The “A” in ATIC: How External Functional Safety Expertise Builds Real Confidence
29 Jun 2026
Independent expertise strengthens functional safety assurance, compliance, and risk reduction
When we think about the Testing, Inspection and Certification (TIC) industry, the conversation typically centres on outputs – test reports, inspection records, and certificates. But these outputs only tell part of the story.
In reality, the most critical element – particularly in functional safety – sits before any of these activities take place. It’s the “A” in ATIC: Assurance.
Because in functional safety, the challenge isn’t just demonstrating that something works – it’s proving that it has been correctly specified, systematically designed, and rigorously validated, with full traceability from hazard identification through to implemented safety functions – something many organisations underestimate or fail to deliver.
And increasingly, organisations are recognising that this level of confidence is rarely achieved through internal effort alone. It is strengthened through independent, external functional safety expertise.
As a provider of Assurance, Testing, Inspection and Certification services, Intertek is uniquely positioned to support not just compliance, but the development of robust, defensible safety arguments – turning functional safety from a documentation exercise into genuine risk reduction.
Functional Safety Is Not a Checkbox Exercise
Standards like IEC 61508 don’t define safety as a simple pass/fail outcome. They require something far more demanding – a demonstration that hazards have been systematically identified, that safety functions are correctly specified and implemented, and that hardware and software behave predictably under fault conditions. Ultimately, the expectation is clear: risks must be reduced to a tolerable level, and this must be supported by robust evidence.
This creates something far more complex than compliance. It creates a safety argument – structured, evidence-based, and defensible.
And building that argument requires a level of experience, exposure, and competence that many organisations struggle to achieve through internal effort alone.
The Limitation of Internal-Only Approaches
Most organisations begin functional safety efforts with capable engineering teams and good intent. But in practice, familiar patterns emerge:
- Design decisions are often made before safety requirements are fully defined
- Evidence is developed late – sometimes retrospectively
- Assumptions go unchallenged
- Independence is limited
- Standards are interpreted incorrectly or inconsistently across the project
The result isn’t usually an obvious outright failure. Instead, it something more subtle – systematic weakness.
What should be a structured and confident process becomes reactive. This is where external functional safety expertise changes the trajectory of a project – introducing independence, consistency, and the experience needed to build a robust and defensible safety argument from the outset.
External Expertise: More Than Just Extra Resource
Bringing in external functional safety specialists isn’t about adding capacity. It’s about introducing a different type of capability – one that most organisations don’t have internally at the required level of independence and experience.
First, there is independent challenge. External experts can question assumptions, identify blind spots, and test the safety argument without bias. This becomes increasingly important as safety integrity levels rise, where independence is not just good practice but an expectation.
Second, there is pattern recognition. Experienced consultants have seen where projects succeed – and more importantly, where they fail. They understand how safety arguments break down under scrutiny, and how certification bodies interpret evidence in reality. That insight helps avoid predictable mistakes before they occur.
Third, there is the ability to structure the safety argument early. Rather than retrofitting evidence at the end, external expertise applied at the right time ensures that safety requirements, architecture, and verification activities are aligned from the outset. The result is not just compliance – it is a system designed for assurance.
Finally, external specialists play a critical role in bridging standards and reality. Standards such as IEC 61508 and ISO 13849 define what “good” looks like, but they do not prescribe how to achieve it. Translating those expectations into practical, consistent implementation is where experience matters most.
Where External Assurance Delivers the Most Value: A Commercial Advantage
Bringing in external functional safety expertise isn’t an added cost – it’s a lever for delivering projects faster, more efficiently, and with greater confidence.
- Reduced Cost: Early alignment prevents late-stage rework, avoiding expensive redesign, revalidation, and repeated assessment cycles
- Faster Project Delivery: Clear safety strategy and structured evidence reduce delays, enabling more predictable and accelerated timelines
- Quicker Market Access: Alignment with standards from the outset minimises certification friction and delays to product launch
- Higher Confidence: Independent expertise strengthens the safety argument, delivering outcomes that are not just compliant, but credible and defensible
Final Thoughts
Testing provides data. Inspection provides visibility. Certification provides recognition.
But in functional safety, assurance provides trust.
That trust is built through independent expertise, structured evidence, and systematic rigor – ensuring that safety is not just claimed, but demonstratable.
This is where organisations see the greatest shift in outcomes – moving from reactive compliance to confident, defensible safety arguments. And it is why external functional safety expertise continues to play an increasingly critical role in delivering successful projects.
As a provider of Assurance, Testing, Inspection and Certification services, Intertek supports this transition – helping organisations reduce risk, accelerate delivery, and build safety cases that stand up to real-world scrutiny.