About RAMSGen
Military analysis for construction H&S
RAMSGen was built by Dylan Squires, a former Royal Engineers Captain, to raise the quality of H&S documentation in UK construction. The product exists for one reason: better safe systems of work, so site teams can crack on and go home in one piece.
Why RAMS?
My time in the army was dominated by two things — writing safe systems of work, and reviewing them. As a commissioned officer I held a moral and legal duty to make sure every operation and training serial was carried out as safely as the activity allowed. High-risk work doesn't excuse loose paperwork; it demands the opposite.
RAMSGen is what happens when you take that discipline, apply modern AI, and combine it with the knowledge of the contractors actually using the system day to day.
RAMS have become a de facto legal asset on UK sites, and getting them right is one of the few things that moves all three numbers that matter to a UK construction business at once: safer sites, better margins, more work won. Safer because the document actually reflects the hazards on the ground. Better margins because nothing's stuck waiting on a rejected RAMS, and the team isn't writing them on Sunday evenings. More work won because clients trust contractors whose documents land right first time.
Get the RAMS wrong and all three break.
Built for the work that doesn't fit a template
Plenty of tools will let you generate a RAMS. Most are no better than a generic template, or five minutes with ChatGPT. RAMSGen is built for the jobs where that approach falls over — civils, demolition, services, anything with real consequences if the document is wrong.
What I've built
RAMSGen is built in Wales, and used by contractors across the UK. If you've got feedback on a document, a hazard we've missed, or a feature you want — it comes straight to me. That's the one real advantage of a small company over the bigger players, and I intend to keep it.