Program Review
For EHS leaders comparing attenuation, training, documentation, and replacement rhythm across several work areas.
Start reviewUse this page for hearing protection selection, connected safety pilot planning, workplace bundle review, or documentation questions. The first response should not be a generic price list. It should clarify your worksite, noise conditions, communication needs, companion PPE, and the records your safety team expects to keep. That context helps the team route the request to the right product or service path.
For EHS leaders comparing attenuation, training, documentation, and replacement rhythm across several work areas.
Start reviewFor teams evaluating dashboards, headset assignment, hygiene reminders, or enterprise reporting connections.
View platformFor procurement teams that need a maintainable product set with clear notes for supervisors and workers.
Browse productsHelpful details include approximate worker count, typical noise sources, shift length, radio or Bluetooth requirements, hard hat or face shield use, and whether the site already has a hearing conservation program. If a request involves wireless or intrinsically safe communication, note the region and any internal approval process so documentation can be scoped correctly. If you need standards language, the team can keep wording aligned with EN 352, NRR selection, or workplace program requirements without making unsupported approval claims.
The form is intentionally short, but a few concrete details make the response much better. Mention whether the request is for passive earmuffs, electronic hearing protection, Bluetooth-enabled communication, radio headsets, hygiene kits, or a connected dashboard pilot. You can also describe the workplace type, current pain point, and expected rollout timing. A specialist can then follow up with a cleaner selection path, documentation checklist, or pilot outline.