Director/VP (16-20 years)

VP of Global Health, Safety and Environment

This role is all about setting the global vision and strategy for how we keep our people safe and our environment protected. You'll be the ultimate owner of our global health, safety, and environmental performance, reporting directly to the C-suite and, frankly, the Board. It's a high-stakes game, where your decisions genuinely shape the company's reputation, operational continuity, and, most importantly, the well-being of thousands of employees around the world. You're not just managing compliance; you're driving a culture where safety is simply how we do business, not just a checklist.

Job ID
JD-HESA-DIRHESA-006
Department
Compliance Quality Health Safety
NOS Level
Strategic Leadership
OFQUAL Level
Level 8
Experience
Director/VP (16-20 years)

Role Purpose & Context

Role Summary

The VP of Global Health, Safety and Environment is responsible for defining, implementing, and overseeing our entire global HSE strategy, which directly impacts our licence to operate, our brand reputation, and the lives of our people. You'll sit right at the executive table, translating complex regulatory landscapes and operational risks into clear, actionable policies that our global business units can actually follow. When this role is done well, we see a tangible reduction in incidents, a stronger safety culture, and fewer regulatory headaches – frankly, it means people go home safe every day. When it's not, we're looking at serious incidents, hefty fines, reputational damage, and, worst of all, potential fatalities or environmental disasters. The challenge is balancing aggressive business growth with unwavering safety standards, often across diverse cultures and regulatory environments. The reward is knowing you're genuinely protecting lives and the planet, while enabling sustainable business success.

Reporting Structure

Key Stakeholders

Internal:

External:

Organisational Impact

Scope: This role is absolutely critical for our long-term viability and reputation. You'll shape our global operational standards, influence capital investment decisions for safety improvements, and directly impact our ability to attract and retain talent. A strong HSE programme, driven by you, can reduce insurance premiums, avoid costly downtime, and protect our brand from environmental scandals. Frankly, you're a major contributor to our enterprise risk management strategy and overall sustainability agenda.

Performance Metrics

Quantitative Metrics

  1. Metric: Global DART Rate Reduction
  2. Desc: Days Away, Restricted, or Transferred (DART) rate across all global operations. This tells us how severe our injuries are, not just how many.
  3. Target: Achieve a 15% reduction in the global DART rate over a 3-year period.
  4. Freq: Quarterly and Annually
  5. Example: If our current global DART rate is 0.8, we'd aim for 0.68 by the end of year three. This isn't just a number; it means fewer serious injuries for our people.
  6. Metric: Workers' Compensation Premium Reduction
  7. Desc: The direct financial impact of improved safety performance on our insurance costs.
  8. Target: Deliver a 5% reduction in annual workers' compensation insurance premiums, year-on-year, through demonstrated safety improvements.
  9. Freq: Annually (at renewal)
  10. Example: If our annual premiums are currently £5M, a 5% reduction would save us £250K. This shows a direct ROI for safety investments, which frankly, helps with those budget conversations.
  11. Metric: ESG Rating Improvement (HSE Component)
  12. Desc: Our external standing in terms of environmental, social, and governance performance, specifically the HSE aspects.
  13. Target: Improve the company's score in a key ESG rating (e.g., Sustainalytics, MSCI) from 'Average' to 'Industry Leader' range within 2 years.
  14. Freq: Annually (upon rating publication)
  15. Example: Moving from a 'Medium Risk' to 'Low Risk' category in Sustainalytics, or improving our overall MSCI ESG rating by 1-2 points. This matters to investors and our reputation.
  16. Metric: Global EHS Platform Deployment
  17. Desc: The successful rollout and adoption of our enterprise-wide EHS management software across all sites.
  18. Target: Successfully deploy the global EHS software platform across all 50+ sites on time and within 10% of the allocated budget.
  19. Freq: Monthly (project progress), Annually (budget vs. actual)
  20. Example: Completing the rollout to all sites by Q4 2026 with total project costs not exceeding £2.2M on a £2M budget. This is a massive operational lift, requiring significant influence.
  21. Metric: Critical Risk Control Effectiveness
  22. Desc: The percentage of critical safety controls (e.g., lockout-tagout, confined space entry permits) that are verified as effective during audits.
  23. Target: Achieve 95%+ effectiveness rating for all identified critical risk controls across the global business.
  24. Freq: Quarterly (via audit programme)
  25. Example: During Q2 audits, 97% of sites demonstrated that their Permit-to-Work system for hot work was correctly followed and documented. This moves us beyond just policies to actual on-the-ground control.

