When it comes to building safer, more efficient workplaces, few strategies are more impactful than pairing ergonomic risk management with employment testing. These two disciplines are often mentioned together, but they serve very different purposes in protecting employee health and improving productivity.
At its core, workplace ergonomics is the art and science of fitting the work to the worker by designing jobs, tools, and environments that support human ability and reduce injury risk. Functional employment testing, on the other hand, does the opposite: it’s about fitting the worker to the work. Testing helps determine whether a person has the physical or functional capacity to safely perform specific job demands.
When used together, testing and ergonomics form a powerful feedback loop. Testing identifies whether current employees or new hires can safely handle the job’s demands, while ergonomics helps modify those demands to reduce unnecessary risk. If a testing program shows high fail rates, it may be time for an ergonomic analysis to identify and fix the source of the problem.
This blog explores how testing and ergonomics complement each other across industries, including manufacturing, aerospace, construction, and the office environment, and how they work across the employee lifecycle from hiring to injury recovery and workplace improvement.
Manufacturing is one of the clearest examples of how testing and ergonomics intersect. With physically demanding roles that often involve repetitive lifting, pushing, or operating heavy equipment, manufacturers face ongoing risk of musculoskeletal disorders (MSDs).
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The manufacturing industry has made great strides in reducing injuries, but the constant pressure of productivity and efficiency means that risks remain. From 2022 to 2023 recordable injuries and illnesses in manufacturing dropped from 396,800 to 355,800.
Manufacturers should be using a dual approach, using testing to ensure hiring safety and ergonomics to refine work design. Injury rates in manufacturing have dropped in recent years, and pairing these two systems continues to drive safer, more sustainable production.
Aerospace operations demand a balance of strength, precision, and endurance. Employees might spend hours working in confined spaces, handling small components, or performing high-stakes assembly.
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The aerospace industry has a forward-thinking view of ergonomics, seeing ergonomics as not just as a way to reduce injury costs but also as a goal. With organizations like the Aerospace Human Factors Association and the Human Factors and Ergonomics Society, this field is working as a leader in ergonomics first applications.
Testing could be on the road to expanding, particularly in baseline and recovery assessments, as employers recognize the need to balance high performance with sustainable worker health.
Unlike a manufacturing line or assembly station, construction sites are fluid, unpredictable, and physically intense. Workers face constant changes in environment, materials, and physical demands.
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Because physical demands in construction can’t always be changed, testing plays a central role in controlling injury risk. But as technology and ergonomic equipment improve the industry continues to find better ways to fit the work to the worker as well.
The office may seem like a low-risk workplace, but repetitive strain injuries and poor posture remain major sources of lost productivity and discomfort. Here, ergonomics takes the lead, but testing still has a role when employees are returning from injury.
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The office sector increasingly treats ergonomics as part of wellness, productivity, and retention strategy rather than just injury prevention. Testing remains secondary but supportive, particularly for employees transitioning back to work post-injury. Testing is likely to continue expanding into self-guided platforms, making assessments more accessible for hybrid and remote employees.
One of the key takeaways across all industries is that ergonomics and testing together do not just address one moment in time. It spans the entire employee lifecycle, involving:
When applied strategically, these tools not only reduce injury risks but also foster a culture of care and efficiency, where employees feel supported and employers benefit from reduced claims, improved productivity, and stronger retention.
Testing and ergonomics are often linked but address different factors in the workplace. Testing matches the worker to the work; ergonomics matches the work to the worker. When implemented together, they form a comprehensive approach to workforce safety and performance.
In industries ranging from manufacturing to aerospace, construction, and office settings, testing ensures that employees can perform safely within the physical demands of their jobs. Ergonomics ensures that those demands are designed as intelligently and humanely as possible.
As organizations mature in their safety and injury prevention strategies, they recognize that true workplace health comes not from choosing one or the other—but from integrating both. Together, testing and ergonomics build workplaces that are safer, smarter, and more sustainable for everyone.