The Leadership Challenge of our time: My Top 10 observations and insights
Audrey McGibbon
Chartered Occupational & Coaching Psychologist, Executive Coach & Wellbeing Expert | Enabling sustainable high performance for organisations, leaders and their people
Managing the psychosocial health and wellbeing of employees is a complex, adaptive, and emergent leadership challenge. In fact, I believe it’s the leadership challenge of our time.??
Why? Because unlike other leadership challenges, it’s a tricky, Rubix-cube of a challenge that doesn’t sit neatly under one area of the business.?Rather, it sits at the intersection of leadership, culture and business operations and responding to it requires a strategic perspective that starts with a multi-stakeholder commitment that psychosocial health and wellbeing in the workplace is a shared responsibility.?Every employee, team, leader and the system itself (job design, culture, systems, processes) all play a vital role.??
It’s a challenge that’s owned by no-one and everyone.?
And it certainly shouldn’t sit in the realm of Health & Safety….all by itself, alone and unloved by the rest of P&C, Risk and Finance.
It's complex work that is generating a lot of noise and confusion.?Not only because the subject matter is complex in and of itself to get your head around - after all we’re talking about the dynamic interplay of individual psychobiology combined with a multitude of external forces that impact wellbeing and performance.?
But the noise triggered by the impending regulatory changes for managing workplace psychological health, has ensured that attention is now being paid at the highest leadership levels, where potential governance, compliance and risk exposure flags have been raised.?Questions are being asked and the answers are not clear cut.
One thing is for sure - the challenge goes well beyond risk identification and requires a strategy which actively promotes thriving.??
This isn’t possible to achieve without lifting the conversation up and outside of a technical and regulatory Health & Safety perspective and integrating with leadership and culture.?
?So what should an integrated approach to workplace mental health and wellbeing look like and what is required for forward momentum and success??I’ve summarised my top 10 observations and insights:
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2.??? Managing the psychosocial health and wellbeing of employees is a complex, adaptive and emergent leadership challenge.
3.??? It's important to resist pressure to provide populist, simple, and immediate technical solutions to complex long-term and systemic needs. Emerging business challenges directly associated with impact on mental health and wellbeing include:
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4.??? It is essential to adopt a multi-stakeholder approach to outlining who is responsible for employee wellbeing. For example, our T.O.I.L.S framework provides guidance for Teams, Organisations, Individuals, Leaders, and Society/Systems.
5.?????Essential everyday leadership actions should include:
This allows leaders to create a positive leadership ‘wellbeing’ shadow. This also creates intentionality around what leaders say, do, prioritise, and measure — in order to positively promote their own wellbeing and their employees’ wellbeing.??
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6. ?? Leaders are required to take a balanced consideration of all factors impacting psychosocial health and wellbeing. This includes managing the interplay between ‘seed and soil’.
Seed: recognise that individual psychobiology (genes, habits, and lifestyle) is accountable for approximately 30% of the factors at play influencing one’s wellbeing at work.?
Soil: also consider the numerous factors at play from the system:
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7.??? An integrated approach to mental health and wellbeing in the workplace means leaders taking ownership of creating and embedding processes:?
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8.???? Regulations are moving rapidly towards an organisational requirement to:?
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9.??? GLWS leader wellbeing data shows a downward trend in overall wellbeing and work-related wellbeing levels for leaders.?There is a perverse irony of increased pressures and accountabilities on leaders to care for their people’s wellbeing, whilst they themselves are struggling.??
Recognising that Leaders are part of the problem AND the solution, the GLWS approach is to help them LEARN, LIVE, LEAD, and EMBED better mental health and wellbeing practices for the benefit of all employees.?
The GLWS assessment and reporting system is recommended to identify, assess, develop, and monitor leaders’ wellbeing needs and challenges at the individual level, and aggregated collectively to meet organisational needs.??
?10.???? Key points when considering your approach to employee psychosocial wellbeing assessment include:?
?And a bonus insight about Gender…?
??? Leader wellbeing, in general, has seen a decline over the past few years. But specifically, the adverse impact on senior women, due to factors associated with the pandemic and hybrid working patterns is now evident.
I’d love to hear your comments and insights to this emerging leadership challenge.?What are you seeing and hearing in your organisation or from your clients???
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2 年This is very insightful and interesting at the same time.
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2 年I wrote about a Chief Wellness Officer roles almost 2 years ago with full deck and job description
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2 年really insightful thankyou Audrey McGibbon
Helping people minimise the pain of leadership by liberating their confidence and competence with The Big 5 Leadership Principles | Chief Meaning Officer | Leadership Development | Executive Coach | Boutique Consultancy
2 年Great post Audrey McGibbon. My observations have been varied, depending on position and industry. Obviously, the organisational culture has a huge impact also. Certainly I see a greater representation at each end of the spectrum between workaholic and burnout/disengaged employees, with a lot of people just hanging on in the middle somewhere…I certainly agree with your theme wholeheartedly. Thanks for posting
Chartered Psychologist | Executive Coach | Award-Winning Published Author | Facilitator
2 年Thank you Audrey - this is a brilliant and important reflection on this absolutely critical issue for leaders and organisations to face into and explore adaptively. Understanding the need to tackle this as an adaptive (rather than a technical) challenge is fundamental to enabling any kind of real or lasting change.