Role Purpose & Context
Role Summary
The Regional Risk Assessment Specialist is responsible for independently carrying out risk assessments and incident investigations across a specific region or group of sites. You'll be the one digging into what could go wrong, figuring out why, and then helping the local teams fix it. This directly impacts our ability to keep our people safe, avoid hefty fines, and keep the business running smoothly.
Day-to-day, you'll work closely with site managers, operations teams, and even our maintenance crews, translating complex regulations into plain English and practical actions. You're the bridge between the 'rules' and the 'real world' on the factory floor or in the office. When you do this well, we see fewer incidents, better operational efficiency, and a genuinely safer workplace. If it's not done well, frankly, people could get hurt, and we could face significant regulatory penalties or even operational shutdowns. The tricky part is often getting everyone on the same page when production targets clash with safety procedures. The reward? Seeing tangible improvements in safety culture and knowing you've made a real difference to people's lives.
Reporting Structure
- Reports to: Senior Regional Risk Assessment Specialist
- Direct reports:
- Matrix relationships:
Compliance Specialist (Health & Safety), EHS Advisor (Site Focus), Safety Coordinator (Risk), Health & Safety Officer (Assessments),
Key Stakeholders
Internal:
- Site Operations Managers (Plant Managers, Warehouse Managers)
- Local Supervisors and Team Leaders
- Maintenance and Engineering Teams
- HR Business Partners (for incident follow-ups and training)
- Procurement (for reviewing new equipment/materials)
External:
- Regulatory bodies (e.g., HSE inspectors during site visits)
- External auditors (for ISO certifications)
- Training providers (for specialist safety courses)
- Suppliers (for safety data sheets or equipment specifications)
Organisational Impact
Scope: Your work directly influences the safety and health of our employees, prevents operational disruptions from incidents, and protects our company's reputation and financial stability from regulatory fines. Get it right, and you save lives and money. Get it wrong, and the consequences can be severe for individuals and the business.
Performance Metrics
Quantitative Metrics
- Metric: Risk Assessment Completion Rate
- Desc: The percentage of scheduled risk assessments for your assigned sites or projects that are completed on time.
- Target: Target: 95% completion rate
- Freq: Measured: Quarterly
- Example: Example: If you have 20 assessments planned for Q1, you'd need to complete 19 of them by the end of March to hit target. Missing one because a site manager was 'too busy' won't cut it – you'll need to chase them.
- Metric: CAPA Closure Rate (Assigned Region)
- Desc: The percentage of Corrective and Preventive Actions (CAPAs) identified in your assessments or investigations that are closed within their agreed-upon due dates for your region.
- Target: Target: 80% of CAPAs closed on time
- Freq: Measured: Monthly
- Example: Example: If 50 CAPAs were due last month, you'd need to see 40 of them officially closed in the system. This means a fair bit of chasing and follow-up with the action owners, which, honestly, can be a bit tedious.
- Metric: Incident Investigation Quality Score
- Desc: A score based on the thoroughness and accuracy of your incident investigations, including proper root cause identification and actionable recommendations, as reviewed by your Senior Specialist.
- Target: Target: Average score of 4 out of 5
- Freq: Measured: Per investigation (random sample reviewed quarterly)
- Example: Example: Your investigation into a near-miss involving a forklift would be reviewed for how well you identified the immediate cause (e.g., driver error), the basic cause (e.g., inadequate training), and the systemic cause (e.g., poor traffic management layout), not just blaming the driver.
- Metric: EHS Platform Data Accuracy
- Desc: The error rate in incident, audit, and risk assessment data you enter or verify within our EHS management platform (e.g., Intelex, Cority).
- Target: Target: <5% error rate
- Freq: Measured: Quarterly audit of data entries
- Example: Example: If you're inputting 100 incident reports, you'd need to have fewer than 5 errors in categorisation, dates, or injury types. It's about getting the details right, because bad data means bad decisions.
Qualitative Metrics
- Metric: Proactive Risk Identification
- Desc: Your ability to spot potential risks before they lead to an incident, often through observations during site visits or by analysing trends in near-miss data.
- Evidence: Evidence: You regularly bring up new, previously unrecognised hazards in team meetings. Site managers start asking you to 'take a look' at new processes before they go live. Your risk assessments aren't just ticking boxes; they're uncovering genuine issues.
- Metric: Effective Site Engagement
- Desc: How well you build relationships with site teams, ensuring they see you as a supportive partner rather than just 'the safety police'.
- Evidence: Evidence: Site teams readily share information with you. You're invited to operational planning meetings. Feedback from site managers indicates you're approachable and provide practical advice, not just theoretical demands.
- Metric: Quality of Advice & Recommendations
- Desc: The clarity, practicality, and effectiveness of the recommendations you provide following assessments or investigations.
