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Case Study: Effective Implementation of How to build a safety-first culture on the warehouse floor

By buildingmaterial | April 23, 2025

Company: SummitBuild Distribution

Industry: Construction Supply & Building Materials

Size: 200+ warehouse employees across 3 regional DCs

Challenge: Rising incident rates, low safety engagement, and high turnover due to workplace injuries

Goal: Build a safety-first culture that’s practical, people-driven, and scalable across multiple warehouse locations

The Challenge

In early 2023, SummitBuild Distribution faced a critical problem: safety was being treated as a compliance requirement—not a cultural cornerstone.

Key issues:

Increase in recordable injuries (sprains, slips, forklift near misses)

New employees weren’t taking safety protocols seriously

Supervisors were stretched thin, focusing more on output than safety behavior

Safety meetings were seen as boring and repetitive

By mid-year, the leadership team knew they had to rethink their approach entirely. Rather than doubling down on rules, they focused on shifting the mindset from reactive to proactive.

The Strategy: 5 Key Steps to Culture Change

  • Appointed Safety Champions at Every Level

Instead of relying solely on management, SummitBuild introduced a peer-led Safety Champion Program.

1 champion per shift, per department

Monthly leadership coaching on how to spot and address unsafe behavior

Empowered to run daily “Safety Seconds” at the start of shifts

🟢 Result: Safety conversations became part of the daily rhythm, not just a box to check.

  • Introduced Real-Time Reporting Tools

They deployed a mobile-based safety reporting tool integrated with the existing ERP/WMS, making it easy for any team member to:

Report hazards or near-misses

Upload photos of blocked walkways, damaged racking, or unsafe lifting

Log incidents anonymously if needed

🟢 Result: 3X increase in reported near-misses—creating a proactive data stream for prevention.

  • Shifted Training From Policy to Participation

Traditional safety videos were replaced with interactive micro-trainings:

Short, scenario-based learning (5–10 min max)

Peer-led forklift walkarounds

Group discussions about past incidents (what happened, how to prevent it)

🟢 Result: Training engagement jumped 70%—especially among new hires and non-native English speakers.

  • Made Safety a Leadership KPI

SummitBuild’s warehouse managers and leads were now measured on safety engagement, not just productivity.

Monthly reviews included safety walkthrough participation

Turnover and injury reduction were tied to team bonuses

Managers were recognized for creating “zero-incident weeks”

🟢 Result: Supervisor buy-in improved dramatically, shifting from “enforcers” to “coaches.”

  • Celebrated Safety Wins Loudly and Publicly

Culture doesn’t stick without recognition. SummitBuild launched a “Safety Spotlight” wall with:

Peer-nominated safety heroes

Team shoutouts for proactive reporting

Prize drawings for clean audits and participation

🟢 Result: Employees took pride in safety—and began reminding each other, not just waiting on leadership.

The Results: 12 Months Later

After fully rolling out the program across all three distribution centers:

📉 43% reduction in recordable incidents

📈 60% increase in near-miss reporting

📊 25% decrease in first-year turnover

💬 80% of employees said they feel personally responsible for safety

Most importantly, safety became a shared value, not just a policy. And that cultural shift translated directly to better morale, stronger teams, and smoother operations.

Key Takeaways for Other Warehouses

If you’re trying to build a safety-first culture in a warehouse setting, take these lessons from SummitBuild:

✅ Empower peers to lead safety from within

✅ Make reporting fast, easy, and action-focused

✅ Keep training short, relevant, and visual

✅ Measure and reward safety behavior—not just outcomes

✅ Celebrate small wins to fuel long-term change

Final Thought:

You can’t outsource safety culture. It has to live in the everyday behavior of your team—and it starts with how you lead, train, and recognize the people who make the floor run safely.


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