No money, no position, no assignment and no pep talk will perk them up. So, what should the employers do to get back the zing?
How
can HR chip in with its pro-skills when productivity of demotivated
and burnout employees takes a massive hit.
Until
and unless your employees are God's own children, at some point of time in
their professional sojourn, their work will fail to excite them as it did
earlier. They will constantly ask themselves, "Is this what I signed up
for?" No money, no position, no assignment and no pep talk will perk them
up. So, what should the employers do to get back the zing?
Should
you worry about such sanity-ripping phases? Well, not really because as humans
it is natural for us to get bored of things. After all, we are not lifeless
like our desks, are we? You, as an HR person, have to deal with this because
the productivity of such demotivated and burnout employees takes a massive hit,
and sooner or later, you will have to chip in with your pro-skills. Here's a
reckoner that will give you a solid head start.
Watch out for the signs:
Only
once in a lifetime will an employee walk up to you and tell you that he has had
enough of the work. So till the time you don't meet someone who is this gutsy,
look for the characteristic signs that will help you identify people who are
dealing with a burnout. Spread your radar to sense employees, whose
productivity has taken a hit of late, or identify those who have suddenly
started taking random leaves, and yet others who have become extremely cynical
about the work and have reduced communication with the team. Remember, if you
are able to identify the people successfully, your battle is half won.
Reach out:
Once
you have identified the people, talk to them and offer them help. Ask them what
you can do to get them back to the groove, but remember, in no way should your
tone be accusatory. Empathise! We all go through it.
Monotony is a devil that's
best kept at bay:
The
most monstrous contributor of a burnout is boredom. If employees are not
allowed to take up new challenges, they will get disengaged from the work
because they somehow connect the monotony of work with decreasing growth
prospects. HR should constantly strive to keep the employees in the challenge
mode.
Avoid overburdening:
It's
not just repetitiveness that leads to a burn out. Even too much work can be
detrimental to employees’ performance. Particularly while the company is
scaling up rapidly or is in the overload mode, the feathers of some employees
are ruffled. Deal with this sensitively because too much pressure isn't a cake
walk for everyone. In case the employee is expected to take up extra work for a
few days, make them aware of the circumstances of such overload.
A bit of fun can be the
magic wand you have been looking for:
All work and no play
makes Jack a dull boy. This phrase is not just relevant for kids, but to HR
too. Team-building exercises, outdoor management programmes and parties will pep
them up in no time.