The Science of Happy Employees: What it takes to have a psychosocially safe workplace with happy and productive employees
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About this ebook
Given changing expectations around workplace conditions, especially in terms of psychosocial safety, as a business leader you must now prioritise the impact of the workplace on your employees' mental health. However, it can be difficult to discern how your employees are coping when they often remain silent until it's too late. It is impractical
Dr Brenda Jamnik
Dr Brenda Jamnik is a renowned leadership specialist who has been recognised with multiple business awards. She has been invited to deliver workshops and speak at conferences in Australia and around the world. Dr Brenda is highly sought-after for her expertise in identifying behavioural issues and coaching leaders to build happy and psychosocially safe high-performing teams. The success of her approach is evident in the multiple national and international projects she has been involved in.
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The Science of Happy Employees - Dr Brenda Jamnik
INTRODUCTION
PEOPLE: THE MOST IMPORTANT ASPECT OF YOUR BUSINESS
Like most business leaders, you want to do the right thing by your people. You know they are critical to your business success. You do your best to provide a good work environment. You pay competitive salaries and provide industry-standard contracts. You have a morning tea with cake on people’s birthdays, and far as you know, all your people get along well. You expect them to work hard and do a good job, and do not exert any undue pressure.
And now, with the government introducing new standards focusing on psychosocial safety, you have a requirement to think about all the aspects that could make a difference to their mental health. As a leader in your organisation, sometimes it feels like – well, what else is expected of me?
Why these new guidelines?
Details of poor work environments are in the headlines often these days: another sexual harassment claim; evidence of bullying is uncovered; a shortage of psychologists for workplace support; inappropriate behaviours that continue to be displayed across offices and communication platforms; unreasonable expectations of employees in their jobs; suicide numbers are up in FIFO workers; and high rates of turnover because of interpersonal conflicts or low employee recognition.
It is – now more than ever – challenging to try to structure meaningful and impactful work while ensuring there is inclusiveness and collaboration and still getting the work done on time and to the standard required. You may think this is all becoming too hard. How are you, as a leader, expected to know what is going on when people don’t speak up about it until it’s too late? It is impossible to watch them all day to ensure they are okay, and you feel if you do, they will claim they are being intimidated by being watched.
The big challenge is that often you think you are doing the right thing by your people and don’t know there is a problem because they don’t speak up about it. They may tell others at the coffee machine or exchange stories at Friday night drinks, but you may be unaware that anything is wrong. There are so many other things to focus on that sometimes what could be a potential red flag goes under the radar because it hasn’t really come your way. The big question is, how are you supposed to know if people don’t tell you?
There is a solution that will help you uncover potential problems without watching your people all day, every day, and there is a solution to fix it.
What’s really going on with your people?
You can find out what is really going on by measuring your employee happiness; specifically, the aspects of their workplace that contribute to making them happy – or not. You find out by producing data that will show you how well you and your people are going – how good is that? There is science behind this where you can find the information you need anonymously. This is not just surveying a few of your employees and hoping they have all the information. It is asking all of your people and finding out exactly how you and they are doing at each level of the business, and with each leader of the business. How good would it be to be able to write in a tender, under the ever-increasing compliance section, that the measure of your psychosocial safety is at 95% for all areas of the business, and be able to show what you are doing to fill the 5% gap?
Working with leaders of businesses over the past three decades, I have recognised one common theme. Your employees are people, they have similar wants and needs as employees in just about every other business: they want to be heard – as long as it is done confidentially. I started realising this when I was reflecting on the feedback we were receiving on the work we were doing in businesses, which ranged from state and federal government departments to large corporations and includes people who are running their own small to medium businesses. The statements usually contained something like:
•‘All I want is …’
•‘If I could only …’
•‘If they would …’
It was usually about work overload and wanting additional employees, or the new systems not aligning, and significantly a fair bit of missing out on being a parent. This insight was mostly gained when I was working to develop company and project charters with vision and mission statements, underpinned with values. Leading the process to develop the behaviour frameworks provides significant insight not only to what your employees expect of each other, but what is also valuable to them personally.
