How HR Managers Can Create Systems to Address Workplace Burnout
Currently, many professionals put so much emphasis on maintaining work-life balance
The article also cited a 2022 survey result from the US showing similar results: out of 4,000 respondents surveyed, 63 percent said they chose work-life balance over better pay. According to the news story, the COVID-19 pandemic has caused professionals to prioritize their mental health more.
When I asked some of my coworkers how they define work-life balance, they said they implemented this by not replying to work-related text messages outside working hours and during weekends. They all said they did this to prevent burnout
Some of the reasons why burnout has been on the rise starting from the COVID-19 pandemic lockdown are:
–The working from home irony #1: because management kind of knows their employees are at home all the time, they expect their employees to handle more tasks, since they assume that their employees will not do anything else outside the home during the pandemic lockdown situations anyways,
–The working from home irony #2: the remote working situation during the pandemic has also shifted most work-related communications to online platforms like WhatsApp instant messaging services. People tend to be more impatient when they use these instant messaging services, expecting immediate response at any time of the day/of the week, even when the tasks they’re discussing are not urgent. Although now some of us have returned to the office again, this shift into instant message communications driven by the pandemic has pretty much stayed with us.
What is work burnout?
Before we go any further on this topic, let us first define work burnout. Here are a number of burnout symptoms which makes it different from the normal stress we’re facing from time to time in our everyday lives.
What are the causes of work burnout? There are a number of reasons, including toxic workplace environment. However, we will not cover this topic right now. Let’s just assume that your organization is a very healthy one. Still, there are risks for your employees to run into burnout, including:
– Long working hours, which exceed regular working hours / days (this is why my colleagues who say they prefer not to respond to work-related messages outside of the working hours have a point there).
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– Highly demanding projects, which involve lots of things which are beyond employees’ control (for instance, setting too high a financial target in a volatile economy).
– Boring or mind-numbing tasks which do not involve a lot of creativity or intellectual development yet are very energy- and time-consuming (such as responding to customers or stakeholders or just doing rote tasks every day, like just modifying template copies or documents)
So, as you can see, even if you have ensured that your work environment climate is as positive as possible, there are still task-related risk factors that can drive workers into burnout.
Startup company workers can attest to this. Although many startup companies have very relaxed and egalitarian culture (i.e. not toxic at all), its employees are more prone to burnout due to the highly demanding, under-resourced and uncertain nature of startup companies.
As we can imagine, the negative consequences of work burnout will potentially impact organizations negatively. Then, what HR managers can do in order to create a system which helps employees prevent burnout?
– Have regular emotional check-in sessions with your employees
We can learn from a number of big organizations which started to also pay attention to their employees' psychological states from time to time. In these organizations, in addition to checking in with their employees regarding task-related stuff, the managers are also checking in about where they’re at emotionally.
– Set up a Plan B to cover for employees who need to take time off to rest and recover
Some managers in these companies also have a backup strategy regarding task redistribution or reassignment just in case one of their employees gets burned out and needs to take time off work immediately. Some psychologists say that burnout is like having a dehydration. When you are dehydrated, you have to drink water immediately. Likewise, when you notice the signs that you’re on the brink of burnout, you also have to take time off work immediately. Do not wait for a few days, or worse, weeks before you finally take that time off.
– Make sure you give opportunities to your employees to have a say in your company projects
Feeling like one has no control over one’s tasks or work situations is one of the biggest contributors to work burnout. This is why, as an HR manager or leader you need to create an organizational culture which involves employees in decision making related to the projects they’re doing, including incorporating their feedback to make the projects better or workable, since they are the ones who know the project best, inside and out.
– Give your employees an opportunity to grow professionally, creatively or intellectually
There is no worse feeling than that of being stuck in a dead-end job where you just repeat your tasks every time. In fact, feeling stuck in a rut is one of the biggest contributors to job burnout. This is why creative and intellectual stimulation is important for your employees. We know, not all organizations have the budget to send their employees to expensive courses or workshops. But this “professional development program
However, work burnout is a very complex issue. Not all companies have the luxury of reassigning tasks to other employees when one needs to take time off due to burnout, or to stimulate their employees’ creativity.
Now, we’d like to ask your opinion as HR managers: what do you think is the best way to prevent burnout in your workplace, and why?
Tell us in the comment section below! And stay tuned for our upcoming LinkedIn poll on job burnout.