People & Culture · Risk & Safety · Sustainability
From "toughen up the worker" to setting the work up well.
Under WHS law, health means physical and mental health.
A quick starting question
When someone burns out — is it the person, or the way the work is set up?
Have your say — scan the QR.
Grounding the language
Psychosocial safety is about the work, not the worker.
Legal note: WHS duties don't cover workers' personal lives — but where work design compounds personal stress, the organisation must minimise that combined risk.
Our experience · Project Simplify
Through Project Simplify, we found that as work gets more complex, sleep and performance drop. Complexity needs to be designed out.
The driver is complexity in the work — not weakness in the worker.
The legislative sandbox · one duty, nine regulators
Two frameworks, one direction. Tap a jurisdiction to see what applies where Indara's people and towers are.
So far as is reasonably practicable
Every jurisdiction lands in the same place: reduce psychosocial risk at its source in the work. The map changes the paperwork — not the job.
Design over training, every time.
Consult before decisions lock in.
Assessments, consultation, plans.
The conditions that create risk
The codes name hazards differently (14 in the national model, 17 in SA) but they all describe the same landscape. They rarely arrive individually — the harm builds when they stack up.
Tap the hazards one role actually faces.
The idea behind it
High demands only harm when they meet low resources.
Drag each onto its side of the beam. Can't lower the demands? Build in more resources.
Our experience · Metro Trains Melbourne
140 scattered procedures, rebuilt into one tool that works at the point of work.
The job didn't change. The support around it did.
How it all connects
Design the work well, and the harm never arrives.
The parts of the job we design and control.
When demands outweigh resources, pressure builds.
The recognised conditions from the last slide.
Poorer health, sleep and safety.
The levers we can redesign
These levers sit underneath the hazards. Redesign these and you shift the hazards.
Procedural clutter — dense, compliance-heavy paper guides that hinder rather than help access.
Where factors collide
In many situations, several work factors are at play at once. That overlap is where the root cause analysis on the next slide begins.
Tap an example to light up the factors:
Tight deadlines, alone, in a remote spot.
Emergency hits a short-staffed night shift.
Specialist gear, tangled structure, dense procedures.
Working through an example
The factors driving harm rarely sit on the surface. Techniques like the 5 Whys dig into the system to find the real cause.
What happened: a technician skipped a pre-start check at a remote tower. A serious incident followed.
Our experience · Compass Group "5IVE"
Hundreds of staff trained to run these investigations themselves.
The real shift was cultural: system first, not blame first.
Over to you
For the tower incident — which response fixes the real cause?
Vote now — scan the QR.
More than one is reasonable. Which fixes the cause?
How the day-to-day plays out
Same situation. Leadership is where the system's pressure is turned up or down.
Putting it to work
No team fixes this alone. Their actions combine to take the pressure off the work itself.
No levers engaged yet — the pressure stays in the work.
What the law asks, in order
Not a mindset — a sequence we're expected to follow, and to show we followed.
Treat work design as the primary control. Training and awareness can't do this job on their own.
Consult to understand how the work really happens — that's where the hazards and the fixes are.
Change the work itself to remove or reduce the hazard at its source.
Throughout — the evidence you did what was reasonably practicable.
Where we've landed
Three questions to take back to your desk.
This week, pick one pressure point your team keeps hitting — and ask the people doing the work what's really causing it. Start there.
All slides — click to jump · press O to toggle