Episode 38 explores the common pitfalls and negative attributes that undermine the value of safety audits. Dr. Ayers explains that while audits are essential for continuous improvement, they can easily become counterproductive when poorly designed, poorly executed, or misaligned with organizational culture.
The core message: A bad audit does more harm than no audit.
Before diving into the negatives, the episode reinforces that a good audit should:
Identify system weaknesses
Drive improvement
Reinforce expectations
Build trust
Provide actionable insights
When audits drift from these goals, they become obstacles instead of tools.
Many audits become:
Checklist exercises
Focused on paperwork, not performance
Obsessed with minor infractions
Blind to real operational risk
This leads to a false sense of security — “passing the audit” replaces “being safe.”
Audits can unintentionally:
Punish workers for honesty
Discourage reporting
Create anxiety and resentment
Lead to hiding issues instead of fixing them
A fear‑based audit culture destroys transparency.
Dr. Ayers highlights audits that:
Don’t understand the work
Don’t consider operational realities
Apply generic standards to unique environments
Fail to involve frontline employees
These audits produce irrelevant findings and erode credibility.
Poor audits focus on:
Individual behavior
Minor PPE issues
Housekeeping observations
While ignoring:
Engineering controls
Staffing levels
Training quality
Procedure accuracy
Leadership behaviors
This shifts blame to workers instead of addressing root causes.
One of the most damaging patterns:
Findings are documented
Reports are written
Action items are assigned
And then… nothing happens
Lack of follow‑through teaches employees that audits don’t matter.
Too infrequent:
Issues go unnoticed
Trends are missed
Risk grows silently
Too frequent:
Audit fatigue sets in
Findings become repetitive
Teams stop taking audits seriously
Balance is essential.
Audits lose value when:
Auditors lack training
Auditors have conflicts of interest
Findings are influenced by personalities
Leadership pressures auditors to “look good”
Objectivity is the backbone of a credible audit.
Dr. Ayers emphasizes that poor audits:
Reduce trust
Discourage reporting
Create compliance theater
Undermine continuous improvement
Damage relationships between workers and leadership
Shift focus away from real risk
A bad audit culture is a risk multiplier.
Safety leaders must:
Ensure audits are fair, objective, and risk‑focused
Train auditors thoroughly
Involve frontline employees
Prioritize systemic issues over minor infractions
Follow through on findings
Use audits to learn, not punish
Reinforce that audits are tools for improvement
The episode’s core message: Audits should build trust, reveal risk, and drive improvement — not fear, frustration, or paperwork.