Mental Health Awareness Week – why improving culture supports employee wellbeing

Mental Health Awareness Week – why improving culture supports employee wellbeing

 

Olivia Fahy, Head of Culture at TCC, said: “Mental Health Awareness Week has particular resonance after a year when the pandemic has taken a heavy toll on wellbeing for many of us. Although the easing of government restrictions means that we can gradually return to the office, employers need to be aware that work life won’t just go back to normal. Many employees will still be battling loneliness, anxiety and stress built up over the months of lockdown, and the new world of hybrid working is likely to create its own stressors too. Employers will need work hard to identify the fault lines and develop a positive, fair, and nurturing culture if they are to survive and thrive in the post-Covid world. With the FCA considering failure to do so a business risk, it’s in the best interests of FS firms to prioritise culture.”  

In light of Mental Health Awareness Week, Olivia Fahy shares her advice for businesses to improve culture and focus on employee wellbeing, especially in a hybrid working world:

Get employee insight

While businesses will be getting plans in place to return to the office, many companies have already committed to an array of flexible working policies, establishing remote working as a permanent feature. But for this to be a success, it’s important that employers get a sense of what their employees really want and need from these policies and how it will impact them. Getting that employee insight is key, so that organisations put policies in place that address the true needs of employees, rather than the business’ perception of what is needed. What policies do parents need to support them with childcare? Do employees believe flexible working will genuinely be encouraged, or will it just become lip service as life returns to normal? How can a good work-life balance be encouraged? Surveys are a good way to gather information from employees on what will actually benefit them going forward.

Maintain good culture through hard times

The onset of the pandemic put businesses into crisis mode as they focused on immediately adapting to remote working. There was a concern that culture would fall to the bottom of the agenda but, instead, many organisations saw the valuable role that it can play in shaping the right behaviours in a virtual environment, and embraced the opportunity to flatten hierarchies and build more collaborative work environments. It’s important that businesses continue to focus on driving healthy cultures as we move out of lockdown. Countless recent reports have shown that homeworking has taken its toll, with the fusion of work and home life leading to increased hours, work-related stress, and exhaustion. As a result, large UK businesses are taking steps to address working from home fatigue and burnout, with the likes of HSBC recently offering Zoom-free Fridays for all staff. While economic hardship makes it challenging to focus on culture, healthy culture improves productivity, retention, and it can lead to better business performance too.

Foster psychological safety

Psychological safety means team members feel free to express their ideas and opinions without fear of embarrassment or punishment. It is a key element of an inclusive culture and allows diversity of thought to flourish. As working norms shift and the workplace continues to be decentralised, it’s vital that all employees feel they can share ideas, questions and concerns and vital that they are listened to. A younger woman of colour might surface a different insight to that of an older white man, for example, and it could be the difference between identifying a risk before it crystallises and only spotting it when it’s too late. Creating the conditions for psychological safety can also lead to greater innovation, new ideas and better problem-solving, so it’s worthwhile for businesses.

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