How companies – and employees – can avoid a burnout crisis
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[December 27, 2021] By
Chris Taylor
NEW YORK (Reuters) - In a more typical
time, burnout is an exception.
In the era of COVID, it almost feels like the norm.
According to Jennifer Moss, organizations should take a hard look in the
mirror for fostering cultures of overwork that make things worse. The
author, speaker and workplace wellness expert has penned “The Burnout
Epidemic: The Rise of Chronic Stress and How We Can Fix It” to help slam
the brakes on this crisis before we all hit the wall.
Moss spoke with Reuters about making it through the pandemic in one
piece. Edited excerpts are below.
Q: You did some research about how people feel now. What did you find?
A: During COVID'S second wave, we found that only 2% of people rated
their well-being as excellent, and 89% said their work life was getting
worse. We expected that people would be exhausted, working more hours in
the day and losing efficacy.
But we also found that cynicism was really high: People are starting to
feel like they don’t have any control over outcomes. That’s really
dangerous.
Q: How do you define burnout specifically?
A: It's chronic workplace stress left unmanaged. There are six root
causes: An unsustainable workload, perceived lack of control,
insufficient rewards for effort, a lack of a supportive community, a
lack of fairness and mismatched values and skills.
Q: Companies know something serious is going on, so are they doing
enough?
A: Leaders are worried about people leaving, so they have been adding
some well-being strategies to their portfolio. This has put employees
more in the driver’s seat; for instance, we have been seeing many
companies delaying a return to the workplace. Self-care strategies can
be a good thing, but sometimes they are a Band-Aid solution to a much
bigger problem that needs to be managed upstream.
Q: What should companies be doing to prevent burnout?
A: They need to be looking at the root causes of workload. Giving people
a day off is okay, but you also need to reduce your expectations of
productivity.
If you have a culture of overwork, that is not making people more
effective – it’s making them sick. Companies need to give people more
agency about how and when they come back to work, pay people what
they’re worth, compensate them if they’re working extra hours, and make
sure they’re promoting people for the right reasons.
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A man walks inside the mall of a commercial tower at the financial
Central district in Hong Kong, China November 23, 2017.
REUTERS/Bobby Yip
A lack of fairness is a big issue here, because young people feel like there is
no path for them.
Q: What can individuals do to make sure they’re not running on empty?
A: Organizations need to have a huge amount of accountability for burnout, but
employees can be part of the solution, too. We can do a lot of work to identify
whether we’re burning out, like how often we feel exhausted and disengaged and
cynical. Then we need to start to think about pulling back, like taking breaks
every couple of hours, digitally detoxing, going outside, putting on music.
Set boundaries about answering e-mails and manage your clients’ expectations, so
everything doesn’t always seem so urgent.
Q: Leaders get burned out too. How can they manage those feelings?
A: We have never had a collective trauma like this where every single person is
going through it. We are all feeling fear and social anxiety, and the same is
true for leaders.
Have some self-compassion, show transparency with your team and don’t worry
about appearing vulnerable. You’ve got things going on too, and employees can’t
be what they can’t see, so model the behavior. If you’re not taking care of
yourself, you can’t help the team.
Q: Have you dealt with burnout personally?
A: It’s been really hard. We have to give ourselves the space to not be as
effective as we used to be. We’re tired, and nothing about this is normal.
I really did try to follow my own rules and take moments for myself – sitting
outside, reading some fiction, walking my dog in nature.
I knew the only way I was going to get through this in a healthy way for my
kids, was to do this work. And it helped.
Every day, every single one of us should look back at the past year and pat
ourselves on the back and say, ‘I made it.'
(Editing by Lauren Young)
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