Employee Wellness In The Workplace - This Isn't What You Expect

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  • Опубликовано: 17 июл 2024
  • Telling your employees to get well through nutrition, sleep and exercise and demanding they work extra every day is like telling them to eat cake and only giving them celery. You aren't serious.
    The work environment has a huge impact on wellbeing - particularly asking too much of people.
    Linda Duxbury is Canada's leading expert on employee wellbeing. She's done national studies involving tens of thousands of people. She has a lot to say on the subject and it does not include telling employees to get more sleep. As the video below says, she refuses employers who want her to talk to employees. She wants to talk to the EMPLOYER.
    And she cleared up some things for me:
    ❌ Unequivocally, time at work or in front of a computer is a terrible measure of productivity.
    ⤵ Productivity rises, plateaus and falls. The point at which it starts to fall depends on the person and the demands on their time.
    🧐 To truly improve wellbeing, employers need to consider the demand they put on their employees.
    📣 We need to stop paying so much attention remote workers who want to stay remote or hybrid. We need to pay attention to all the the people who have to show up in person. Their morale post pandemic is terrible.
    This should be required content. The amount of insight... 😯
    0:00 Intro
    0:58 What she means by 'wellbeing'
    2:01 The impact of personal factors
    3:06 What can an employer influence?
    6:18 Impact on the bottom line
    9:01 Productivity and the bottom-line
    12:11 Myths about employee wellbeing
    14:18 Who has responsibility
    17:22 Employee wellbeing post-pandemic
    22:32 Advice to employers re flexible work
    As she said during the interview, Linda doesn't really do social media but you can find her by googling!
    Find me (Andrea) at www.thehrhub.ca. I'm an HR consultant as well as RUclipsr and provide a wide range of consulting support.

Комментарии • 13

  • @mapitsithamaga-xn3oi
    @mapitsithamaga-xn3oi 16 дней назад +1

    I am having 2 interviews lined up in this area and i found this video helpful not only in my preparation but also to my personal life on focusing on my welbeing

    • @hrhubtalk
      @hrhubtalk  9 дней назад

      That's fantastic! I hope you did well!

  • @loriallison1786
    @loriallison1786 Год назад +1

    Love your new look! Thanks for great HR content.

    • @hrhubtalk
      @hrhubtalk  Год назад

      Thank Lori! I dressed up for this one. LOL Maybe I should more often? Also took a new bank of thumbnail photos.

  • @fizzagmm
    @fizzagmm 4 месяца назад +1

    Love the videos, highly resonating especially as an HR professional. Can you call over an industry professional explaining if CHRP is essential when you have extensive work experience under your belt and perform well with HR? How far does licensing signify your credibility and worth in the industry?

    • @hrhubtalk
      @hrhubtalk  4 месяца назад

      Hi Fizzamemon. I might attempt, sometime, to confront this head on. I did do an episode on it 3 years ago with the head of CPHR AB. He was fairly balanced, but he doesn't represent industry. He doesn't represent hiring managers in HR.
      It's a question I am asked fairly frequently. Certainly you don't require it to get a job. Once you're in an organization, it's unlikely to be more than a minor factor in promotions. But for some careers, it's more valuable. It can make you stand out when you're applying for jobs. It also forces you to do continuing education when you might not without the extra motivation. But it isn'tg cheap and the effort to get it is considerable... hours and hours. There are lots of tradeoffs! I'll tell you this: I wish I had not let mine lapse because re-qualifying has been sooo much work. :)

    • @fizzagmm
      @fizzagmm 4 месяца назад +1

      A very comprehensive response. This has left me with more clarity in terms of CHRP for personal consideration. Thanks a bunch. 🙂

    • @hrhubtalk
      @hrhubtalk  4 месяца назад +1

      @@fizzagmm Thanks for the question. I always want to know what questions I could answer.

  • @charlieestey138
    @charlieestey138 5 дней назад +1

    Dr. Duxbury is an expert in her field. However, the title of this session is misleading. It avoids sharing best practices to help small to large employers plan, promote and execute an employee wellness (health and wellbeing) strategy that meets the specific needs of the employees and the sponsoring employers. A more appropriate title for this interview might convey Change Management, Training Supervisors and Managers to Impact Absence and Productivity, Job Crafting, Leadership Training & Development, Enhancing Human Capital Benefits or Creating Cultures of Success and Wellbeing. These discussions often shade the merits of a comprehensive employee wellbeing program ("employee wellness doesn't work") when the discussion is led by experts in the functioanl areas outlined above.

    • @hrhubtalk
      @hrhubtalk  День назад

      Hi Charlie. Thanks for the thoughtful critique. My take isn't the same. I was interested in all the things you are talking about, but she squarely put more responsibility for wellness on the shoulders of employer practices. That is in a basic sense of work quality and quantity. So wellness programs are not going to be helpful if the work is poorly structured, employees are overworked, managers are jerks etc. I thought it was a great reminder of not using wellness programs as 'lipstick on a pig.' If anyone has a different take, I'm interested.

    • @charlieestey138
      @charlieestey138 13 часов назад +1

      @@hrhubtalk Thank you for your reply. I agree with the need for enhanced work structure policies and practices (which is the responsibility of the CFO/HR/Benefits leadership). However, the session title and the narrative shades the good work results-focused and comprehensive (not "check the box" models) employer health and wellbeing delivers. Thank you for your commitment to positive work structures and enhancing employee wellness.

    • @hrhubtalk
      @hrhubtalk  9 часов назад

      @@charlieestey138 No shade intended for those employers or programs who are really trying at both the programs and the systemic factors driving a lack of wellness! No one is going to get it perfect, keep trying!

  • @andrewt7607
    @andrewt7607 Год назад

    💯 *promo sm*