- Evidence: Evidence: Your recommendations are clear, specific, and easy for site teams to implement. They directly address the root causes you've identified and lead to measurable improvements in safety. Your Senior Specialist rarely has to re-write your suggested actions.
- Metric: Ownership of Follow-Up
- Desc: Your commitment to seeing identified risks and CAPAs through to proper closure, even when it requires persistence.
- Evidence: Evidence: You don't just 'file and forget'. You regularly check in on overdue CAPAs, offer support to action owners, and escalate issues appropriately when you hit roadblocks. You're known for making sure things actually get done, not just discussed.
Primary Traits
- Trait: Skeptical Investigator
- Manifestation: You're the person who asks 'why' at least five times, even when the first answer seems perfectly reasonable. You won't just take someone's word for it; you'll go and see for yourself. If the procedure says 'wear gloves,' you'll check if the right gloves are actually available and being used. You read the small print on the incident report, looking for inconsistencies or missing details that others might gloss over.
- Benefit: In our line of work, surface-level answers often hide deeper problems. This trait is crucial for getting to the real root cause of an issue, not just the easiest one. It's the difference between saying 'worker wasn't paying attention' and uncovering that the machine design was inherently flawed, or the training was inadequate. Getting this wrong means incidents will just keep happening.
- Trait: Pragmatic Influencer
- Manifestation: You understand that telling a busy Plant Manager they 'must' do something often falls on deaf ears. Instead, you'll frame safety recommendations in terms of what matters to them—like how a new guard could actually reduce machine downtime from injuries by, say, 15%. You build rapport with the frontline supervisors before an audit, not just show up with a clipboard. You know when to formally escalate an issue and when a quiet chat over a cuppa will actually get things moving faster.
- Benefit: Honestly, you don't have direct authority over operations. Your success here depends entirely on your ability to persuade and influence. You need to turn a 'grudge purchase' (like a new safety feature) into a shared objective, making people *want* to be safer, not just feel forced to. Without this, your recommendations will just gather dust.
- Trait: Systematic Thinker
- Manifestation: You can mentally map out a process, like how a 'Permit to Work' goes from initial request to final sign-off, and you can spot every potential failure point along the way. You see the connections between, say, a change in our purchasing policy for cleaning supplies and a new chemical exposure risk in the warehouse. You don't just look at individual risks; you see how they fit into the bigger picture.
- Benefit: Risk is rarely a single, isolated problem. It's usually a chain of events or a combination of factors. This trait allows you to conduct a proper BowTie analysis, for instance, that's comprehensive and credible. It helps you understand how different controls, people, and processes interact, so your solutions actually address the whole system, not just a symptom.
Supporting Traits
- Trait: Resilient
- Desc: You'll need to bounce back when a well-researched recommendation is rejected due to budget constraints or operational pressures. It happens, and you can't let it derail your overall mission.
- Trait: Patient
- Desc: Changing safety culture and embedding new processes is a marathon, not a sprint. You understand that some changes take time and consistent effort, not just a single intervention.
- Trait: Diplomatic
- Desc: You can deliver critical feedback to a senior manager or a frontline team without making them defensive or feeling attacked. It's about getting to a solution, not assigning blame.
- Trait: Self-Directed
- Desc: You'll manage your own schedule of site visits, audits, incident investigations, and reporting deadlines. You're trusted to get on with it with minimal oversight from your manager.
Primary Motivators
- Motivator: Making a Tangible Difference
- Daily: You get a real buzz from seeing a new safety guard installed, a procedure improved, or an unsafe behaviour corrected, knowing it directly reduces the risk of someone getting hurt. It's about the real-world impact.
- Motivator: Solving Complex Puzzles
- Daily: Incident investigations are like detective work for you. You enjoy piecing together fragmented information, interviewing witnesses, and using tools like Fishbone diagrams to uncover the true 'why' behind an event.
- Motivator: Being a Trusted Advisor
- Daily: You like being the person that site teams come to for advice on safety matters, knowing you can provide practical, sensible solutions that help them do their job safely and efficiently.
Potential Demotivators
Honestly, this role isn't for everyone. You'll spend a fair bit of time chasing overdue Corrective and Preventive Actions (CAPAs) from busy operational managers, which can feel like herding cats. You'll often face the perception that you're a barrier to productivity, especially when deadlines are tight and safety procedures are seen as 'getting in the way'. You might conduct a thorough investigation, identify systemic issues, only to have the 'blame the worker' narrative persist. Sometimes, you'll build a really solid case for a safety improvement, only to see it rejected for budgetary reasons. If you need every single one of your recommendations to be implemented immediately, or if you struggle with persistent follow-up, you'll probably find this role quite frustrating.
