While achieving organisational goals is crucial, leaders must also recognise the relentless pursuit of productivity without regard for employee well-being can give rise to "toxic productivity" – a phenomenon posing significant psychosocial risks in the workplace.
It typically falls on People, Operations and Culture leaders to spearhead initiatives empowering managers to create a balanced and healthy work environment. By understanding the connection between toxic productivity and psychosocial hazards, leaders can protect workplace mental and physical health while fostering a more resilient and engaged workforce.
Toxic productivity describes an excessive focus on output and performance, often at the detriment of employee well-being.
In such environments, employees may be given unreasonable workloads, feel compelled to sacrifice personal time for work on an ongoing basis, experience a lack of support from their manager, and be subject to intense competition and pressure.
These continuing pressures create what are known as ‘psychosocial hazards’, and according to Safework Australia, these create stress and psychological harm, often leading to anxiety, depression, and other health issues, and they should be treated as no different to physical workplace injuries.
For example: If someone fell off a ladder at work, the following process could be triggered:
Processes around workplace health and safety are designed to protect employees from injuries and illnesses. So if workplace stress contributes to a decline in mental health and well-being in people, then assessing, managing and mitigating psychological safety should be as high a priority as physical safety.
Workplace psychosocial hazards and risks can manifest in various ways:
Learn more about workplace psychosocial hazards here.
Here are some ideas and strategies to help your managers and team combat Toxic Productivity:
“Most companies are still in hybrid mode, but are dictating, to minute detail, what their particular hybrid model looks like. Setting up requirements on exactly how many days workers are required in the office, which days of the week those office days are, etc. This rigidity in the model removes many of the benefits of hybrid working, namely flexibility and employee agency” - a thoughtful and relevant conversation on Linkedin by Ted Tencza.
Managers are vital in creating a workplace culture prioritising well-being and productivity. They bridge the organisation and its most valuable asset - people.
In the face of new hybrid ways of working and the growing pressure to retain talent and do more with less, the role of people managers has become increasingly complex and critical.
Technology can be a powerful ally in this endeavour. Pioneera uses real-time sentiment analysis to look for subconscious signs of burnout. Coach Indie (a chatbot) offers short, science-backed tips (nudges) to help reduce people-related risks and improve productivity.
With Coach Indie, you can unlock actionable insights into employee well-being, enabling you to address toxic productivity and psychosocial hazards proactively. This data-driven approach will improve well-being, enhance productivity, and increase talent retention within your organisation.
Now is the time to take the next step towards a workplace that values and safeguards the mental health of your employees. Empower your managers, embrace technology, and cultivate a workplace where the measurement of success by output and the happiness and prosperity of your people.