Hazards don’t always announce themselves. Most of the time, they blend into the background of a job that feels familiar. And that’s the real problem. When something feels routine, our guard drops.

The habit that prevents this is simple and teachable: Stop, Look, Assess.
This isn’t a long meeting or a clipboard checklist. It’s a quick mental pause before starting any task or moving into a new area on the job site.
Think of it as a three-second reset for your awareness.
STOP
Before reaching for a tool, stepping onto equipment, or starting a repetitive task, pause.
Even one second helps reset your focus. This matters because most injuries happen when someone is:
- Rushing
- Fatigued
- Distracted or complacent
Research supports this. Workers under time pressure are significantly more likely to skip safety steps or misread environment cues (NIOSH, 2020). The simple act of stopping interrupts that mindset.
LOOK
Once you’re paused, scan the environment. What could go wrong here?
Common hazards across nearly all job sites include:
| Hazard Type | What to Look For | Why It Matters |
| Slip, trip, fall hazards | Uneven surfaces, ice, clutter, unsecured cords | Slips account for the majority of workplace falls and nonfatal injuries (BLS, 2022) |
| Moving equipment and vehicles | Blind spots, pinch points, swing radiuses | Struck-by incidents are a leading cause of serious injury |
| Electrical hazards | Damaged cords, unlocked panels, wet areas | Electrocution remains one of OSHA’s “Fatal Four” |
| Manual handling | Awkward lifts, repetitive strain, oversized loads | Musculoskeletal injuries are the most common work-related injury category |
| Chemical exposure | Open containers, lack of ventilation, missing PPE | Continuous low-level exposure can be as harmful as acute exposure over time |
Don’t just look at what is happening. Look for what could happen if something shifts, falls, slips, or fails.
ASSESS
Now that you’ve spotted potential hazards, ask yourself:
- What is the worst realistic thing that could happen?
- How likely is it?
- What is one simple control that would reduce that risk?
This might mean:
- Grabbing gloves instead of bare-handing materials
- Asking for a spotter before backing a truck
- Moving clutter instead of stepping over it
- Swapping a ladder for a platform that’s more stable
It’s not about stopping work. It’s about doing the work smarter. OSHA guidance consistently shows that small preventative steps drastically reduce incident rates when applied early and consistently (OSHA, 2023).
Make It a Habit
This only works if it becomes automatic. Some teams use:
- A three-second pause rule before each new task
- A shared phrase like “Reset” to remind each other
- Crew leads modeling the habit in front of others
The strongest safety cultures aren’t built on posters and slogans. They’re built on small, shared habits that people actually use.
Final Thought
Hazard recognition doesn’t require special training, complex paperwork, or a lengthy tailgate talk. It just requires awareness.
Stop. Look. Assess: Every task. Every shift. Every job site.
Because most injuries don’t happen due to ignorance. They happen because someone didn’t take that small pause.
References
- National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH), “Workplace Safety and Health Topics,” 2020.
- U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS), “Nonfatal Occupational Injuries and Illnesses Requiring Days Away From Work,” 2022.
- Occupational Safety and Health Administration (OSHA), “Commonly Used Statistics,” 2023.