Common Frustrations
- Chasing overdue CAPAs: Spending 30% of your week sending 'gentle reminder' emails to operational managers about corrective actions that are 90 days past due.
- The 'Production vs. Safety' battle: Constantly fighting the perception that you are a barrier to productivity; knowing that when deadlines are tight, safety procedures are often the first thing to be 'streamlined'.
- The 'Safety Cop' label: The feeling of being an internal affairs officer instead of a trusted business partner, where people only change their behaviour when they see you coming with your clipboard.
- Data Graveyard: Knowing the EHS platform contains a wealth of data that could predict the next major incident, but not having the time or resources to properly analyse it beyond basic monthly reporting.
- Operational resistance: When you've identified a clear risk, but the site team pushes back on implementing the control because it's 'always been done this way' or 'it's too much hassle'.
What Role Doesn't Offer
- Direct managerial authority over operational teams or budgets. You're an influencer, not a director.
- A purely desk-based role; you'll be out on site a lot, often in less-than-glamorous environments.
- Instant gratification for all your efforts; cultural change and risk reduction take time and patience.
- A role where all your recommendations are immediately accepted and funded without question.
- A role focused solely on reactive incident response; a significant part is about proactive prevention.
ADHD Positives
- The varied nature of site visits, investigations, and different projects can be really engaging, preventing boredom. You'll often switch between tasks, which can suit a dynamic, curious mind.
- The 'detective work' involved in root cause analysis can be highly stimulating, tapping into a strong drive for problem-solving and pattern recognition.
- The urgency of incident response or addressing an immediate hazard can provide a strong focus and drive to action.
ADHD Challenges and Accommodations
- Keeping track of multiple open CAPAs and follow-ups can be challenging. We can help with robust task management tools and structured weekly check-ins.
- Detailed report writing can sometimes feel tedious. Using AI tools for initial drafts or having a clear template can help streamline this process.
- The need for meticulous documentation and data entry, while crucial, might require focused blocks of time and strategies to minimise distractions.
Dyslexia Positives
- Strong visual-spatial reasoning, which is brilliant for understanding site layouts, process flows, and identifying physical hazards that others might miss.
- Often excellent at 'big picture' thinking, seeing how different parts of a system connect, which is vital for systematic risk assessment (e.g., BowTie analysis).
- Great at verbal communication and explaining complex concepts simply, which is key for influencing site teams and training.
Dyslexia Challenges and Accommodations
- Reading dense regulatory documents or writing lengthy reports can be demanding. We use text-to-speech software, provide clear templates, and encourage verbal briefings alongside written reports.
- Proofreading your own work can be tough. We encourage using grammar and spell-checkers, and peer review for critical documents.
- Organising large amounts of written information. Visual tools like mind maps, flowcharts, and EHS platforms with clear categorisation can be very helpful.
Autism Positives
- Exceptional attention to detail, which is paramount for spotting subtle hazards, inconsistencies in procedures, or critical data errors.
- A strong adherence to rules and procedures, which is a huge asset in a compliance-focused role. You'll naturally ensure processes are followed correctly.
- The ability to focus deeply on complex problems during investigations, leading to thorough and accurate root cause analysis.
- A preference for clear, direct communication, which is often appreciated in operational environments where ambiguity can cause problems.
Autism Challenges and Accommodations
- The social dynamics of influencing various site teams can sometimes be tricky. We provide clear frameworks for stakeholder engagement and support in navigating interpersonal challenges.
- Unexpected changes to plans or urgent, unplanned site visits might be unsettling. We try to provide as much advance notice as possible and offer strategies for managing unexpected shifts.
- Sensory input on site (noise, smells, busy environments) can be overwhelming. We can discuss noise-cancelling headphones, scheduling site visits during quieter times, or finding less stimulating routes.
Sensory Considerations
Our sites can be noisy, busy environments with varying temperatures, smells (e.g., chemicals, machinery), and visual stimuli. You'll be expected to wear appropriate PPE, including hearing protection and safety glasses. Office work is typically in a standard open-plan setting, which can have ambient noise. We're happy to discuss specific needs.
Flexibility Notes
We believe in creating an inclusive environment. If you have specific needs related to neurodiversity, please chat with us. We're keen to understand how we can support you to do your best work, whether that's through specific software, flexible scheduling for focused work, or adjustments to the work environment.
Key Responsibilities
Experience Levels Responsibilities
- Level: Regional Risk Assessment Specialist (L2)
- Responsibilities: Independently carry out routine risk assessments for assigned sites or projects, following our established methodologies and templates. This means you'll be on the factory floor, talking to operators, and really seeing what's happening.
