A single EHS score is a data point. A score trend is a story. And the story is almost always more useful than any individual chapter.
Once you have several cycles of data, the question shifts from what is our score to what is our score doing - and that is where the genuinely actionable information lives.
A score of 74 that has been rising for two months is a different situation to a score of 74 that has been declining over the same period. The number looks the same. The underlying reality is different.
Direction tells you whether the conditions in your organisation are improving or deteriorating. The level tells you where you are. The direction tells you where you are going. Managing well requires both.
Not all score movements mean the same thing. Reading them accurately requires holding the pattern alongside the context:
The trend line is more useful in management conversations than the absolute score. Rather than asking why the score is 72, you can ask why the score has been declining for the past six weeks - a question that is more specific, more contextual and more likely to produce a useful answer.
One of the most valuable uses of the trend is evaluating whether something you did had an effect. If you made a change - in management approach, in workload, in communication - the trend in the cycles that follow tells you whether it worked. That feedback loop is built into continuous measurement.
Your EHS score trend tells you more than any individual score can. Direction, rate of change, recovery patterns and the response to specific events are all visible in the trend - but only if you are measuring consistently enough to see them. The trend is the signal. Individual scores are just the data points that build it.
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Also worth reading: How to read your early EHS(R) score without overreacting