Qualitative Metrics

  1. Metric: Board and Executive Confidence
  2. Desc: The degree to which the Board and Executive Leadership Team trust your strategic direction and reporting on HSE matters.
  3. Evidence: You'll be proactively consulted on major strategic decisions (e.g., M&A, new market entry) for HSE implications. Your quarterly Board presentations will be seen as transparent, credible, and insightful, leading to constructive dialogue rather than reactive questioning. They'll seek your counsel on complex risk issues and rely on your judgement.
  4. Metric: Proactive Regulatory Engagement
  5. Desc: Our ability to anticipate and influence regulatory changes, and maintain a positive, transparent relationship with key regulatory bodies globally.
  6. Evidence: We'll see fewer unexpected regulatory inspections or enforcement actions. You'll be representing the company in industry forums, helping shape future regulations. When regulators do engage, our responses will be swift, comprehensive, and demonstrate a genuine commitment to compliance, not just ticking boxes. We're seen as a responsible operator, not just a compliant one.
  7. Metric: Global Safety Culture Maturity
  8. Desc: The observable shift towards a truly proactive, 'hearts and minds' safety culture across all regions.
  9. Evidence: Increased near-miss reporting rates (a good sign, actually, as it shows trust), higher participation in Behaviour-Based Safety programmes, and unsolicited positive feedback from frontline employees about safety improvements. You'll hear leaders at all levels talking about safety as an operational imperative, not just an HSE department responsibility. We're moving away from the 'Safety Cop' stigma.
  10. Metric: Strategic Integration of HSE
  11. Desc: How well HSE considerations are embedded into broader business strategy, not just treated as an add-on.
  12. Evidence: HSE will be a standing agenda item in executive business reviews. Capital expenditure requests will routinely include HSE impact assessments. New product development or market entry strategies will integrate HSE from the outset, rather than as an afterthought. You'll be seen as a business enabler, not a blocker.

Primary Traits

Supporting Traits

Primary Motivators

  1. Motivator: Protecting People and Planet
  2. Daily: You'll wake up every day driven by the deep-seated belief that every employee deserves to go home safe and that our operations should not harm the environment. This isn't just a job; it's a moral imperative. You'll find satisfaction in seeing global incident rates decline and our environmental footprint shrink.
  3. Motivator: Strategic Impact and Organisational Transformation
  4. Daily: You're motivated by the opportunity to shape the very fabric of a large, complex organisation. This means setting the long-term vision, influencing executive peers, and driving cultural change that permeates every level of the business. You're building something lasting.
  5. Motivator: Solving Complex, High-Stakes Problems
  6. Daily: You thrive on tackling truly difficult challenges – like integrating HSE into a complex M&A deal, navigating conflicting international regulations, or responding to a major crisis. These aren't easy problems, but the impact of solving them is immense.

Potential Demotivators

Honestly, this role isn't for everyone. You'll often feel like the 'Safety Cop,' constantly fighting the perception that your job is to say 'no' and slow down production, rather than enabling the business to operate safely and sustainably. You'll face relentless budget battles, having to justify every pound for safety improvements against revenue-generating projects, often with an intangible ROI until after an incident occurs. There's the exhausting, never-ending effort to make safety a deeply held value versus a mere checklist. You'll experience post-incident whiplash, where the entire organisation is laser-focused on safety for a few months, only for attention and resources to wane. The immense personal and professional pressure of knowing that a failure in your programmes or systems could lead to a fatality, a life-altering injury, or a major environmental disaster is a constant weight. And yes, you'll spend time translating 500-page government regulations into something a frontline supervisor can actually understand and implement. If you need constant positive feedback, or if you struggle with long-term, incremental change, you'll find this incredibly frustrating.