- Take ownership of incident investigations for minor and moderate incidents within your region, making sure we get to the actual root cause, not just the easy answer. You'll use tools like the 5 Whys or basic Fishbone diagrams.
- Track and follow up on Corrective and Preventive Actions (CAPAs) for your sites, making sure they're completed on time. Honestly, this involves a lot of polite but persistent chasing of action owners.
- Conduct internal audits against standards like ISO 45001 or ISO 14001 for specific departments or processes, identifying non-conformances and opportunities for improvement. You'll be using our digital audit tools for this.
- Help site teams understand and apply regulatory requirements (e.g., specific HSE guidance) to their day-to-day operations. You'll need to translate the 'legalese' into practical advice.
- Input and maintain accurate incident, audit, and risk assessment data in our EHS management platform (e.g., Intelex, Cority). Getting this right is crucial for our reporting and trend analysis.
- Deliver basic safety training or toolbox talks to site personnel on specific hazards or procedures, making sure everyone understands the risks and controls.
- Supervision: You'll typically have weekly check-ins with your Senior Specialist to discuss progress, any roadblocks you're hitting, and to get advice on more complex or unusual situations. For routine tasks, you'll work pretty independently, but for anything new or tricky, you're expected to ask for guidance.
- Decision: You'll make routine decisions within established guidelines, such as choosing the appropriate risk assessment template for a specific task or deciding on the best method for a basic incident investigation. Any significant changes to procedures, budget requests, or anything that might impact other departments will need to be escalated to your Senior Specialist for approval. You won't have any budget authority yourself.
- Success: Success here means reliably delivering your scheduled risk assessments on time and to a high standard, ensuring CAPAs are closed out efficiently, and that your incident investigations are thorough and identify real root causes. It also means building good working relationships with the site teams so they see you as a valuable partner.
Decision-Making Authority
- Type: Risk Assessment Methodology Selection
- Entry: Follows pre-defined methodology and template as assigned by supervisor.
- Mid: Chooses appropriate methodology (e.g., FMEA vs. basic risk matrix) for routine site-level assessments. Consults Senior Specialist for complex or novel risks.
- Senior: Designs and adapts risk assessment methodologies for specific workstreams or new processes. Approves methodology for junior team members.
- Type: Incident Investigation Scope
- Entry: Investigates incidents as directed, focusing on immediate causes. All findings reviewed by supervisor.
- Mid: Independently investigates minor to moderate incidents, identifies basic root causes, and proposes initial CAPAs. Escalates major incidents immediately.
- Senior: Leads investigations for significant incidents, including complex root cause analysis (e.g., Fault Tree). Determines scope of investigation and approves final report.
- Type: Corrective Action Approval
- Entry: Proposes corrective actions for supervisor review.
- Mid: Proposes and agrees on corrective actions with site management for identified non-conformances within established guidelines. Escalates if agreement can't be reached.
- Senior: Approves corrective actions for complex non-conformances or systemic issues. Challenges and refines proposed actions from junior team members.
- Type: Regulatory Interpretation
- Entry: Looks up specific regulations as directed. Seeks clarification from supervisor.
- Mid: Interprets and applies standard regulatory requirements to specific site operations. Consults Senior Specialist on ambiguous or complex interpretations.
- Senior: Provides authoritative interpretation of complex regulations and their application across multiple sites or new business areas. Develops internal guidance documents.
ID:
Tool: Automated Incident Triage
Benefit: Stop sifting through every incident report manually. An AI model can read incoming, unstructured text from near-miss and incident reports, automatically categorising the event type, identifying potential severity based on keywords, and flagging reports that genuinely need your immediate, senior-level review. This means you focus your attention where it's truly needed.
ID:
Tool: Predictive Risk Hotspotting
Benefit: Wouldn't it be great to know *where* an incident is most likely to happen next? AI can analyse historical incident data, audit findings, maintenance logs, and even weather patterns to predict which sites, equipment, or shifts are at the highest risk in the upcoming week. This lets you proactively allocate your time and safety resources, preventing problems before they start.
ID:
Tool: Regulatory Change Summariser
Benefit: Forget reading dense, 200-page updates to HSE regulations. An AI tool can provide a concise summary of the key changes, identify which company policies are likely impacted, and even draft an initial impact assessment report for your review. This saves you hours of reading and helps you stay on top of compliance without the headache.
ID: ✍️
Tool: First-Draft CAPA Generator
Benefit: After you've done the hard work of root cause analysis, an AI assistant can suggest a set of common, effective Corrective and Preventive Actions (CAPAs). It can even draft the initial CAPA entry in our EHS system, assigning a suggested owner and due date based on similar past events. You review, refine, and approve – saving you valuable administrative time.
Expect to save 10-15 hours weekly on routine tasks, freeing you up for more impactful work.
