As we marked World Mental Health Day on Sunday, 10 October, we also faced the prospect of numerous employees returning to the office ill-prepared.
The pandemic reality has placed enormous pressure on mental well-being, but also heightened awareness and support to build and maintain mental well-being among employees.
“It is possible to stay well by continuously building on this in small, consistent ways,” says Andile Rapiya, COO for human capital and communications at Pan-African professional real-estate services provider Broll Property Group.
She says employees can best maintain a work-life balance by, firstly, being aware of the quality of their own mental well-being and, secondly, the impact of work-life interaction on this.
“Increased awareness comes about by opening up about it and obtaining and sharing information on the topic,” says Rapiya.
Therefore, it is important for employees to educate themselves from trustworthy sources other than social media. Engage with professionals to assist you if you or people close to you have concerns about your mental well-being. Do not take mental well-being for granted. Work at it constantly by maintaining some basic essentials such as sleeping well, moving enough, eating in a balanced and nutritious way, quieting your mind regularly, maintaining supporting interpersonal relationships on a personal and work basis, and being open to learning new things.
An example of such a mental well-being initiative is a Core Series of motivational and inspirational webinars launched by Broll in July to help its employees navigate the pandemic reality.
“We had a combination of teams working from home and the office. The various lockdown levels meant that most teams effectively had hybrid working models in place already. However, the pressure of the past 18 months was certainly the same for all of us, and we needed to ensure our employees were strengthening their personal core.”
“Strengthening the core” is a key theme of Broll’s five-year strategy launched by group CEO Malcolm Horne earlier this year. The Core Series speaks directly to employee well-being, a strategic priority of the human capital cluster within Broll. It was designed with the aim of shoring up employees’ mental reserves with a focus on mental wellness, emotional resilience, financial well-being and healthy productivity. Weekly Zoom sessions were hosted by an invited speaker, respected in their field, to address the topic of the week.
Topics were selected by means of surveys to gauge what main concerns employees had in both their work and personal situations, and how they were coping, staying alert and well in the face of the ongoing challenges posed by the pandemic. An Inner Core Zoom workshop was held every second Thursday, where the Broll leadership discussed that week’s topic and how best to equip their teams with the necessary skills to remain resilient. The overwhelmingly positive response to the 12-week series has resulted in it being extended to December.
“We just do not realise the extent of the physical and psychological impact that has been exerted on employees since March last year,” says Rapiya. “People have lost loved ones, friends, livelihoods, jobs. The fact that Broll has maintained business continuity throughout the course of the pandemic is testament to the true core strength of … our most important asset, which is our people.”
The aftermath of extended working from home (WFH) is only surfacing now after a prolonged period of disengagement from the office and colleagues, leading to a debate about how to develop workplace strategies for the future.
For example, a way forward is to look at having access to a workplace “away from home” as encouraging the uptake of potential “third spaces” that sit between work and home. These include coffee shops and meetings out of the office. In essence, providing employees with the choice to work from anywhere, and not only from home, stands to enhance mental health significantly.
Mental health issues such as anxiety can cause employees to lose concentration, making it difficult to prioritise and carry out day-to-day activities. Employees’ stamina is also affected, meaning it is a constant battle to meet deadlines and remain productive. “
There are also top-down policy changes that may benefit a workforce, such as introducing an element of flexi-time into WFH so that employees can still get sufficient exercise and attend to their personal day-to-day tasks, and completing a full day of work. Here WFH options can vary from a full move to a home office or only one or two days per week.
The key to understanding the future workplace and way of working is that it needs to remain flexible. A hybrid way of working, in essence, allows employees to work from anywhere in an organic and or structured manner, keeping the workplace open, collaborative and multi-functional. The workplace should be able to adapt and evolve continuously and not create a new static norm. For example, workplace performance can be improved by designing for access to natural light for all employees, improving the air quality and temperature control, encouraging movement in and around the office, providing ergonomic furniture in a variety of work settings and providing mentorship and coaching.
What has emerged recently as the national vaccination programme gains momentum, and there is renewed talk of a return to the office, is a clear understanding that the workplace is not only a place of work. It is a place of collaboration.
“Organisations will never be able to go back to the way things were before March 2020,” says Rapiya. “Therefore, employers and employees have forged a new way of working that brings with it the benefits of flexibility and autonomy. We should leverage these advantages to build employee engagement and well-being, while managing and leading in a way that mitigates any disadvantages, such as loneliness and distraction.”