Common Frustrations

  1. The 'Safety Cop' stigma – constantly battling the perception that HSE is a blocker, not an enabler.
  2. Budget battles – justifying safety investments against revenue-generating projects, often with an ROI only visible after an incident.
  3. Culture vs. Compliance – the relentless effort to shift from 'what we have to do' to 'how we work'.
  4. Post-incident whiplash – intense focus after an event, followed by a gradual decline in attention and resources.
  5. The weight of 'What If' – the constant pressure of knowing your decisions could prevent catastrophic harm.
  6. Translating complex regulations into actionable, understandable procedures for a global workforce.
  7. Dealing with 'pencil-whipping' – people signing off on checks without actually doing them, a cardinal sin.

What Role Doesn't Offer

  1. A quiet, predictable work environment – crises happen, often at inconvenient times.
  2. Immediate, tangible gratification for every initiative – cultural change is slow and hard-won.
  3. A role where you're universally loved – you'll often have to deliver unpopular messages or enforce tough decisions.
  4. A purely technical role – this is heavily about leadership, influence, and business acumen.
  5. A static role – the regulatory landscape and business needs are constantly evolving.

ADHD Positives

  1. The fast-paced, high-stakes nature of incident response and crisis management can be highly engaging and stimulating, tapping into hyperfocus when it matters most.
  2. The need to quickly synthesise complex information and make rapid decisions in an emergency can play to strengths in dynamic problem-solving.
  3. The variety of challenges – from strategic planning to regulatory interpretation to on-site investigations – means less routine and more novelty.

ADHD Challenges and Accommodations

  1. The extensive documentation, detailed policy writing, and meticulous audit trail requirements might be challenging. We can provide templates, AI-assisted drafting tools, and administrative support for these tasks.
  2. Managing a large, geographically dispersed team and complex global projects requires strong organisational skills. We encourage the use of project management software, clear goal setting, and regular check-ins to keep things on track.
  3. The need for long-term strategic planning and consistent follow-through on multi-year programmes might require structured planning tools and accountability partners.

Dyslexia Positives

  1. The strategic, conceptual thinking required to build global HSE frameworks and anticipate future risks can be a strong suit.
  2. Excellent verbal communication skills, especially in presenting to the Board or negotiating with regulators, are highly valued.
  3. The ability to see the 'big picture' and identify systemic patterns in incident data, rather than getting bogged down in individual words, can be a significant advantage.

Dyslexia Challenges and Accommodations

  1. The sheer volume of written policies, reports, and regulatory documents can be daunting. We use text-to-speech software, provide access to proofreading tools, and encourage verbal briefings where appropriate.
  2. Detailed report writing, especially for Board packs or regulatory submissions, needs to be precise. We offer dedicated editorial support and encourage the use of structured outlines and visual aids.
  3. Ensuring clarity in written communications across diverse global teams is crucial. We promote clear, concise language and visual communication tools.

Autism Positives

  1. A strong adherence to rules, logic, and established protocols (like the Hierarchy of Controls or Permit-to-Work systems) is absolutely essential in HSE and can be a significant strength.
  2. The ability to deep-dive into complex regulatory texts and identify precise requirements, or to meticulously analyse incident data for patterns, is highly valued.
  3. A direct and honest communication style, especially when delivering difficult safety messages or holding others accountable, is crucial in this role.

Autism Challenges and Accommodations

  1. The role involves extensive, nuanced social interaction, from influencing executives to engaging with frontline workers and external regulators. We support structured communication frameworks, clear agendas for meetings, and provide coaching on social dynamics.
  2. Unexpected changes, crises, and the need to adapt quickly to new information can be challenging. We aim for clear communication of changes and provide support structures during high-stress periods.
  3. Navigating organisational politics and unspoken social cues can be difficult. We foster a culture of direct feedback and clarity, and provide mentors who can help interpret complex social situations.

