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Industrial Ergonomics Evaluations

Industrial Ergonomics Evaluations

We conduct industrial ergonomics evaluations to identify, quantify, and prioritize risk—then recommend practical, production-ready solutions.

Two-Pronged Evaluation Approach

Our industrial ergonomics evaluations follow a structured, two-step process that allows us to efficiently prioritize risk and perform in-depth task analysis where it matters most.

Step 1: Industrial Screening & Job Prioritization

We begin with our Industrial Screening Tool to score and prioritize potentially significant ergonomic concerns across job roles. This screening evaluates the jobs for risk thresholds identified for each of the major body parts. We are able to systematically prioritize tasks and identify those tasks that warrant deeper ergonomic analysis.

These categorical ratings allow us to systematically prioritize tasks and jobs that warrant deeper ergonomic analysis.

Step 2: Deep-Dive Task & Risk Analysis

Once screening is complete, our ergonomists apply advanced evaluation methods to identify and quantify key stressors and ergonomic risk factors for each prioritized job or task.

Analysis techniques may include:

  • Standardized evaluation tools (e.g., NIOSH lifting Equation, RULA, etc.)
  • Postural analysis
  • Force measurement
  • Biomechanical modeling
  • Energy expenditure evaluations
  • Time and motion studies

Stressors are quantified and ranked to help guide the selection of effective and efficient risk control strategies.

Reporting & Practical Recommendations

Following the evaluation, we deliver a detailed report that includes:

  • Risk prioritization across evaluated jobs
  • Identification of primary stressors and concerns
  • Task-specific findings and contributing factors
  • Practical, targeted recommendations

All recommendations are developed with your operational realities in mind—supporting your task requirements, production goals, and budget constraints.

Ideal For

  • High-risk industrial environments
  • Organizations seeing rising injury trends
  • Facilities needing job prioritization for ergonomic improvements
  • Engineering and safety teams planning targeted interventions
  • Companies seeking data-driven ergonomics decisions