Weekly time savings potential
You'll typically use 2-3 core AI-powered tools, with an investment of around £30-£80/month in subscriptions, though many are integrated into our existing platforms.
Typical tool investment
Competency Requirements
Foundation Skills (Transferable)
These are the core abilities that underpin everything you'll do. Think of them as the essential building blocks for being effective in this role – they're not just 'nice-to-haves', they're critical for your day-to-day success.
- Category: Communication & Influence
- Skills: Clear Verbal Communication: Explaining complex safety concepts to non-technical audiences (e.g., a factory worker or a site manager) in a way they understand and can act on. This means ditching the jargon.
- Active Listening: Genuinely hearing concerns and information from site teams, even when it's not what you expect, to uncover the real story behind an incident or risk.
- Persuasion & Negotiation: Convincing site managers to prioritise safety actions, even when they're under pressure, by framing recommendations in terms of their operational benefits.
- Concise Written Communication: Drafting clear, actionable incident reports, risk assessment summaries, and emails that get straight to the point without waffle.
- Category: Problem-Solving & Analysis
- Skills: Root Cause Analysis: Going beyond the obvious to identify the underlying reasons why something went wrong, using techniques like the '5 Whys' or basic Fishbone diagrams.
- Critical Thinking: Evaluating information from various sources (witness statements, data, observations) to form a sound judgment about risks and incident causes.
- Data Interpretation: Making sense of basic safety data (e.g., incident trends, audit findings) to identify patterns and areas needing attention.
- Structured Problem Solving: Breaking down complex safety issues into manageable parts and applying a logical approach to find solutions.
- Category: Adaptability & Resilience
- Skills: Managing Changing Priorities: Dealing with urgent incident responses that can derail your planned schedule, and quickly re-prioritising your work.
- Bouncing Back from Setbacks: Not getting discouraged when a safety recommendation is initially rejected or when a CAPA owner is slow to respond.
- Learning Agility: Quickly picking up new regulatory requirements, understanding new operational processes, or learning to use new EHS software.
- Working Autonomously: Managing your own workload, scheduling site visits, and meeting deadlines with minimal day-to-day supervision.
- Category: Collaboration & Teamwork
- Skills: Cross-Functional Collaboration: Working effectively with diverse teams across different departments (Operations, HR, Maintenance) to achieve shared safety goals.
- Building Rapport: Establishing positive working relationships with site personnel, from frontline workers to senior managers, to foster trust and open communication.
- Conflict Resolution (Basic): Handling minor disagreements or resistance from site teams regarding safety procedures in a constructive way.
- Information Sharing: Proactively sharing relevant safety insights and best practices with colleagues and site teams to improve overall performance.
Functional Skills (Role-Specific Technical)
These are the specific technical and domain-specific skills you'll need to actually do the job. This isn't just theory; it's about practical application of tools and knowledge.
Technical Competencies
- Skill: Risk Assessment Frameworks
- Desc: Practical application of standard risk assessment methodologies like basic FMEA (Failure Mode and Effects Analysis) and general qualitative risk matrices. You'll know which tool to use for assessing a new piece of equipment versus a new process.
- Level: Intermediate
- Skill: Root Cause Analysis (RCA)
- Desc: Mastery of techniques beyond just the '5 Whys', including Fishbone (Ishikawa) diagrams and basic Fault Tree Analysis, to differentiate between immediate, basic, and systemic causes of incidents. You'll use these to get to the real 'why'.
- Level: Intermediate
- Skill: Regulatory Interpretation & Application
- Desc: Ability to move beyond just reading regulations (e.g., specific sections of HSE guidance, COSHH, PUWER) to interpreting their intent and translating them into practical, auditable operational controls for our sites.
- Level: Intermediate
- Skill: Management Systems Auditing
- Desc: Planning, executing, and reporting on internal audits against specific elements of standards like ISO 45001 (Health & Safety) or ISO 14001 (Environmental), based on ISO 19011 guidelines. This means you can spot a non-conformance.
- Level: Intermediate
- Skill: Human Factors Analysis (HFA) - Basic
- Desc: A foundational understanding of how human error (slips, lapses, mistakes) contributes to incidents and how to design systems/processes that are more resilient to it. You'll use the 'Swiss Cheese Model' as a conceptual guide.
- Level: Basic
- Skill: Leading & Lagging Indicator Development - Reporting
- Desc: Understanding the difference between predictive metrics (leading, e.g., % of safety observations closed on time) and historical failure data (lagging, e.g., Lost Time Injury Rate), and being able to report on both effectively.
- Level: Intermediate
Digital Tools
- Tool: EHS/GRC Platform (e.g., Intelex, Cority, Enablon)
- Level: Intermediate
- Usage: Entering incident data, running pre-built reports, tracking Corrective and Preventive Actions (CAPAs), managing user permissions for your specific site or region, and documenting risk assessments.
