We all know that stress
levels in the workplace are reaching unreasonable levels. And most sensible
human beings will agree that we have to take action to fix this problem.
However, some
government agencies and, I must say, some consultants are all for creating yet
another paper and theoretical exercise that will have little benefit to the
employees or the business. Managers don't need lectures on how too much stress
diminishes people's creativity and productivity, increases absenteeism,
extended sick leave and can result in tribunal payouts of tens or hundreds of
thousands of pounds. Managers want assistance not lectures.
Do whatever you can to
escape the form filling that supposed ensure you meet certain "stress
management standards". Avoid like the plague what are now being called
"stress risk assessments". These will require the resources of a full
time employee and lead to even more stress!
Rather concentrate on
straightforward and easily applied measures to reduce stress and at the same
time show employees and regulatory authorities and legal courts that your
organisation does stake stress seriously.
Here are just ten you
could start with.
1. Ensure your Employee Handbook and Induction has
plenty of wording in it that shows that management knows about the adverse
effects of too much stress. Explain what
people must do if they feel under stress. Go over the top to show that
management wants and welcomes discussion reporting of excess stress. Who ever
is giving the induction must state this orally too.
2. Have a clear, written and concise procedure that people can follow if they find stress getting
out of hand. What can people do if they feel under stress? Who should they
speak to? What do they do if it's their boss who is the cause of stress? What
help can the business offer? Make sure employees know they also have a
responsibility to look after their physical and mental health.
3. Give people clear job descriptions so they know what is required of them and revisit
the description every six months to update them. You can do this in the annual
or (better) twice-yearly appraisal Involve people in writing and re-negotiating
job descriptions. Specifically ask about what can be done to reduce stress and
record the answer.
4. Keep referring to stress in newsletters, speeches
and meetings. Put stress reduction
on the agenda of management meetings and have a set section in the newsletter.
Senior managers should include a mention of stress in at least one speech per
year.
5. Offer people-management/leadership workshops to
managers and supervisors. Many of them
don't know how to get the best from their people. Unnecessary tension is caused
by ignorance of how to speak to and treat people effectively in the modern
workplace. Often supervisors don't know they're a source of stress - nobody
tells them. Keep it simple: one day is enough and avoid "models and
theories of leadership"!
6. Offer stress management workshops and literature. Even if there are no current stress problems offer
the workshops anyway. Even insist people go. Keep it simple - a half-day is
enough and avoid all theory! Give people a book or CD on stress management as
part of the induction.
7. Offer a time management workshop. It's amazing how people can take better control
when they know it's okay to say "no", to scrap a meeting, to scrap a
report, to cut short appointments and to find better, quicker less burdensome
ways of doing things. Most people get bogged down because they don't think in
terms of time management and even when they do, some are too afraid to approach
the boss. They will think you'll think, they're lazy or uncooperative.
8. Monitor stress levels.
No, you don't need an
80-question stress climate survey or bureaucratic stress management standards.
Just twice a year issue a half-page with one question: "For you personally
give three things the organisation could do to reduce unreasonable
stress". Make this an anonymous exercise and publish the results with
actions taken.
9. Take time to listen and act. If a stress issue is raised, be seen to be taking
it seriously. Make time to listen, document the issues and then take action.
Whilst keeping confidences publicise what action has been taken.
10. Unfortunately, sooner or later you'll have to prove
to some authority that you are doing things to combat unreasonable stress. Therefore keep a running and up-to-date record -
just a simple book - of all the things your organisation is doing to reduce
stress in the workplace. Record everything. For example, if you run a
Recruitment Interviewing Course, record how you amended the content to include
an hour or so on testing to see if candidates can cope with the stress of a
particular job.
Debate about what
stress is, the relative responsibilities of employers and employees and what
systems to use will go on and on. You might as well just get on and do what
commonsense and good leadership dictates.
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Dear Daniello,
ReplyDeleteThank you for your comment.
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