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justin76@email.com  
#1 Posted : 12 August 2025 20:48:19(UTC)
Rank: New forum user
justin76@email.com

Hi, I'm Justin,

I have recently joined iosh as a affiliate. I am currently studying Health and Safety Management in Construction, and planning to sit my exam in October.

I have worked in groundworks and civil engineering for the last 30 years, and started as a labourer and now a foreman, which i have been for the last 10 years on various projects.

I have alot to offer as a H&S advisor/consultant, but i have a lot to learn in this position. As there is more to my knowledge and experience i have from site, writing and delivering TBT, daily briefs, RAMS, HAVS and dealing with the daily works on site.

If anyone could give me any advice for me to develop my skills and become more attractive to potential employers, i would be very greatful.

Kind regards 

Justin 

bxuxa  
#2 Posted : 12 August 2025 21:04:48(UTC)
Rank: Forum user
bxuxa

Hi Justin,

It sounds like you already have a strong foundation to build on 30 years’ experience is hugely valuable in a health and safety role.

A few steps that could help make you more attractive to future employers:

  1. Leverage your site credibility – Your practical knowledge and experience will be highly respected by both operatives and management. When moving into H&S, emphasise how you bridge the gap between the office and the site.

  2. Learn to translate site experience into reports and evidence – Employers value H&S professionals who can document findings clearly for audits, incident investigations, and client reporting. Any vision should be factual and not an opinion.

  3. Gain exposure to various aspects of H&S by shadowing your current company’s HSEQ team during audits, and consider shadowing other teams that have different approaches.

  4. Network within the profession – IOSH branch meetings are great, mainly the face-to-face ones. Networking often opens up opportunities ; )

  5. Consider short specialist courses – Topics like Temporary Works Awareness, CDM Regulations, or behavioural safety can make you stand out when applying for roles in construction.

Best of luck with your October exam.

thanks 1 user thanked bxuxa for this useful post.
justin76@email.com on 13/08/2025(UTC)
Kate  
#3 Posted : 13 August 2025 07:06:40(UTC)
Rank: Super forum user
Kate

Hello Justin and welcome.

If I was an employer I would already be thinking by now that you sound ideal.  Your previous experience is gold, you are studying for a qualification  and you still feel you have a lot to learn (instead of claiming to already know it all).

Ultimately the way to learn is by doing so it's a case of seizing whatever opportunities you see, however small, to do something you haven't done any or much of before.  If you can get feedback on what you've done, it's even better.

If you choose to record your CPD on the IOSH system, that will give you a log of what you have learned, from doing as well as studying, which you can use for reference when compiling your CV.

Very best of luck to you.

thanks 2 users thanked Kate for this useful post.
justin76@email.com on 13/08/2025(UTC), peter gotch on 13/08/2025(UTC)
peter gotch  
#4 Posted : 13 August 2025 10:27:04(UTC)
Rank: Super forum user
peter gotch

Good morning Justin

Welcome to the Forums.

Good advice already given.

My first question for you is to check whether the course you are doing is recognised by IOSH as meeting the academic criteria for TechIOSH and/or CertIOSH, which translates to Levels 3 and 6 on the European Qualifications Framework?

It is entirely possible that you are doing a course which DOES meet one of those standards but hsa not been accredited by IOSH.

If so, you might think about a need to try and influence the course provider to apply for accreditation (which means time and money for your provider to spend) OR think about whether you ALSO want to do courses that IOSH does accept as the academic criteria needed to climb up the Membership ladder - also experience criteria, but you ought to be able to jump through those hoops without much difficulty.

Of course the word "think" doesn't mean "do"! Could be entirely reasonable for you to choose not to try and jump over any hurdles that IOSH sets. You have a huge wealth of experience that gives you transferable skills and there will be opportunities for you in roles with more H&S as the focus, without that much need to worry about what letters you can put after your name. YOU can make the decisions about your goals.

Good luck, Peter

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