Most Safety Efforts Don’t Fail in Training.
They Fail When They Meet Reality.
Whether it's routine work going on autopilot, a new initiative that needs to stick, or training that didn't change behavior, let’s make the safe behavior automatic, not something that relies on memory or willpower.
Industries We Serve:
Utility | Construction | Oil & Gas | Aviation
Do any of these sound familiar?
THE PROBLEM
Your crews know the risks. The problem is that routine work rewires how attention works. The brain stops actively processing the work.
That’s why incidents show up during “simple” tasks, not because they’re complex, but because they’re familiar.
RESOURCES
WHERE WE BEGIN
We start by making routine risk visible and interrupting autopilot at the right moments. That typically includes:
Not more reminders. Better-designed work.
A CASE STUDY
A mechanical construction team was experiencing incidents during routine, high-frequency tasks. We mapped the work and introduced a small number of targeted protections at key moments. Within months, leaders reported earlier hazard recognition, more intentional pauses, and fewer reactive decisions, without slowing production.
"This event helped us see a familiar task in a completely new way. The timeline revealed where things can go wrong and where we needed to strengthen our approach. We left with better alignment, practical insights, and new tools to make the job safer."
- CEO, Maritime Transportation
"I have already heard many using some of the language introduced to them during your keynote presentation. We really appreciate the time and effort put into the keynote to tailor it to our language."
- SAFETY DIRECTOR, Manufacturing
THE PROBLEM
A new safety initiative is coming. New procedures, new expectations, maybe new technology. Communication will happen. Training will happen.
But six weeks later, people will be back to the old way of doing things.
Rollouts fail when they're built for launch instead of survival. We help you plan for after the kickoff meeting. The daily reinforcement, the leadership modeling, and the field-level systems that make the new behavior easier to sustain than the old one are what makes sure it's working when you're not watching.
WHERE WE BEGIN
We start by designing for adoption before the rollout breaks down. That typically includes:
The goal is simple.
Make the new way of working easier to sustain than to abandon.
A CASE STUDY
Our client launched an ambitious initiative to improve the Pre-Job Briefing form and promote its adoption throughout the organization.
Our Results:
"The work you did to break down our safety model for attendees was world class."
- EHS MANAGER, Midstream Oil and Gas
"We have actual, professional training for this initiative!"
- SENIOR DIRECTOR EHS&S, Utility
THE PROBLEM
Everyone agrees something needs to change. Maybe it's how leaders communicate or coach their teams. Maybe it's how crews conduct job briefings, pay attention or make decisions.
The challenge is that knowing what people should do and getting them to do it consistently are two different things.
Behavior is shaped by habits, competing priorities, social influences, leadership expectations, and the realities of daily work. Without the right support, people naturally fall back on familiar routines. The desired behavior never becomes part of how work gets done.
Awareness may increase, but under pressure, distraction, fatigue, and familiarity, people default to existing habits.
WHERE WE BEGIN
We start by understanding what behavior needs to change and what is preventing it from happening consistently. That typically includes:
Not more content. Better conditions for behavior change
A CASE STUDY
Participants had already been through extensive driving training. They did not need more driving training. They needed an opportunity to practice the driving skills they already knew they needed, so that it became a habit.
Our Results
"Habit Mastery Consulting's system aligned with our vision, and their tools helped our employees make significant and lasting changes in their behavior."
- DIRECTOR, Utility
"The insights we gained were absolute gold. Not only did it validate so much of what we were sensing in the field, but it also gave us a level of depth and clarity we simply didn’t have before. We now have concrete, actionable information that’s already proving valuable."
-DIRECTOR, Certification & Licensing
The Underlying Pattern
This Isn't A Knowledge Problem
In each of these moments, the issue isn’t awareness.
The issue is what happens between knowing and doing, under real conditions: time pressure, competing priorities, the informal expectations of the people around them, and years of experience that suggest the shortcut is fine.
That’s why more training and more reminders often don’t stick. The solution isn’t more information.
It’s designing the environment so the right behavior holds up when it matters most.
Results and Recognition
Trusted By Leading Organizations
Beyond The Engagement
Let’s stay connected. Here are a few ways to keep the conversation going and bring these ideas to your team.
NECA: May 19
Want to bring Sharon to your event? Visit her speaking page for topics and availability.
Our award-winning articles and case studies can be found here.
You describe what's happening. We ask questions. Neither of us commits to anything. If there's a fit, you'll know it by the end of the first conversation because it will feel like the problem is already becoming clearer.
©2026 Habit Mastery Consulting. All rights reserved.