- Tool: Microsoft Power BI / Tableau
- Level: Intermediate
- Usage: Connecting to standard EHS platform data sources, building basic dashboards from templates, and using filters and slicers to answer specific questions about incident trends or CAPA status.
- Tool: iAuditor (by SafetyCulture) / GoCanvas
- Level: Advanced
- Usage: Completing digital checklists on a tablet during site walks, attaching photos and comments, and designing and building more complex, logic-based inspection templates for specific hazards.
- Tool: Microsoft SharePoint / Confluence
- Level: Intermediate
- Usage: Uploading approved procedures, managing version control for your region's safety documents, and maintaining risk registers and action logs in a structured way.
- Tool: Regulatory Intelligence Platform (e.g., Compliance.ai, Wolters Kluwer)
- Level: Basic
- Usage: Using the platform to look up specific regulations relevant to your sites, receiving and triaging automated alerts for new legislation in your region, and understanding their basic implications.
- Tool: Microsoft Excel (Power Query, VBA)
- Level: Advanced
- Usage: Using VLOOKUP/XLOOKUP, PivotTables, and complex formulas to clean and analyse data exports from various systems. You should be able to build a basic risk matrix and use Power Query to automate some data cleaning.
Industry Knowledge
- Area: Health & Safety Legislation (UK specific)
- Desc: A solid working knowledge of key UK health and safety legislation, including the Health and Safety at Work etc. Act 1974, COSHH, PUWER, LOLER, and RIDDOR, and how they apply in various operational settings.
- Area: Environmental Regulations (UK specific)
- Desc: An understanding of basic UK environmental regulations relevant to our operations, such as waste management, pollution prevention, and environmental permitting requirements.
- Area: Quality Management Principles
- Desc: Familiarity with the core principles of quality management (e.g., ISO 9001), particularly how process control, documentation, and continuous improvement contribute to overall safety and compliance.
- Area: Operational Processes & Hazards
- Desc: A good understanding of typical operational processes (e.g., manufacturing, logistics, warehousing) and the common hazards associated with them, allowing you to quickly identify risks on site.
Regulatory Compliance Regulations
- Reg: Health and Safety at Work etc. Act 1974
- Usage: Understanding the general duties of employers and employees, and how to apply these principles to ensure a safe working environment and manage risks 'so far as is reasonably practicable' (ALARP).
- Reg: Control of Substances Hazardous to Health (COSHH) Regulations
- Usage: Conducting COSHH assessments, understanding Safety Data Sheets (SDS), and advising on appropriate control measures for hazardous substances used on site.
- Reg: Provision and Use of Work Equipment Regulations (PUWER)
- Usage: Assessing the safe use of work equipment, ensuring proper maintenance, inspections, and suitable guarding are in place, and advising on compliance.
- Reg: Reporting of Injuries, Diseases and Dangerous Occurrences Regulations (RIDDOR)
- Usage: Knowing what types of incidents are reportable, how to accurately gather the necessary information, and ensuring timely submission to the HSE.
- Reg: Environmental Permitting Regulations (EPR)
- Usage: Recognising when an activity might require an environmental permit and understanding the basic requirements for compliance, knowing when to escalate to a Senior Specialist.
Essential Prerequisites
- At least 2-3 years of hands-on experience in a dedicated Health & Safety, EHS, or Risk Assessment role, ideally within an operational or industrial setting.
- Demonstrable experience conducting risk assessments and incident investigations independently, including identifying root causes and recommending practical controls.
- A solid understanding of UK health and safety legislation and how to apply it in a real-world context.
- Experience using an EHS management system (e.g., Intelex, Cority) for data entry, reporting, and CAPA management.
- The ability to communicate effectively, both verbally and in writing, with people at all levels of an organisation, from frontline staff to site management.
- A valid UK driving licence and willingness to travel regularly to various sites within your assigned region (this is non-negotiable).
Career Pathway Context
These prerequisites mean you're not starting from scratch. You'll have already dipped your toes into the world of risk assessment and compliance. This role builds on that foundation, giving you more autonomy and responsibility for specific sites and projects. If you've been a Site Safety Officer or an EHS Coordinator for a couple of years, this could be a natural next step for you.
Qualifications & Credentials
Emerging Foundation Skills
- Skill: Data Storytelling for Safety
- Why: We're drowning in data, but what's missing is the ability to turn that data into compelling narratives that actually drive action. Just showing numbers isn't enough; you'll need to tell a story about *why* these numbers matter and *what* we should do about them.
