10880 Wilshire Blvd Suite 1101 Los Angeles, CA 90024

Safety Services

Our services were designed with your business in mind. Discover a host of tools, services, and resources that help you to collaborate, minimize risks, prevent losses and stay in compliance. It’s just one of the many innovative ways we support your business. Call us today at (310) 329-5494

Custom Job Description Builder

Access a comprehensive library of job descriptions to help you attract and hire the best candidates.

In-person Interview Question Builder

Build a series of questions to help you learn more about a candidate during an in-person interview.

Salary Benchmarking

The Salary Benchmarking Tool will generate a compensation report with annual or hourly compensation rates in every state for over 800 positions.

Employee Handbook Builder

Create and communicate your organization’s HR policies and procedures quickly and conveniently. Generate custom employee handbooks, branded to any organization, by simply answering a few quick questions. State and federal content is available along with the ability to upload any custom content.

Multi-State Laws Comparison Tool

The Multi-state Laws Comparison Tool will build a side-by-side comparison chart that features state labor laws that are relevant to you.

Employee Cost Calculator

Add up all of the overlooked and hidden expenses that contribute to the true cost of hiring a new employee.

Performance Review Builder

Create a professionally developed performance appraisal that will enable employees to achieve their potential and contribute to the success of your business.

Sample Job Descriptions

Use the Sample Job Descriptions Tool to find sample job descriptions that can help you when reviewing an employee’s performance or to assist you in recruiting the best candidates.

OSHA Log

The OSHA Log makes it easier for you to record, track, and export your injury and illness data and ensure OSHA compliance.

Additional resources:

OSHA 300 Reporting: Recordable Incident Advisor

FMLA Advisor

Understand your company’s rights and responsibilities under the federal Family and Medical Leave Act (FMLA)

HR Self-Assessment Tool

Evaluate your company’s existing HR practices and policies to identify areas for improvement.

Phone Interview Question Builder

Build a customized set of phone interview questions to help you narrow your pool of job applicants

Total Compensation Statement Builder

The Total Compensation Statement Builder will create a personalized compensation statement for your employees using the benefit information entered.

Federal Poster Advisor

Determine which federal posters are required for your company in order to stay compliant with the Department of Labor (DOL).

Safety Programs and the Impact to Your  Bottom Line

If you could save your company money, improve  productivity and increase employee morale, would you?

According to the Occupational Safety and Health  Administration (OSHA), workplaces that establish safety  and health management systems can reduce their injury  and illness costs by 20 to 40 percent. Safe environments  also improve employee morale, which positively impacts  productivity and service. When it comes to the costs  associated with safety, consider the following statistics  from OSHA:

  • Employers pay almost $1 billion per week for direct  workers’ compensation costs alone, which comes  straight out of company profits.
  • Injuries and illnesses increase workers’  compensation and retraining costs.
  • Lost productivity from injuries and illnesses costs  companies roughly $63 billion each year.

In today’s business environment, these safety-related  costs can be the difference between reporting a profit or  a loss. Use these tips to understand how safety programs  will directly affect your company’s bottom line.

Measuring the Cost of Safety

Demonstrating the value of safety to management is  often a challenge because the return on investment (ROI)  can be cumbersome to measure. Your goal in measuring  safety is to balance your investment vs. the return  expected. Where do you begin?

There are many different approaches to measuring the  cost of safety, and the way you do so depends on your  goal. Defining your goal helps you to determine what  costs to track and how complex your tracking will be. For example, you may want to capture certain data  simply to determine what costs to build into the price of  a product or service, or you may want to track your  company’s total cost of safety to show increased  profitability, which would include more specific data  collection like safety wages and benefits, operational  costs and insurance costs.

In today’s business environment,  safety-related costs can be the  difference between reporting a profit  or a loss.

Since measuring can be time consuming, general cost  formulas are available. A Stanford study conducted by  Levitt and Samuelson places safety costs at 2.5 percent  of overall costs, and a study published by the Economist  Intelligence Unit (EIU) estimates general safety costs at  about 8 percent of payroll.

If it is important for your organization to measure safety  as it relates to profitability, more accurate tracking  should be done. For measuring data, safety costs can be  divided into two categories. Direct, or hard costs, which

Safety Programs and the Impact to Your Bottom Line

Safety wages

Operational costs

Insurance premiums and/or attorney’s fees

Accidents and incidents

Fines and/or penalties

There are also Indirect, or soft costs, which go beyond those recorded on paper, such as the following:

  • Accident investigation
  • Repairing damaged property
  • Administrative expenses
  • Worker stress in the aftermath of an accident resulting in lost productivity, low employee morale and increased absenteeism
  • Training and compensating replacement workers
  • Poor reputation, which translates to difficulty attracting skilled workers and lost business share.

When calculating soft costs, minor accidents costs are about four times greater than direct costs, and serious accidents about 10 to 15 times greater, especially if the accident generates OSHA fines or litigation costs.

According to IRMI, just the act of measuring costs will  drive improvement. In theory, those providing the data  become more aware of the costs and begin managing  them. This supports the common business belief that  what gets measured gets managed. And, as costs go  down, what gets rewarded gets repeated.

How Can You Show ROI?

OSHA studies indicate that for every $1 invested in effective safety programs, you can save $4 to $6 as  illnesses, injuries and fatalities decline. With a good  safety program in place, your costs will naturally  decrease. It is important to determine what costs to  measure to establish benchmarks, which can then be  used to demonstrate the value of safety over time.

Also, keep in mind that your total cost of safety is just  one part of managing your total cost of risk. When safety  is managed and monitored, it can also help drive down  your total cost of risk.

Safety as a Core Business Strategy Industry studies report that companies who focus on  safety as a core business strategy come out ahead.  Consider the following as reported by the American  Society of Safety Engineers:

  • A coal mining company in West Virginia reduced its  workers’ compensation rate of $1.28 per $100  payroll vs. its competitor’s rate of $13.78.
  • Implementation of an OSHA consultation program  reduced losses at a forklift manufacturing operation  from $70,000 to $7,000 per year.
  • A fall protection program implementation reduced  one employer’s accident costs by 96 percent – from  $4.25 to $0.18 per person-hour.

Considering the statistics, safety experts believe that  there is direct correlation between safety and a  company’s profit. We are committed to helping you  establish a strong safety, health and environmental  program that protects both your workers and your  bottom line. Contact us today at (310)329-5494 to learn  more about our value-added services.