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Preventing Employee Burnout In The Workplace

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Work Space

Burnout according to google is a form of exhaustion caused by constantly feeling swamped. It is a result of excessive and prolonged emotional, physical and mental stress. In many cases, burnout is related to one’s job.

In the workplace, it only occurs when an employee is overwhelmed with excess workload, or exhausted from the completion of a tedious task, which leaves them physically and emotionally drained. It becomes very difficult for them to keep up with the incessant demands of their employers as well as the demands of the workplace.

It is important to note that no organization grows when the team members constantly face burnout, because it lowers productivity, leads to lack of concentration, health decline, etc. One of the major causes of burnout in the workplace is work overload.

Among other causes, burnout can result from an inflexible schedule, unrealistic deadlines, unfair treatment. Managers must understand that an employee experiencing work burnout cannot perform well on the job. It will no doubt stifle the growth of the organization.

It is interesting to note that work burnout does not only affect employers, but also the organization, because a company can risk losing their competent and talented staff members. Due to how effective they are in the workplace, most employers tend to give so many tasks to their best team members, at the detriment of their well being.

Managers must come to the understanding that employees are humans and not robots, as some of the team members are likely to fail to deliver on a given task or fail to meet expectations, not because they are not effective, but as a result of too much workload.

Therefore, employers must see the need to withdraw certain tasks to avoid overwhelming their team members. One strategy often used by managers who do everything to ensure that the team members do not face burn out, is to provide them with paid time off.

However, here are four (4) ways on how employers can prevent staff burnout;

1.) Maintain A Flexible Schedule: Employers must ensure that team members are given flexible schedules in the workplace. For instance, there shouldn’t be back to back meetings and work execution that won’t give them time to rest or replenish their energy. Team members should have a place for rest in their work schedule, and not always constantly loaded with work as it will lead to burnout. There should be a flexible workplace schedule that accommodates their individual schedules most especially outside the workplace.

2.) Taking Note Of Excess Workload: Managers must ensure that employees are not unnecessarily tasked with unreasonable workloads. While workloads might be sometimes necessary, probably due to meeting deadlines, however, it shouldn’t be a regular thing. Managers must take note of workload being given to team members, and carefully observe if it is too much for them to handle. Once they notice that their team members are overwhelmed with the task, it is ideal that they take off certain tasks.

3.) Offer Employees Time Off: Employers must see the need to give employees time off from work, where they can go on a vacation or rest from a hectic work period. The time off could be for a week, month, year, depending on what the manager decides. Time off gives team members the chance to reset and recharge which will no doubt see them resume at the workplace rejuvenated.

4.) Encourage Feedback: Though this can sometimes be uncomfortable and challenging on the part of the team members, feedback, positive, constructive or negative allows them to express their concerns over something they are not cool with. When a company has a workplace structure that encourages feedback, employers can get to know when any member of the team is faced with burnout.

Final Thoughts

No organization thrives when a large percentage of their team members are faced with burnout probably due to excessive workload. One negative impact is that it stifles the organization’s growth which also affects their revenue, because tired workers can’t give their best.

Therefore, it is pertinent for managers to deploy measures to eliminate work burnout from it’s team members, because once these measures are put in place and strictly adhered to, it will no doubt improve productivity in the workplace and encourage staff retention. The company’s revenue will also experience high turnover.

I am for remote work. I am also for onsite. Find what works for you.

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Elon Musk is his generation’s finest innovator, but on this one, he may not be providing a template for everyone to copy blindly. Yes, that Elon has said it does not mean it is the best model. My position is simple: market systems are different, and you need to check what works for your business.

Remote work offers many advantages because of the improving marginal cost efficiency which makes it easier to tap talent from anywhere on earth.

But that does not mean that if your business is on the quasi-industrial age type (making cars) that factory workers will not revolt if “soft” colleagues are at home working. To maintain equilibrium, HR might have told Elon to pause remote work. Do not follow blindly.

I am for remote work. I am also for onsite. Find what works for you.

Elon Musk has reportedly told Tesla employees that they must put in a minimum of 40 hours per week in the office if they also wish to do remote work.

“If there are particularly exceptional contributors for whom this is impossible, I will review and approve those exceptions directly,” he wrote, according to the screenshot, which was shared on Twitter.

Comment on LinkedIn Feed

Comment 1: It depends on nature of work and culture, not every job makes sense remotely. There are things that happen when people are in a room trying to figure out what works, trying to replicate same remotely is a joke. For elite and experienced employees, remote can get things done, but for others, expect inefficiencies and frustration at intervals.