- Concepts: [{'concept_name': 'Narrative Structure', 'description': 'How to build a compelling story: beginning (the problem), middle (your analysis), and end (the solution and impact).'}, {'concept_name': 'Visualisation Best Practices', 'description': 'Using Power BI or Tableau to create charts and graphs that highlight key insights, not just display data.'}, {'concept_name': 'Audience Adaptation', 'description': 'Tailoring your message and visuals for different audiences – a frontline team needs different information than a site manager.'}, {'concept_name': 'Call to Action', 'description': 'Ensuring every data story leads to a clear, actionable recommendation.'}]
- Prepare: This month: Pick one incident report you've written and try to re-frame it as a story, focusing on the 'who, what, why, and what next' for a site manager.
- Next quarter: Take an online course on data visualisation or storytelling (e.g., from LinkedIn Learning or Coursera).
- Month 3-6: Present a safety trend or incident analysis to a site team, focusing on the narrative rather than just raw data. Get feedback on how well it landed.
- Ongoing: Look for opportunities to simplify complex data into clear, impactful messages in your regular communications.
- QuickWin: When you write your next incident summary, start with the 'so what?' – what's the most important takeaway for the reader? That's the start of a good story.
- Skill: Digital Tool Optimisation & Automation
- Why: We're always looking for ways to make our processes slicker and less manual. You won't just be *using* our EHS platforms and digital audit tools; you'll be expected to spot opportunities to make them work harder for us, perhaps by automating repetitive tasks or improving data flow.
- Concepts: [{'concept_name': 'Workflow Analysis', 'description': 'Mapping out current processes to identify bottlenecks and manual steps that could be automated.'}, {'concept_name': 'Low-Code/No-Code Platforms', 'description': 'Understanding how tools like Microsoft Power Automate or even advanced features within Intelex/Cority can automate simple tasks (e.g., sending reminders).'}, {'concept_name': 'Data Integration Basics', 'description': 'Understanding how data moves between different systems and identifying opportunities to reduce manual data entry.'}, {'concept_name': 'User Feedback Loops', 'description': 'Gathering feedback from site teams on how our digital tools could be improved and translating that into actionable suggestions.'}]
- Prepare: This week: Identify one repetitive task you do weekly (e.g., sending CAPA reminders) and research if our EHS platform or Microsoft Power Automate could automate it.
- This month: Experiment with building a simple automated reminder or data validation rule within one of our existing platforms.
- Next quarter: Propose one specific improvement to a digital workflow to your Senior Specialist, outlining the time savings or accuracy benefits.
- Ongoing: Stay curious about new features in our existing software and how they could be used to make your work, or the work of site teams, easier.
- QuickWin: Explore the 'rules' or 'workflow' sections of Intelex/Cority – you might find pre-built automation options you can switch on today for things like overdue CAPA notifications.
Advancing Technical Skills
- Skill: Advanced EHS Platform Configuration
- Why: As our EHS platforms evolve, you'll need to move beyond just data entry and basic reporting. You'll be expected to understand how to configure workflows, build custom dashboards, and even suggest new modules to better capture and manage risk data.
- Concepts: [{'concept_name': 'Workflow Design', 'description': 'Mapping out and configuring approval processes for permits, MOCs, or CAPAs within the EHS system.'}, {'concept_name': 'Custom Report Building', 'description': "Creating bespoke reports and dashboards using the EHS platform's internal reporting tools, beyond the standard templates."}, {'concept_name': 'User Access Management', 'description': 'Understanding how to manage user roles and permissions effectively to ensure data security and integrity.'}, {'concept_name': 'Integration Points', 'description': 'Basic understanding of how the EHS platform can exchange data with other systems (e.g., HR, maintenance).'}]
- Prepare: This month: Spend an hour each week exploring the 'admin' or 'configuration' sections of our EHS platform. What options are there?
- Next quarter: Volunteer to help your Senior Specialist with a small configuration change or a new report build.
- Month 3-6: Take any vendor-provided online training for advanced user or administrator functions of our EHS platform.
- Ongoing: Document any 'pain points' in our current EHS system use and brainstorm how configuration changes could fix them.
- QuickWin: Look at the dashboards your Senior Specialist uses. Can you figure out how they were built? Try to replicate a simple one yourself in a test environment.
- Skill: Predictive Analytics for Risk (Basic)
- Why: We're moving from purely reactive safety to proactive prevention. This means using data to predict where and when incidents are most likely to occur, allowing us to intervene *before* something happens. You'll need to understand the basics of how this works.
