Product category:
Industrial Vehicle Safety
News Release from: Drive and Survive UK | Subject: Drive and Survive workshops
Edited by the Manufacturingtalk Editorial
Team on 28 August 2006
New series of Drive and Survive
workshops
Drive and Survive has announced three new dates for its two-and-a-half-hour driving safety workshop - but hurry, spaces are limited!
Sitting in a stuffy classroom being lectured on how to behave like a saint on the road is never going to be popular with business drivers so Drive and Survive has come up with a novel, engaging way of influencing driver behaviour for the better......without boring them rigid The resulting two-and-a-half-hour long Drive and Survive Workshop product is proving so popular at just £45.00 per head that a series of further dates and locations has been announced
This article was originally published on Manufacturingtalk on 25 Aug 2006 at 8.00am (UK)
Related stories
Major driver safety programme for National Grid
National Grid is implementing a wide-ranging programme of assessment and training for anybody who drives on company business (around 8000 employees), using leading provider Drive and Survive.
New training course to help business drivers
Drive and Survive has created a course to help occupational drivers understand the benefits of chassis stability control devices, and have the confidence to make full use of them
26 September 2006 - Legoland, Berkshire.
27 September - Track and Training Facility, Warwickshire.
28 September - Derby County Football Club, Derby.
The Workshops are both informative and entertaining, in that they include a number of different presentation formats to keep the audience engaged and personally involved.
Alongside the usual static images and accompanying text, there are cartoon sequences, television advertisements and audio clips, as well as moving graphics that explain the benefits of such things as the latest chassis aid technology in an easily digestible manner.
One of the most popular aspects of the Workshop experience is the audience participation.
Volunteers are asked to act as guinea pigs to demonstrate the inbuilt visual blind spot that all humans have and there is also a group challenge to list a series of priority actions that one might take in a theoretical high risk scenario.
Anybody wishing to book places on the latest series of Workshops should contact Drive and Survive's customer service team.
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