Making Safety Happen with Brian Fielkow
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In this episode, Michael sits down with Brian Fielkow to discuss his new book, Making Safety Happen, and why safety leadership belongs in the boardroom rather than the basement. Brian brings a compelling perspective shaped by his transition from corporate law to executive leadership, and he makes a powerful case for why safety is not a compliance checkbox but a core business principle with measurable impact on profitability, culture, and competitive positioning.
Key TakeawaysSafety is a C-Suite Imperative. Brian argues that safety must be led from the top of the organization. When it is delegated solely to a safety department, it loses the executive authority needed to drive real cultural and operational change.
Safety Drives Business Value. Organizations that embed safety into their culture attract value-aligned customers, improve employee retention, and build a meaningful competitive advantage. Brian draws on Paul O'Neill's transformation of Alcoa as a landmark example of how safety leadership can simultaneously improve human outcomes and business performance.
Compliance and Safety Are Not the Same Thing. Using the Tracy Morgan crash as a case study, Brian illustrates how an organization can be fully legally compliant and still be fundamentally unsafe. True safety is about systems and processes, not simply the absence of incidents.
Frontline Expertise Is an Untapped Asset. Both Michael and Brian emphasize the value of involving frontline employees in risk assessment and process design. Brian shared how his former logistics company had truck drivers author their own process manual in plain language, dramatically improving comprehension and adherence.
Safety and Growth Can Coexist. Organizations do not have to choose between scaling and maintaining a strong safety culture. With the right systems and leadership commitment, safety becomes an accelerant rather than a constraint.
About Brian FielkowBrian Fielkow is a seasoned executive, attorney, and author with deep experience leading organizations where safety is operationally and culturally central. His book, Making Safety Happen, is written for leaders at all levels and covers leadership roles, employee engagement, process implementation, accountability, and organizational resilience. The book is structured to be used as a practical reference, complete with actionable ideas and checklists, rather than a cover-to-cover read.
Resources Mentioned- Book: Making Safety Happen by Brian Fielkow, available at major retail outlets
- Reference: Paul O'Neill's safety leadership transformation at Alcoa
- Case Study: The Tracy Morgan crash as an illustration of compliance versus genuine safety
https://BrianFielkow.com