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Resilience At Work: Unlocking Performance Through Change and Challenge


16 November 2017 at 8:10 am
Contributor
In the modern workplace, it often feels like uncertainty is the only certainty, writes Mike Hennessy, principal consultant, facilitator, psychologist at J&G Consulting, who has just released his new ThinkPaper; Resilience in the Workplace.


Contributor | 16 November 2017 at 8:10 am


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Resilience At Work: Unlocking Performance Through Change and Challenge
16 November 2017 at 8:10 am

In the modern workplace, it often feels like uncertainty is the only certainty, writes Mike Hennessy, principal consultant, facilitator, psychologist at J&G Consulting, who has just released his new ThinkPaper: Resilience in the Workplace.

Organisations and the environments in which they operate are increasingly characterised by volatility, uncertainty, complexity, and ambiguity (VUCA), and the pace of change in the technical, social, political, market and economic realities of our world means that VUCA is here to stay.

In response to their environment, people in developed economies are now working harder and longer than ever before (and Australians more so than most), placing additional strain on employee wellbeing.

People who work in the ‘caring professions’ (e.g. nursing, allied health, teaching, social and community work) can be at even greater risk of burnout, psychological strain and turnover than their peers in most other professions; they perform emotionally demanding work, often in an environment where funding is tightly constrained and improvements in productivity must be driven by stretching existing resources even further.

Unfortunately, “doing less with more” creates a false economy – people who are struggling to manage their own stress are unlikely to provide the same level of service to their patients and clients as they would if they were managing their stress effectively. Sub-optimal performance creates additional pressure, and so the cycle continues.

In the not-for-profit sector in Australia, the challenges are currently compounded by pervasive market reform such as the implementation of the NDIS, which requires many organisations in the sector to completely transform themselves from top to bottom, and the consolidation of smaller providers under threat of folding in a user-pays environment.

What are the smart organisations doing?

It is impossible for organisations to completely control their operating environment, but they can – at least to a certain degree – influence how their employees respond to the challenges the environment presents.

Resilience is having the skills and capacity to be robust under conditions of strain and change. People who are more resilient don’t merely hope and plan for the best, they acknowledge the impact of negative events and get on with the business of returning to normalcy. And they use these negative events as learning opportunities on the path to bigger and better things.

Resilience enables people to adapt effectively to many of the things that make working in the 21st century a challenging and unique experience. In the workplace this translates into a range of benefits:

Resilience can be grown.

The good news is that humans are a resilient species, and as individuals our resilience is a resource which can be developed through deliberate practice. People who operate with a high level of resilience have generally learned to be flexible, adaptive and how to maintain their motivation at work. This allows them to make quality decisions, maintain mental focus and preserve energy even when the sand shifts beneath their feet.

A growing body of evidence supports the efficacy of targeted resilience-building programs (e.g. workshops, coaching and self-guided practice exercises) in the workplace, particularly for individuals who are at higher risk of stress in the workplace.

Designing your resilience building plan: Where to start.

Resilience is a systemic idea. It can be considered at a whole of organisation level, linked to enterprise risk and strategy, and it also operates at an individual and group level – a group of resilient individuals does not necessarily make a resilient team, so each level needs to be considered somewhat independently.

Focusing on leader resilience is a great place to start; leaders who exhibit personal resilience are in a much better position to role model resilient attitudes and behaviours and weave these into the culture of their teams. It’s also important, in a world where organisations are overwhelmingly busy and executive agendas are crunched, to have a clear plan of attack for progressing your Resilience Building program of work.

Some of the factors and features of resilience that can be measured and developed include:

Caring for those who care for others.

Research spanning diverse industries points consistently to the benefits of resilience, but the results speak loudest for individuals, organisations and industries under particular stress. If there was ever a time for a deliberate focus and targeted investment in workforce resilience within the Australian not-for-profit sector, it is now. When the world around you is changing so rapidly, any investment in your own resilience, and the resilience of your staff and your organisation, is a wise one.

Download the ThinkPaper

Mike Hennessy of J&G Consulting, has just released his new ThinkPaper; Resilience in the workplace – The key to unlock performance during change, which explores the case for building this vital resource in greater detail, and provides a great starting point for resilience conversations in your workplace. You can download it here.




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