Most Workplace Accidents Don’t Begin with Recklessness
Share
By Abbie Geigle
One Small Shortcut
It’s near the end of the shift, and everyone is ready to wrap up.
One last task needs to be finished before the team can leave. The correct ladder is in another area of the building, but a nearby chair looks sturdy enough. The worker has done this kind of task many times before. It will only take a second.
So they step up.
At first, nothing happens. The job feels simple. The shortcut feels harmless.
Until the chair shifts.
In an instant, a routine task becomes a fall, an injury, an investigation, and a question everyone wishes had been asked sooner:
“Was saving a few minutes worth it?”
Most workplace accidents don’t begin with recklessness.
They begin with a shortcut.
A step skipped because “it’ll only take a second.” A guard removed because it slows the job down. A ladder used the wrong way because the right equipment is across the building. A quick lift without help because the load “doesn’t look that heavy.”
When Shortcuts Start to Feel Normal
In the moment, shortcuts can feel harmless. They often come from good intentions: wanting to save time, keep production moving, help a coworker, or finish the job before the end of the day. But in safety, small decisions can carry big consequences.
The problem with shortcuts is that they rarely look dangerous at first. In fact, many shortcuts work — until they don’t. Someone bypasses a procedure once, and nothing happens. They do it again, and still nothing happens. Over time, the shortcut starts to feel normal. What began as an exception becomes part of the routine.
That is when risk grows quietly.
Why Safety Procedures Matter
Workplace safety depends on consistency. Procedures, personal protective equipment, equipment inspections, lockout/tagout steps, housekeeping rules, and reporting systems all exist for a reason. They are not just “extra steps.” They are layers of protection designed to prevent one mistake, distraction, or unexpected event from becoming an injury.
A shortcut removes one of those layers.
Maybe the worker is experienced. Maybe they have done the task a hundred times. Maybe they know what they are doing. But experience does not eliminate hazards. Familiarity can actually make hazards easier to overlook. When a task becomes routine, people may stop seeing the risks that are still present.
Building a Culture That Stops Shortcuts
That is why safety culture matters.
A strong safety culture does not just tell workers to “be careful.” It creates an environment where doing the job safely is expected, supported, and reinforced. It gives workers the time, tools, training, and confidence they need to follow safe procedures, even when production pressures are high.
Supervisors play a major role in this. If leaders ignore shortcuts, workers learn that shortcuts are acceptable. If leaders only focus on speed, workers may assume safety is secondary. But when leaders model safe behavior, correct unsafe habits, and recognize workers who follow proper procedures, safety becomes part of the way work gets done.
Employees also have a role. Every worker has the responsibility to pause when something does not feel right, speak up when a shortcut becomes common, and look out for coworkers who may be rushing or taking unnecessary risks. Safety is not just about individual choices. It is about shared accountability.
One Question That Can Prevent an Accident
Preventing accidents often starts with a simple question:
“Is there a safer way to do this?”
That question can stop a shortcut before it becomes an incident. It can turn a rushed decision into a safer plan. It can remind a team that saving a few minutes is never worth risking someone’s health, livelihood, or life.
Most accidents are not caused by one dramatic mistake. They are often the result of small unsafe choices that build over time.
So the next time a shortcut seems tempting, pause.
Use the right tool. Follow the procedure. Wear the PPE. Ask for help. Take the extra step.
Because the safest way to finish the job is the way that lets everyone go home healthy at the end of the day.