🎙️ The Safety Edge Podcast

When Everyone Agrees Too Quickly

17 min · 4. apr. 2026
episode When Everyone Agrees Too Quickly cover

Description

Do you often speak first in meetings? Have you considered how your influence might be quietly shaping agreement…., and potentially masking risk? In Episode 13 of my podcast, "When Everyone Agrees Too Quickly," I explore how authority bias, groupthink, and social proof can lead teams to agree with a supervisor during high-risk activities, without questioning the plan. The Problem: * Authority Bias: Assuming the leader is always right. * Groupthink: No one wants to be the one to disagree. * Social Proof: If everyone agrees, it must be correct, right? The Solution: * Encourage open dialogue and constructive dissent. * Create a culture where questioning is welcomed. * Recognize and address cognitive biases like authority bias, groupthink and social proof.. The Takeaway: True alignment isn’t about agreeing quickly…, it’s about ensuring every voice is heard and every risk is considered. 🎙️ Listen to Episode 13 to learn how to balance alignment with critical thinking on Spotify, Apple, YouTube, Riverside.  ♻️ Repost this to help your network rethink the way they approach team alignment. Have you experienced groupthink or authority bias in your team? Share your thoughts below!

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23 episodes

episode When Drift Becomes the New Normal artwork

When Drift Becomes the New Normal

Overview In this episode, we explore how organizations gradually drift away from their own standards, not officially, but operationally. We examine why successful outcomes can sometimes hide emerging risks and what effective leaders do to recognize drift before incidents expose it. Keywords organizational drift, safety culture, leadership, risk management, operational standards  Key  Topics * Organizational drift and its signs * The role of leadership in safety culture * How temporary fixes become permanent * The importance of questioning routine practices * Small signals of system weakening * The psychology of normalization of deviance Key Takeaways * Organizational drift occurs gradually through repeated compromises. * Success can mask underlying risks until a failure occurs. * Leaders should pay attention to small signals like routine shortcuts. * Creating a culture where questioning normal practices is safe is crucial. * Major incidents are often preceded by many small, overlooked signals. Sound bites * "It started small, a temporary walk around." * "Success can create blindness to risk." * "Success can mask underlying risks." Chapters 00:00 Understanding Organizational Drift 07:51 The Hidden Dangers of Success 11:51 Effective Leadership Against Drift 17:00 Coaching Insights and Key Takeaways #TheSafetyEdgePodcast #SafetyLeadership #Safety #Speakup #Coaching #OrganizationalDrift #SafetyCulture #HumanFactors #OperationalExcellence #BeyondCompliance #HSE #RiskManagement #LearningCulture #CoachingConversations #LeadershipDevelopment

15. juni 202620 min
episode When Procedures Don’t Match Reality artwork

When Procedures Don’t Match Reality

When Procedures Don’t Match Reality | Work as Imagined vs. Work as Done Why do experienced workers sometimes adapt procedures or create unofficial ways of getting the job done? In this episode, we explore the gap between Work as Imagined and Work as Done — one of the most important concepts in modern safety and operational leadership. Procedures are designed to create consistency and control. But when operational realities change and systems fail to adapt, frontline workers often develop hidden adaptations just to keep work moving. The danger is not always the adaptation itself. The real risk begins when organizations stop learning from those adaptations. In this episode, we discuss: * Why procedures lose credibility when they ignore operational reality * How organizational drift becomes normalized * Why hidden adaptations are signals, not just rule violations * The danger of blaming workers instead of understanding the system * How psychologically safe conversations improve learning * The role of frontline supervisors in identifying weak signals before incidents occur * How proactive organizations strengthen what is working before failure happens Key Takeaways * Gap between work as imagined and work as done * Adaptations create invisible risk Chapters * 00:00 The Gap Between Procedure and Reality * 06:10 Normalized Deviance and System Design * 12:10 Normalization and Organizational Drift This episode is valuable for: ✔ Frontline Supervisors ✔ Safety Professionals ✔ Operations Leaders ✔ HSE Managers ✔ Industrial Workers ✔ Leadership Teams focused on operational excellence If this episode resonated with you, share it with your team, and start the conversation about where work as imagined may no longer match work as done. Because sometimes, the conversations that prevent the next incident begin with a simple moment of reflection. #SafetyCulture #IndustrialSafety #Leadership #FrontlineLeadership #HSE #OperationalExcellence #HumanFactors #WorkAsDone #SafetyLeadership #ProcessSafety #WorkplaceSafety #LearningCulture #RiskManagement #OilAndGas #Manufacturing

26. maj 202615 min