can suit those with high energy and rapid decision-making abilities.
  2. The broad, strategic scope allows for big-picture thinking and connecting disparate ideas across the organisation.
  3. High-stakes problem-solving can be engaging and stimulating, tapping into hyperfocus when needed.

ADHD Challenges and Accommodations

  1. The extensive governance, reporting, and detailed policy review could be challenging; strong executive assistants and structured reporting frameworks are essential.
  2. Maintaining focus on long-term, multi-year strategic initiatives amidst constant short-term demands requires robust organisational support and clear prioritisation tools.
  3. Managing a vast team and numerous simultaneous initiatives requires excellent delegation and structured communication protocols to avoid overwhelm.

Dyslexia Positives

  1. Strong conceptual thinking and ability to see patterns in complex data sets are highly valued for strategic risk identification.
  2. Excellent verbal communication and storytelling skills can be crucial for influencing the Board and shaping culture.
  3. The role's emphasis on system design and process improvement can benefit from creative, non-linear problem-solving approaches.

Dyslexia Challenges and Accommodations

  1. The volume of written reports, policies, and regulatory documents is immense; access to advanced proofreading software, dictation tools, and support staff for document preparation is critical.
  2. Ensuring absolute precision in regulatory submissions and board papers requires a robust review process, likely involving dedicated support.
  3. Reliance on visual aids and clear, concise summaries for complex information is key for effective communication with internal and external stakeholders.

Autism Positives

  1. A deep commitment to logic, fairness, and adherence to rules and standards is a significant asset in compliance and quality leadership.
  2. Exceptional ability to identify patterns, anomalies, and systemic flaws in complex quality and safety data.
  3. The drive for precision and accuracy in designing and implementing robust management systems.

Autism Challenges and Accommodations

  1. Navigating complex organisational politics, subtle power dynamics, and nuanced stakeholder relationships can be demanding; clear communication protocols and a trusted Chief of Staff can help.
  2. Extensive public speaking, media interactions, and investor relations require preparation and potentially coaching to manage social demands.
  3. Unexpected crises and rapid shifts in regulatory landscapes can be disruptive; clear incident response plans and structured decision-making processes are vital.

Sensory Considerations

This is a high-pressure, high-visibility executive role. Expect a dynamic environment with frequent meetings (both in-person and virtual), public speaking, and interactions with various internal and external stakeholders, including regulators and the media. There will be periods of intense focus and quiet work, but also significant social and communicative demands. The office environment is typically modern, open-plan with private offices for senior leadership, but you'll also spend time in manufacturing facilities or other operational sites, which can be noisy and require PPE. Flexibility for remote work is possible, but significant in-person presence for executive meetings and site visits is expected.

Flexibility Notes

While a C-Suite role demands significant commitment, we support flexibility where possible. This isn't a 9-to-5 job; it's about delivering strategic outcomes. We can discuss flexible working arrangements that support your effectiveness while meeting the demands of the role, understanding that some executive meetings or crisis responses may fall outside standard hours.

Key Responsibilities

Experience Levels Responsibilities

  1. Level: C-Suite (20+ years)
  2. Responsibilities: Define the enterprise-wide vision and strategic roadmap for Quality, Compliance, and Health & Safety, ensuring it aligns perfectly with the company's overall business objectives and long-term growth plans.
  3. Serve as the primary executive interface and ultimate accountability holder for all regulatory bodies, external auditors, and certification agencies. You'll represent the company during high-stakes inspections and investigations.
  4. Lead the design, implementation, and continuous improvement of a robust, integrated Quality Management System (QMS) and Environmental, Health & Safety (EHS) framework that operates effectively across all global business units.
  5. Advise the CEO and Board of Directors on critical quality and safety risks, emerging regulatory landscapes, and strategic opportunities to enhance our compliance posture and operational resilience. This means preparing and presenting comprehensive reports that are clear and actionable.
  6. Build, mentor, and lead a high-performing global team of Quality, Compliance, and Safety professionals, fostering a culture of excellence, accountability, and continuous learning. You're responsible for the talent pipeline and succession planning for your entire function.
  7. Oversee the development and execution of enterprise-level incident management, crisis response, and product recall programmes, ensuring rapid, effective, and compliant actions when things go wrong.
  8. Drive the integration of quality and safety considerations into major business initiatives, including M&A due diligence, new product development, market expansion, and digital transformation projects. You're the voice of caution and assurance.
  9. Supervision: Fully autonomous. You're accountable to the CEO and the Board, but you set the direction and execute with complete strategic authority for your function. You'll engage in monthly or quarterly strategic alignment discussions with the CEO and Board, but day-to-day, you're running the show.
  10. Decision: Full strategic authority for the Quality, Compliance, and Health & Safety functions. This includes P&L accountability for budgets exceeding £10M, ultimate sign-off on all major regulatory submissions, organisational design within your function, and final decisions on critical incident responses. You'll advise the Board on M&A quality/safety risks and have significant influence over enterprise-level capital expenditure related to QMS/EHS infrastructure.
  11. Success: Achieving and maintaining a 'zero major non-conformance' record with regulatory bodies, significantly reducing the Cost of Non-Quality across the enterprise, demonstrably improving the company's QMS maturity, and fostering a proactive, embedded culture of quality and safety that is recognised internally and externally. Your success is measured by the overall resilience, reputation, and ethical performance of the entire organisation.

