Episode 75 explains the Context of the Organization requirement in ISO 45001 and how it shapes every other part of the safety management system. Dr. Ayers emphasizes that this section forces organizations to understand who they are, what they do, what risks they face, and what external and internal factors influence their ability to manage safety. It is the foundation on which the entire system is built.
ISO 45001 requires organizations to identify the conditions that affect their ability to achieve safe operations. This includes:
The nature of their work, processes, and hazards
Organizational structure, culture, and workforce characteristics
External factors such as regulations, customers, supply chains, and community expectations
Internal factors such as resources, technology, and leadership priorities
Dr. Ayers stresses that context is not a paperwork exercise—it is a strategic understanding of the environment in which the safety system must function.
A major part of this section is identifying the needs and expectations of workers and other interested parties, such as:
Employees
Contractors
Regulators
Customers
Community members
Corporate leadership
These expectations influence what the safety management system must deliver. For example, a chemical plant’s stakeholders expect robust emergency preparedness, while a logistics company’s stakeholders may prioritize fatigue management and traffic safety.
Context drives the scope of the ISO 45001 system—what is included, what is excluded, and why. Scope must reflect:
All relevant operations and locations
All workers, including contractors
All activities that can affect safety performance
Dr. Ayers notes that organizations often get this wrong by defining scope too narrowly, which weakens the system.
The episode explains that context is not a standalone requirement. It directly shapes:
Hazard identification and risk assessment
Objectives and planning
Operational controls
Competence and communication needs
Performance evaluation priorities
Improvement strategies
If context is misunderstood, the entire system becomes misaligned with real risks.
Dr. Ayers highlights several recurring issues:
Treating context as a one‑time document instead of an ongoing assessment
Failing to consider external pressures such as supply chain changes or regulatory shifts
Not involving workers in identifying internal realities
Defining scope too narrowly to avoid complexity
Ignoring cultural factors that influence safety behavior
These gaps lead to systems that look good on paper but fail in practice.
Leaders must ensure:
Context is reviewed regularly as conditions change
Workers participate in identifying internal and external factors
Scope reflects the full operational reality
The safety system is aligned with organizational risks and stakeholder expectations
Leadership engagement is essential because context determines what the system must manage.