Employee burnout and workplace stress are major issues. Many employees are exhausted and find it challenging to stay engaged with work. They feel frustrated and hopeless, as if there is no longer any purpose or meaning in their work and that any effort they put into it is inadequate.
And the pace isn’t slowing down.
Job burnout is an employee’s response to emotional and work-related stress. The WHO recognises it as an “occupational phenomenon” that has three major components:
1. Emotional exhaustion
Emotional exhaustion is characterised as the state of feeling worn out, drained, and powerless as a result of accumulated stress. People may experience it differently, but symptoms generally include trouble sleeping, irritability, lack of motivation, absentmindedness, and apathy. Employers may notice changes in job performance, such as failure to meet deadlines, absences, and a high turnover rate.
2. Depersonalisation
Depersonalisation happens when employees begin distancing themselves from the people they work with as a coping strategy to deal with overwhelming emotional exhaustion. It is a feeling of cynicism and pessimism as if they are cut off or separated and unable to interact with work and their co-workers.
3. Loss of professional efficacy
Decreased efficacy occurs when employees feel they aren’t accomplishing as much at work as they used to. This could be a result of micromanaging, where the employee feels like they are constantly being reviewed, which can lead them to feel like they are not capable in their roles.
Long hours with little to no time off
Dreadful commutes or work-from-home environments
Getting less than the recommended seven to eight hours of sleep
Micromanaging and a lack of trust or autonomy
Unfair treatment, such as bias, favouritism, unfair compensation or corporate policies
Out-of-control workload
Lack of role clarity where accountability and expectations shift
Lack of communication and support from management
Unreasonable time pressures
Workplace burnout can trigger a downward spiral in individual and organisational performance. Burned-out employees are more likely to take a sick day and 2.6 times as likely to seek a different job actively. And even if they stay, they typically have lower confidence in their performance and are half as likely to discuss how to approach performance goals with their manager.
Burned-out employees are also more likely to visit the emergency room. With stress comes unhealthy lifestyle choices that lead to obesity, diabetes, hypertension, heart disease, and other chronic conditions. This costs employers millions in healthcare, absenteeism (employees taking unaccounted-for leaves), presenteeism (employees showing up to work but are unable to be productive), and poor performance annually.
While burnout is an individual employee’s response to emotional and work-related stress, it has external causes. “Hustle culture” and “busyness” as badges of honour have led to late nights, weekend work, and an inability to manage stress properly. Instead of finding ways to eliminate or reduce stress in the workplace, organisations need to find solutions to build their employees' mental and emotional resilience skills.
Here’s how:
Identify the issues that exist
Take employee workload and work-life balance concerns seriously. Understanding individual challenges will lead to discussing personalised solutions. Encouraging employees to self-check in with a reliable mental health assessment like DASS-21 can help pinpoint the level of support needed.
Create a safe environment
Employees experiencing burnout tend to think it is a personal weakness that they cannot keep up. Prioritising mental health, removing the stigma, and enabling employees to discuss work concerns and stressors without fear of retaliation are essential in creating a safe environment.
Re-examine wellness programmes
Building healthy habits is key to combating burnout. Digital wellness programme providers like Naluri can help employers reach more employees at the employees’ convenience and help individuals with resilience skills, lifestyle choices, and emotion regulation that interrupt the cycles of anxiety and fear that stem from burnout.
Enable a healthy workplace
Encouraging employees to rest, take paid time off, and work reasonable hours will convey that employee well-being is important to the organisation. Communicating this and implementing it fairly to all levels of employees is crucial.
Employee expectations are changing. Being able to manage a healthy work-life balance is more important than ever, even more so than compensation and benefits. Organisations need to acknowledge the importance of employee well-being to curb the impacts of stress and burnout in the workplace.
For more info on how your employees can benefit from one of Naluri's programmes, email hello@naluri.life.