Rave Mobile Safety’s report identifies critical communication and safety gaps in the workplace.
FRAMINGHAM, Mass.–(BUSINESS WIRE)–Rave Mobile Safety (Rave), the critical communication and collaboration platform customers count on when it matters most, today announced the results of its fourth annual 2021 Workplace Safety and Preparedness Survey. The findings show that employers are reevaluating how to best protect employees both on-site and remotely in a year of unprecedented change.
“With hybrid workforces here to stay, it’s critical employers evolve their emergency communication and safety procedures to meet the needs of employees in this new environment”
The COVID-19 outbreak forced employers to redefine the workplace and establish flexible modes of communication with a workforce that could be in the workplace, working off-site or remotely—or in a combination of these environments.
The key findings of the survey indicate that:
While coronavirus restrictions and an increase in remote work meant that events like an active shooter incident or workplace violence were the least common emergencies in 2020, it’s critical employees understand safety procedures as on-site work makes a return more widely.
However, a third of respondents said they were not aware of or not sure about emergency plans for certain emergency incidents, with most “no/not sure” responses for emergency plans related to active shooter incidents, cyberattacks/system outages and workplace violence.
Additionally, the survey found workplaces are not practicing for prevalent events like medical emergencies and severe weather. Thirty-seven percent of respondents said that their employer never held safety drills for medical emergencies or exposure to illness and 38% of respondents said they never drilled for severe weather events.
For the second year in a row, the results of this survey showed that the most common modes of communication for workplaces were email and alerting employees in-person, which risk leaving workers uninformed.
While their employers currently use email as the primary method of emergency communication, respondents in the 30-44 and 45-60 age groups say their preferred method of communication is mass text message. Mass text messages are also the most preferred emergency communication method for all employees—on-site and off-site.
“With hybrid workforces here to stay, it’s critical employers evolve their emergency communication and safety procedures to meet the needs of employees in this new environment,” said Todd Piett, Rave CEO. “Technology can help ensure that, no matter the emergency, all members of a workforce are quickly communicated with and aware of a situation to help facilitate the best possible outcome.”
Download the full report
For more details on these findings, download the complete 2021 Workplace Safety and Preparedness Survey here.
Methodology
Rave surveyed 515 full-time employees working in various industries across the United States. Responses were collected in March 2021.
About Rave Mobile Safety
Rave Mobile Safety is the leading provider of critical communication and collaboration technology used to save lives, manage crisis incidents and increase resiliency. From major disasters and crisis events to everyday emergencies and operational incidents, the Rave platform enables critical data sharing, mass notification and emergency response coordination. Over 8,000 first responder, emergency management, 9-1-1, and federal, state and local agencies—as well as corporations, healthcare organizations, universities and schools—all rely on Rave to prepare better, respond faster, recover quicker and mitigate anticipated critical incidents. Founded in 2004, Rave’s award-winning software solutions are backed by leading growth equity firm TCV. Let Rave enable you to do all you can todayTM to keep everyone safe. For more information, visit https://www.ravemobilesafety.com, read our company blog, and follow us on LinkedIn, Twitter and Facebook.
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