🌟 Core Message
Dr. Ayers speaks directly to his younger self about the importance of public speaking as a safety professional. His central theme is simple but powerful: Avoiding public speaking limits your impact, your opportunities, and your ability to influence safety culture.
Communicating safety effectively requires clarity, confidence, and presence.
Speaking to groups—large or small—is one of the most effective ways to spread the safety message.
Safety leaders who avoid public speaking miss opportunities to educate, influence, and build trust.
Dr. Ayers reflects on how he dodged public speaking early in his career.
He believes this avoidance cost him meaningful opportunities to grow and help others.
His message to his younger self: don’t hide from discomfort—lean into it.
Public speaking becomes easier with practice.
Even small opportunities—toolbox talks, shift meetings, committee updates—build skill and confidence.
The more you speak, the more effective you become as a safety leader.
When safety professionals speak well, employees listen.
Clear communication reduces confusion, increases buy‑in, and improves hazard awareness.
Speaking up is part of modeling the behavior you want from others.