Decision-Making Authority

Supercharge Your Strategic Impact: Save 10-15 Hours Weekly with AI in Quality & Safety Leadership

Let's be real, at the C-Suite level, your time is gold. You're not meant to be sifting through individual reports; you're meant to be setting strategy, mitigating enterprise risks, and driving cultural change. AI isn't here to replace you, but it's absolutely here to augment your capabilities, giving you back precious hours and providing insights you simply couldn't get before.

ID:

Tool: AI-Powered Enterprise Risk Prediction

Benefit: Instead of waiting for incidents, an AI tool can analyse global incident databases, regulatory changes, and internal audit findings to predict emerging quality and safety risks specific to our operations. It flags potential vulnerabilities before they become crises, giving you a massive head start on mitigation strategies.

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Tool: Strategic Board Reporting & Scenario Planning

Benefit: Feed your executive summaries, key performance indicators, and strategic objectives into an AI assistant. It can generate first drafts of board-level presentations, synthesise complex data into concise narratives, and even run 'what-if' scenarios for regulatory changes or major incidents, helping you prepare for tough questions.

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Tool: Proactive Compliance Monitoring & Culture Nudging

Benefit: AI can monitor real-time operational data and employee feedback (anonymised, of course) to detect deviations from policy or early warning signs of cultural issues. It's like having thousands of extra eyes and ears, identifying areas where training might be needed or where a process is consistently being bypassed, allowing for proactive intervention.

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Tool: AI-Assisted M&A Quality & Safety Due Diligence

Benefit: When considering an acquisition, AI can rapidly analyse the target company's historical quality data, incident reports, and compliance records. It can flag potential liabilities, integration challenges, and cultural incompatibilities much faster than manual review, giving you critical insights for negotiation and post-merger planning.

10-15 hours per week on research, reporting, and risk analysis Weekly time savings potential
Leveraging 3-5 key AI tools for strategic insights and productivity Typical tool investment
Explore AI Productivity for Chief Quality & Safety Officer (CQSO) →

12-15 specific tools & techniques with implementation guides

Competency Requirements

Foundation Skills (Transferable)

At the C-Suite level, these aren't just 'skills'; they're ingrained behaviours that shape your leadership style and define your strategic impact. You're not just 'communicating'; you're influencing the Board. You're not just 'solving problems'; you're navigating enterprise-level crises. These are the bedrock of effective executive leadership in Quality and Safety.

Functional Skills (Role-Specific Technical)

These are the deep technical and industry-specific capabilities that underpin your strategic leadership. You might not be doing the hands-on work anymore, but you need to understand the nuances to make informed decisions, challenge assumptions, and guide your teams effectively. It's about knowing enough to be dangerous, and to know when your team is being dangerous.

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 proven yourself as a strategic leader who can drive significant organisational change and manage complex risks across a large enterprise. This isn't a learning role; it's where you apply decades of hard-won experience to protect and shape the future of the company.

Qualifications & Credentials

Emerging Foundation Skills

Advancing Technical Skills

Future Skills Closing Note

The future of Quality and Safety isn't just about adherence; it's about intelligence, foresight, and seamless integration into the fabric of the business. Your leadership in these emerging areas will define our competitive edge and our resilience in an increasingly complex world.

Education Requirements

Experience Requirements

You'll need at least 20 years of progressive experience in Quality, Compliance, and/or Health & Safety roles, with a minimum of 7-10 years in senior leadership positions (Director/VP level) managing large, multi-functional global teams. This must include extensive experience reporting to executive leadership and interacting directly with Boards of Directors and major regulatory bodies. We're looking for someone who has successfully led significant organisational change and managed high-stakes incidents or regulatory challenges on an enterprise scale.

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, regulatory compliance, and building robust management systems is highly transferable. You could move into C-Suite roles in other highly regulated industries (e.g., finance, energy, defence) or even into public sector governance roles, where your ability to manage complex systems and ensure public trust is invaluable.

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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