- Concepts: [{'concept_name': 'Correlation vs. Causation', 'description': 'Understanding the difference between two things happening together and one causing the other.'}, {'concept_name': 'Leading vs. Lagging Indicators (Advanced)', 'description': 'Moving beyond just reporting to actively designing and using leading indicators that predict future performance.'}, {'concept_name': 'Basic Statistical Concepts', 'description': 'Understanding concepts like probability, variance, and regression to interpret predictive models (not build them, yet!).'}, {'concept_name': 'Data Sources for Prediction', 'description': 'Identifying what data points (e.g., maintenance logs, training records, weather) could be useful for predicting risk.'}]
- Prepare: This month: Read up on 'leading indicators in safety' – there are plenty of free resources online.
- Next quarter: Work with your Senior Specialist to identify one new leading indicator we could start tracking for your sites.
- Month 3-6: Take an introductory course on statistics or data science concepts (focus on interpretation, not coding) from a platform like Khan Academy or Coursera.
- Ongoing: Challenge yourself to think 'what could this data tell me about the *future*?' rather than just 'what happened?'
- QuickWin: Start looking at your existing incident data not just for what happened, but for patterns in *when* or *where* things happen. Are there specific shifts, days, or locations that stand out?
Future Skills Closing Note
These aren't skills you need to master overnight, but they represent the direction our function is heading. By proactively developing these areas, you'll not only future-proof your career but also significantly increase your impact on the organisation's safety and compliance performance. We'll support you with training and opportunities to apply these new skills.
Education Requirements
- Level: Minimum
- Req: A relevant vocational qualification (e.g., NEBOSH General Certificate, IOSH Managing Safely) or an equivalent Level 5-6 OFQUAL qualification in a related field such as Health & Safety, Environmental Science, Engineering, or Occupational Health.
- Alts: We're pragmatic. If you don't have a formal degree but have 4+ years of demonstrable, hands-on experience in a dedicated EHS role with a strong track record of independent risk assessment and incident investigation, we'd still love to hear from you. Show us what you've done!
- Level: Preferred
- Req: A Bachelor's degree (or equivalent) in Occupational Health & Safety, Environmental Management, Engineering, or a closely related scientific discipline.
- Alts: While a degree is great, practical experience and relevant certifications often count for more in our field. Don't let a lack of a degree put you off if you have the real-world skills.
Experience Requirements
You'll need roughly 2-5 years of dedicated, hands-on experience in a Health & Safety, EHS, or Risk Assessment role. This isn't just about being 'around' safety; it means you've been actively involved in conducting risk assessments, investigating incidents, and driving corrective actions. Experience in an operational, manufacturing, or industrial environment is a big plus, as you'll be spending a lot of time on site.
Preferred Certifications
- Cert: NEBOSH General Certificate in Occupational Health and Safety
- Prod: NEBOSH
- Usage: This certification demonstrates a solid understanding of general health and safety principles, risk management, and legal requirements, which are core to the role.
- Cert: IOSH Managing Safely
- Prod: IOSH
- Usage: Shows a practical understanding of how to manage safety in the workplace, including risk assessment, investigation, and performance measurement.
- Cert: Internal Auditor (e.g., ISO 45001)
- Prod: Various accredited bodies
- Usage: This will give you the skills to conduct effective internal audits, which is a key responsibility, and helps us maintain our management system certifications.
Recommended Activities
- Regularly attending industry webinars and seminars (e.g., from IOSH, RoSPA, HSE) to stay updated on best practices and regulatory changes.
- Joining professional bodies like IOSH or IIRSM and actively participating in local branch meetings or special interest groups to network and learn from peers.
- Seeking out opportunities to shadow more experienced Senior Specialists on complex risk assessments (e.g., HAZOPs) or major incident investigations.
- Taking advantage of internal training programmes on our EHS software, data analysis tools (like Power BI), or communication skills.
- Volunteering to lead a safety initiative or project at one of your sites to gain more practical experience and demonstrate leadership.
Career Progression Pathways
Entry Paths to This Role
- Path: Associate Risk Analyst (CQHS) / L1
- Time: 1-2 years
- Path: Site Safety Officer / EHS Coordinator
- Time: 2-4 years
- Path: Junior Environmental / Quality Specialist
- Time: 2-3 years
Career Progression From This Role
- Pathway: Senior Regional Risk Assessment Specialist (CQHS) / L3
- Time: 3-5 years
Long Term Vision Potential Roles
- Title: Lead Risk Strategist (CQHS) / L4
- Time: 5-8 years from current role
- Title: Regional Risk & Compliance Manager (CQHS) / L5
- Time: 8-12 years from current role
- Title: Principal Risk & Process Safety Specialist (IC Path) / L5
- Time: 8-12 years from current role
Sector Mobility
The skills you'll gain here—risk assessment, regulatory compliance, incident investigation, and influencing operational teams—are highly transferable across many industries. You could move into manufacturing, logistics, energy, construction, or even financial services (with some re-skilling in specific regulations). Good risk management is needed everywhere.
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.