In strategic communication management, strengthening safety culture requires sustained leadership engagement, targeted communication, and visible accountability—not one-time messages or punitive reminders. Option C represents the most effective strategic response because it integrates leadership, learning, and behavioral reinforcement over time. Repeated injuries signal a systemic cultural issue rather than a lack of information, which means the solution must address norms, expectations, and leadership influence.
Focusing on the supervisors and employees closest to where injuries are occurring reflects a risk-based and audience-centered approach. These groups experience the safety protocols most directly and are therefore the most critical leverage points for behavior change. A multi-month communication and training effort allows messages to be reinforced, skills to be practiced, and attitudes to shift gradually—key principles in organizational change communication.
Leadership’s face-to-face involvement is especially important. Strategic communication management emphasizes that safety culture is driven from the top. When leaders visibly engage, discuss expectations, and model safety priorities, employees interpret safety as a core organizational value rather than a compliance exercise. Broadcasting leadership messages more broadly reinforces consistency and signals that safety standards apply across the organization.
The other options rely on limited or counterproductive tactics. Tool kits and memos are passive and easily ignored, while peer-reporting campaigns risk creating fear, resentment, or mistrust. These approaches may increase awareness but rarely lead to sustainable behavioral change.
By combining leadership advocacy, targeted training, and ongoing communication, option C aligns communication strategy with management responsibility. It positions safety as a shared expectation, embedded in daily operations and leadership behavior—an essential condition for building a durable and credible safety culture.