Ergonomic Assessments for Melbourne Businesses — What to Expect and How to Prepare
Many Melbourne organisations organise an ergonomic assessment after staff begin reporting discomfort.
But businesses often aren’t sure what actually happens during the visit — or how to prepare employees so the assessment is effective.
Understanding the process helps workplaces get meaningful results rather than just a chair adjustment.
Corporate Work Health Australia provides workplace ergonomic assessments across Melbourne CBD and metropolitan areas.
Book a Melbourne ergonomic assessment:
https://corporateworkhealth.com.au/services/ergonomic-workstation-assessment/
What an Ergonomic Assessment Is Designed to Do
An ergonomic assessment identifies how work tasks interact with the human body and whether that exposure is likely to cause discomfort or injury over time.
It is not simply a posture check.
The goal is to determine:
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why symptoms occur
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what factors increase fatigue
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how work habits influence strain
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what changes will prevent the issue continuing
Learn how ergonomic assessments work:
https://corporateworkhealth.com.au/ergonomic-risk-assessment-guide/
What Happens During the Assessment
A typical workplace ergonomic assessment in Melbourne takes 20–40 minutes per worker and follows a structured process.
1. Worker Discussion
The assessor asks about:
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symptoms
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when discomfort occurs
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daily work patterns
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recent workload changes
Pain timing often reveals the true risk factor faster than posture observation.
2. Task Observation
The assessor watches the employee perform their normal work.
This is important — people sit differently when told to “sit properly”.
The aim is to understand real behaviour, not ideal posture.
Signs your workstation may be contributing to discomfort:
https://corporateworkhealth.com.au/signs-your-workstation-is-causing-pain/
3. Exposure Identification
Rather than labelling posture as good or bad, the assessor identifies load drivers such as:
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sustained muscle activity
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reach distance
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lack of movement
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screen viewing angle
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repetitive actions
4. Workstation Adjustment
Equipment may be adjusted including:
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chair height
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monitor height
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keyboard and mouse position
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document placement
But adjustments only occur when they reduce exposure — not simply to match a diagram.
5. Worker Education
The employee is shown:
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why symptoms occur
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how to adjust their setup
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how to vary posture
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how to prevent recurrence
Education is often the most important part of the visit.
Ergonomic training programs:
https://corporateworkhealth.com.au/training/ergonomics/
6. Reporting
After the visit, the workplace receives a report outlining:
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risk factors identified
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recommendations
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any follow-up required
How ergonomic reports are written:
https://corporateworkhealth.com.au/ergonomic-assessment-report-template/
How Melbourne Businesses Should Prepare
Preparation improves the quality of the assessment significantly.
Inform Staff Early
Employees should understand the visit is preventative — not performance monitoring.
Encourage Normal Work Behaviour
Workers should complete typical tasks so the assessor observes real exposure.
Provide Typical Equipment
Avoid changing desks or equipment just before the assessment.
Share Known Concerns
Managers should notify the assessor of any high-risk workers beforehand.
When Assessments Are Most Useful
Organisations benefit most when assessments are arranged:
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after office moves
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during hybrid work transition
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when complaints increase
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before injuries develop
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during early intervention
Training vs individual assessments explained:
https://corporateworkhealth.com.au/ergonomic-training-vs-individual-workstation-assessments/
Benefits for Melbourne Organisations
Companies that implement ergonomic assessments commonly experience:
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reduced injury complaints
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fewer workers compensation claims
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improved productivity
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improved employee comfort
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early identification of risk
How ergonomics reduces injuries:
https://corporateworkhealth.com.au/how-ergonomics-reduces-workplace-injuries/
Supporting Hybrid and Remote Workers
Melbourne workplaces increasingly support remote work arrangements.
Remote assessments allow workers to receive guidance for home setups and prevent delayed injury reporting.
Workplace ergonomics overview:
https://corporateworkhealth.com.au/workplace-ergonomics-australia/
Melbourne Ergonomic Services
Corporate Work Health Australia provides:
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onsite ergonomic assessments
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remote assessments
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group ergonomic training
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early intervention workplace support
Contact our Melbourne ergonomics team:
https://corporateworkhealth.com.au/contact/
Conclusion
An ergonomic assessment is not simply adjusting furniture — it identifies how work exposure affects the body and how to manage it.
When businesses prepare properly, the assessment becomes a preventative strategy rather than a reactive fix.
Early intervention protects workers, improves comfort and reduces long-term workplace risk.