Sensory Considerations

This role involves a mix of environments. You'll spend time in a typical office setting, but also in operational sites (factories, warehouses, construction sites) which can be noisy, visually complex, and require personal protective equipment (PPE). There's also significant travel, meaning exposure to various social and environmental stimuli. We offer flexible working arrangements where possible, and ensure comfortable, accessible workspaces. On-site, you'll be equipped with appropriate PPE to manage sensory input.

Flexibility Notes

We understand that a 'one-size-fits-all' approach doesn't work. We're committed to providing reasonable accommodations to ensure all our VPs can thrive. This might include flexible hours, remote work options for strategic planning, or specific software/tools to support your work style. Let's have an open conversation about what you need.

Key Responsibilities

Experience Levels Responsibilities

  1. Level: Director/VP (16-20 years)
  2. Responsibilities: Define and drive the enterprise-wide HSE strategy, vision, and governance framework, ensuring it aligns with our business objectives and future growth plans. This isn't just about compliance; it's about shaping how we operate globally.
  3. Accountable for the overall global HSE performance, including all leading and lagging indicators. You'll own the narrative for the Board and external stakeholders, providing transparent and credible reporting.
  4. Build, lead, and mentor a high-performing global HSE team, including regional Directors and specialist functions. This means attracting top talent, fostering their development, and ensuring consistent application of standards across diverse cultures.
  5. Oversee and approve the global HSE budget (P&L typically £2M-£10M+), making strategic investment decisions for technology, training, and capital projects that enhance safety and environmental performance.
  6. Represent the organisation at Board-level meetings (e.g., Audit & Risk Committee), presenting on HSE performance, strategic initiatives, and enterprise risks. Be prepared for tough questions and to defend your strategy.
  7. Lead the HSE integration strategy for all M&A activities, ensuring that new acquisitions quickly adopt our safety culture and standards, and that environmental liabilities are thoroughly assessed and managed. This is often complex and time-sensitive.
  8. Establish and maintain proactive relationships with key regulatory bodies and industry associations globally, influencing policy where possible and ensuring our organisation is seen as a responsible leader. This involves a lot of diplomacy and foresight.
  9. Develop and embed a 'Stop Work Authority' culture across the entire organisation, empowering every employee to halt unsafe work without fear of reprisal. This is a critical cultural shift you'll champion.
  10. Drive the continuous improvement of our global EHS management systems (e.g., ISO 45001, ISO 14001), ensuring they're robust, effective, and regularly audited. This is the backbone of our operational discipline.
  11. Lead the organisation's response to major incidents or environmental emergencies, acting as the primary executive contact and ensuring effective crisis management, communication, and robust root cause analysis. This is where your decisive leadership really counts.
  12. Supervision: You're fully autonomous on execution, reporting directly to the CEO or COO with monthly strategic alignment meetings. The Board will review your performance quarterly. You're expected to set your own agenda and drive outcomes without close supervision.
  13. Decision: You'll have full strategic authority within your domain, including P&L responsibility for £2M-£10M+ annual budget. This includes approving major capital expenditures for HSE improvements, making hiring and firing decisions for your direct reports, and signing off on significant regulatory submissions. M&A involvement means you'll have a critical voice in deal assessments and integration plans. Board-level decisions will require your presentation and recommendation, but ultimate approval rests with the Board.
  14. Success: Success looks like a demonstrable, sustained reduction in global incident rates (DART, TRIR), a significant improvement in our ESG ratings, and a strong, proactive safety culture that's evident at all levels. You'll have built a highly capable global HSE team, and your executive peers and the Board will trust your judgement implicitly. When a major incident occurs, the response will be swift, effective, and transparent, mitigating impacts and protecting our reputation. Ultimately, you'll have embedded HSE as a core business value, not just a compliance function.