About me
Much of my work over the past 30 years has been building high-performance teams, both within Australia, across the Pacific and in South East Asia. I enjoy watching the response in workshops when we collaboratively develop a Charter of values and behaviours that align with the business or project’s purpose. Hearing the discussions about what the statements mean, how they are applied and what happens if the charter is not adhered to, allows me to understand how well the team will adapt, collaborate and feel empowered. This process is both building a solid foundation for the team members to understand what they are expecting from each other so they effectively work together, as well as building an understanding of what may happen when the values and behaviours are not applied as agreed in the Charter. It is the basis I build my work on in the subsequent professional development sessions, as there is agreement to the framework, and commitment to implement it. Employees want to participate in the workshops as they like to have a say in the behaviours they would like to see in the workplace and what they expect of themselves and others.
In the late 1990s psychosocial safety culture (PSC) was not a phrase that was heard often. There were theories around job demand, resource control and workplace ergonomics, discussions on stress and working nights and weekends – all themes that seemed to me to be related. There was not much dialogue in the workplace at management level around the impact of these work aspects on the employees. I was also doing research at the time on why people were long-term unemployed. I interviewed about 500 people to discover one of the major themes that arose was mental health challenges arising from poor workplace culture, discrimination and bullying, as well as literacy. The research I published in 1999 said that to be successful, business leaders need to embrace empowerment, devolve decision making and focus on collaborative teamwork, along with self-management and people skills. We use different language a quarter of a century later, however the themes are still the same. The primary theme that emerged is that employees are the most important aspect of our businesses, and many of the leaders didn’t seem to recognise this aspect until their important assets depart and they measure the impact of the loss. I have spoken with and interviewed many people on this subject; tested the concepts and analysed the practices in multiple countries, and the themes remain: employees like to work in psychosocially safe work environments where they can feel appreciated, know their work is impactful and that they can collaborate to innovate. This is applicable both in the office and in a hybrid working environment.
My initial research was expanded when I was building a capability framework for the former Queensland lottery business Golden Casket, and then extended across multiple major construction projects and medium-sized companies. During my time at Golden Casket, I received a phone call and was asked if I would like to further my research, which I accepted. Incorporating my theories into my daily work, I proceeded to observe the application of my concepts and conduct research over the following seven years in relation to what makes a happy work environment. When I moved to building high-performance teams for larger infrastructure projects, such as water treatment plants, dams, highways and a rail project, I had a rich source of interactions that I could observe to further understand the impact of how work is organised, what aspects create psychosocial hazards, and the effect of repetitive work and isolation. All of this was done in an environment where we were focusing on merging multiple company cultures concurrently with building fast-track projects. I will admit, it wasn’t all smooth sailing, as you will read in some of the examples, however it was a learning experience and allowed me to influence the behaviour in these workplaces, ensuring there were as few psychosocial hazards as possible and that the team members felt happy undertaking impactful work. Recognising I am only one person, the desire to understand the extent that workplaces were happy and psychosocially safe led me to consider building an online platform to measure it. I had collected a significant amount of baseline data, and thinking it would be a waste not to have a way of capitalising on that information so other businesses could also have happy workplaces, the assessment platform became a reality.
If I sound passionate about this work, you bet I am. In my office, I have a token that reminds me why I am so passionate; it is a small square card that was attached to a flower arrangement that was sent to me. The card reads, ‘Thank you for saving my life’.
About this book
The Science of Happy Employees will share insights into what you can look for to raise your awareness antenna as to the level of psychosocial safety in your workplace; how happy are your people really feeling? I have included some of the experiences and stories that I have encountered in my work, and some that have been provided to me through interviews. There are stories from government and private sector employees I have interviewed who want to remain anonymous, and there are examples and stories from business owners who are happy for people to know what they are doing to create a safe and happy workplace for their employees.
I discuss what psychosocial safety is, help you understand why it is important, and provide stories to show you the picture of what it really means in your work environment and to your team.
This book is not a legal volume that will give you legal advice, case studies or legal precedents, although there are a couple in here for you to ponder. It does give you accounts of what has happened in work environments that I have seen or heard about that contribute to employees feeling unsafe and being unhappy, and to keep it balanced, those who feel safe and