Stress: A Stealer of Productivity.
John Thalheimer
Award-Winning Consultant | Dynamic Workshop Facilitator | Podcast Host | Best-Selling Author | Empowering Leaders to Create Thriving Workplaces
“I’m exhausted,” were the first words out of his mouth as he walked into the conference room. He wasn’t the first person this week to express this sentiment. In fact, if I am honest, I, too, am tired.
In the workplace, we have been asked to deal with changing environments due to the pandemic. We have been asked to do more with staffing shortages getting worse. We have been asked to meet increased demand for our products or services. And we are dealing with more life stress than usual.
It is no wonder we are all stressed.
Stress isn’t a bad thing. Stress evolved to heighten our senses and to help us make better decisions in the moment. However, chronic stress is a bad thing. It can lead to physical, mental, and emotional diseases. It can damage our relationships with our loved ones. It can reduce our productivity at work.
Burnout:
The World Health Organization has acknowledged that burnout is chronic workplace stress that hasn’t been well managed, characterized by feelings of physical, mental, and emotional exhaustion, decreased connection from one’s job, and reduced professional effectiveness. Does this sound like you?
What causes burnout in the workplace?
Many factors could cause burnout in the workplace, but let’s talk about how stress works before we get into that. According to the American Psychological Association, “Stress is a normal reaction to everyday pressure.” Stress is our body’s natural physical and mental response to a situation that we perceive to have personal significance or overwhelming to us. When our body and mind have continuous stress placed on it, either physical, mentally, or emotionally it causes us to use coping mechanisms to deal with it. In the short term, it may elevate our performance. In the long term, it causes burnout.
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So, let’s look at the factors that might cause chronic stress in the workplace.
Notice in this list that there are both outward pressures, like working in a high-paced environment, and inward pressures, like the need to be constantly in control at work. More often than not, stress comes from our perception of the situation (inward pressure) versus the actual situation (outward pressure).
So, what can we do to reduce the level of burnout in our workplace?
Teamwork:
Because I work with managers, supervisors, and team leads, I spend time helping them better deal with stress because I know that if they are calm, they will make better decisions when working with their teams. And if the leader of the group can see the benefit in reducing stress, then the whole team is more likely to work to reduce stress.
What are you doing to show your team the importance of reducing stress in the workplace?