Poor safety signage creates risk long before an incident occurs. When hazards are not clearly marked or instructions are misunderstood, unsafe decisions become more likely and legal exposure increases.
Safety signs help prevent workplace incidents by influencing behaviour at the exact moment risk is encountered. They warn of danger, prohibit unsafe actions, enforce protective behaviour, and guide people under normal and abnormal conditions.
Safety signs are required wherever hazards exist and risks remain after other controls are applied. They are not optional additions or dependent on experience, but a fundamental part of workplace risk communication.
Safety signs and safety training are often confused or treated as interchangeable, but they serve fundamentally different roles. Training explains risks and procedures in advance, while safety signs reinforce those requirements at the point where hazards are encountered.