Decision-Making Authority

Save 15-25 hours weekly and elevate your strategic impact with AI

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ID:

Tool: Automated Trend Analysis

Benefit: Imagine AI sifting through thousands of unstructured safety observation cards, near-miss reports, and audit findings from across your global sites. It'll automatically identify recurring themes, high-risk locations, or at-risk behaviours that a human analyst would simply miss. This means you get actionable insights instantly, not weeks later after manual data crunching.

ID:

Tool: Predictive Risk Forecasting

Benefit: An AI model can use historical incident data, production schedules, weather forecasts, and even overtime data to predict and flag specific shifts, crews, or tasks that have a statistically higher risk of an incident. This shifts your focus from reactive analysis to proactive planning, allowing you to intervene before something goes wrong. It's like having a crystal ball for safety.

ID:

Tool: Rapid Regulatory Intelligence

Benefit: AI tools can monitor regulatory bodies (like HSE, EPA, OSHA, and their international equivalents) 24/7. They'll instantly summarise new or updated legislation, highlighting the specific clauses relevant to your company's global operations and suggesting initial impact assessments. This drastically cuts down on the manual legal and regulatory research that usually takes up so much of your team's time.

ID: ✍️

Tool: Instant Incident Briefings

Benefit: Following a significant incident, AI can draft initial executive summaries and board-level communications. It synthesises verified facts from your incident management system into a clear, concise, and appropriately toned briefing document, accelerating critical communication during high-stress events when every minute counts. This ensures consistency and accuracy when the pressure is on.

You could realistically save 15-25 hours per week by strategically implementing AI tools, allowing you to focus on high-impact leadership. Weekly time savings potential
Starting with 2-3 key AI-powered tools could transform your workflow within weeks. Typical tool investment
Explore AI Productivity for VP of Global Health, Safety and Environment →

12-15 specific tools & techniques with implementation guides

Competency Requirements

Foundation Skills (Transferable)

At this level, we're not just looking for technical skills; we need someone who can lead, influence, and think strategically across a complex global organisation. These are the underlying capabilities that make a truly effective VP of Global HSE.

Functional Skills (Role-Specific Technical)

You'll need deep, strategic expertise in the core disciplines of HSE, combined with the ability to architect and oversee the technical tools and systems that support our global programme.

Technical Competencies

Digital Tools

Industry Knowledge

Regulatory Compliance Regulations

Essential Prerequisites

Career Pathway Context

Before stepping into this VP role, you'd typically have spent several years as a Director of HSE for a major business unit or a specific global domain. You'd have already proven your ability to set strategy, manage a substantial team, and influence senior leaders within a significant part of an organisation. This role is about taking that experience and scaling it to a truly global, enterprise-wide level, with direct accountability to the C-suite and Board.

Qualifications & Credentials

Emerging Foundation Skills

Advancing Technical Skills

Future Skills Closing Note

Your journey in this role will be one of continuous learning and adaptation. The HSE landscape is dynamic, and your ability to embrace new technologies and strategic thinking will define our future success. We're not just looking for someone to maintain the status quo; we're looking for a visionary leader who can truly transform our global HSE performance.

Education Requirements

Experience Requirements

You'll need roughly 16-20 years of progressive experience in Health, Safety, and Environment roles, with at least 8-10 years spent in senior leadership positions (Director level or above) overseeing global or multi-regional operations. This must include direct experience managing large teams (25+ people, including managers), significant P&L responsibility (£2M+), and regular interaction with C-suite executives and Board members. We're looking for someone who has genuinely driven cultural change and managed complex regulatory environments across diverse geographies. Experience in M&A integration from an HSE perspective is a definite plus.

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 managing complex global risks, driving cultural change, and ensuring operational resilience is highly transferable. You could move into similar senior leadership roles in other highly regulated industries (e.g., pharmaceuticals, energy, aerospace), or transition into broader risk management, sustainability, or operational leadership positions. The skills you gain here are truly universal for any large, responsible organisation.

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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