Comment 2: Remote work was not designed for the kind of work we do here in nigeria. But every organization will choose which option will be favourable to them.

BusinessDay + Tekedia Institute = HUGE PROFIT for your company; Register for Tekedia Mini-MBA

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I begin my Nigerian day with BusinessDay. It is Africa’s finest business journalism. It brings the cases  live, and prepares me for the market day. You have your team; you want them to be knowledge-ready, on business frameworks/models and market news.

Tekedia Mini-MBA provides world-class business education (the frameworks and models). BusinessDay provides the news and leading practical fresh perspectives. You get both when you register for the next edition of Tekedia Mini-MBA which begins June 6 here: https://businessday.ng/tekedia/

(Once you register, you will get access to BusinessDay online portal and the team will send your email to Tekedia for login to the course. Companies, speak with Ihaza Anthonia of BusinessDay to guide you).

BusinessDay + Tekedia Institute = HUGE PROFIT for your company

Have a Vision and a Plan – And Become A Legend in Markets

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“You must have a vision, and not just a vision; you must have a plan that would make you fulfil that vision.” – Aliko Dangote

A trader like others. But he had a Vision and a plan. And over time, he has built Africa’s leading industrialized conglomerate. “The Dangote System: Techniques for Building Conglomerates” will explain to you how great category-king companies are built, from Amazon to IBM, Dangote Industries to Apple, etc. It is about accumulating capabilities, and compounding them, to fix market frictions at the upstream where few players can participate.

Begin reading the book the critics wrote “a revelation on making legends out of ordinary men”. It has been updated; start here.

 

Nigeria’s Internet Population Increases By 108%

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The Nigerian Communications Commission (NCC) has disclosed that, according to available data within its reach, Nigerians with access to fast Internet had grown by 108.39 per cent in four years.

The commission’s portal revealed that broadband penetration increased from 38.72 million (20.28 per cent) in March 2018 to 80.68 million (42.27 per cent) in March 2022.

According to the ‘Nigerian National Broadband Plan (2020 – 2025),’ broadband commonly refers to high-speed Internet connection.

It added that broadband penetration was measured by the number of broadband subscribers per 100 inhabitants.

In the broadband plan document, the President, Muhammadu Buhari, was quoted as saying, “I am told that every 10 per cent increase in broadband penetration results in about 2.6 per cent to 3.8 per cent growth in GDP.”

According to data from the NCC’s portal, the contribution of the telecoms industry to GDP increased from 9.19 per cent in Q1 2018 to 12.61 per cent in Q4 2021.

The broadband plan intends to effectively cover 90 per cent of the population and deliver 25 Mbps in urban areas, and 10 Mbps in rural areas.

It added, “Rapid rollout of broadband services will address various socio-economic challenges faced by the country, including the need to grow its economy, create jobs, rapidly expand the tax base, and improve digital literacy and educational standards.

“This will also address identity management and security challenges through the effective use of technology, increase financial inclusion and deliver a broad range of services to its people to improve the quality of life and work towards attainment of Social Development Goals set by the UN for 2030.”

It further stated that a 4G LTE network was needed to achieve the kind of download speeds Nigerians need.

When the broadband plan was released, most of the Internet service in the country was reportedly on 2G and 4G. It said, “Internet services in the country are currently provided on 2G, 3G, and increasingly 4G mobile networks.

“However, though 4G coverage is available to 37 per cent of the population, download speeds in the country are noted to be generally uncompetitive with other countries in the same income bracket.”

According to the plan, it costs $3.5 – $5bn to achieve its aim. Much of the growth in broadband penetration is being driven by telecommunication firms.

In their recent earnings reports, MTN Nigeria Communications Plc. and Airtel Africa disclosed that they invested a combined N208.56bn in the Fourth-Generation (4G) network and others in the first quarter of 2022.

MTN also disclosed that 4G, which implies faster Internet, now accounts for 76 per cent of its data traffic and covers about 72 per cent of the population. Airtel added that 99 percent of its sites in Nigeria now had 4G capabilities.

According to the World Bank, a 10 per cent increase in mobile broadband penetration could lead to about a 2.46 per cent growth in Africa.

This is also a clarion call to the government to tighten regulations in the telecom sector, so consumers would acquire the exact services of what they are paying for. This would definitely encourage more access to the internet on a regular basis, thereby boosting the country’s economic worth.

Hence, the existing policies are required to be reviewed and updated for greater efficiency.