The workforce is changing quickly across many industries. Safety risks are shifting with it. Understanding these workforce changes is becoming a key priority for safety leaders heading into 2026.
The Workforce Looks Different Than It Did Five Years Ago
Across industries, employers are seeing clear changes in workforce composition.
Including:
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higher employee turnover
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more new hires entering physically demanding roles
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less on-the-job experience among frontline workers
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greater production pressure on teams
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more complex operational environments
Many safety systems were designed for a workforce that looked very different.
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more experience
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more workforce stability
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more time for training
These attributes are no longer a given in today’s workforce.
The Experience Gap Is Growing
Many teams now include a larger number of newer or less experienced employees.
Common patterns include:
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new hires learning demanding physical tasks
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employees transitioning between roles more frequently
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workers with limited exposure to complex environments
Experience influences how workers navigate risk.
It affects:
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how quickly hazards are recognized
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how confidently employees speak up
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how safely tasks are completed under pressure
When experience declines, small risks can escalate more quickly.
Why Employers Are Viewing Workers as Industrial Athletes
Many organizations are beginning to think about workers as industrial athletes. The comparison reflects the physical demands of modern work. Employees performing physical work often experience:
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fatigue accumulation
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conditioning gaps
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recovery periods after injury or illness
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increased risk during transitions back to work
Athletic environments actively manage these risks. Many employers are now applying similar thinking to workplace safety.
Turnover Is Changing How Safety Knowledge Spreads
Higher turnover is affecting how safety knowledge moves through organizations.
Teams may experience:
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inconsistent safety habits between crews
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new hires hesitant to ask questions
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knowledge gaps around equipment or procedures
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fewer experienced mentors on the floor
Employers can no longer assume knowledge transfer will happen naturally. In 2026, ensuring that it does occur is a safety priority.
Operational Pressure Is Increasing
Many industries are operating under rising production demands.
Organizations are being asked to:
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produce more
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move faster
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operate with tighter margins
While maintaining strong safety performance. Without strong systems, small risks can grow quickly.
The Hidden Risk of Rapid Workforce Change
Rapid workforce change can introduce multiple safety risks at once.
Organizations may experience:
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new employees entering demanding work
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reduced familiarity with hazards
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less institutional safety knowledge
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increased physical strain on workers
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greater variability in safety behaviors
These conditions require earlier visibility into emerging risks.
What Safety Leaders Are Prioritizing in 2026
Many organizations are shifting from reactive safety strategies toward earlier intervention.
Common priorities include:
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earlier reporting of discomfort or strain
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faster access to clinical guidance
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stronger communication between workers and supervisors
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better onboarding for new hires
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systems that identify risk earlier
Earlier visibility allows teams to respond before issues escalate.
The Opportunity Ahead
Workforce change introduces new complexity for safety leaders. Organizations that adapt often gain stronger visibility into risk.
Benefits may include:
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earlier identification of hazards
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stronger communication between teams
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better support for new employees
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improved recovery outcomes
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greater operational awareness
Understanding the workforce is becoming as important as understanding the work itself.
Want to learn more about 2026’s top trends?
Joined by special guest Stewart Levy, Vice President of Population and Occupational Health for Wellworks For You, and Chief Medical Officer Scott Cherry, we will walk through what the data is showing about workplace injuries today and what it could mean for you heading in 2026.










