mental health

How to be a good boss

How to be a good boss

Every good leader has been a bad boss at some point.

The truth is, we’re all a mixture of good and bad qualities and leadership often falls upon us by accident.

Managers - be they good leaders, or bad bosses - have a profound impact on their teams.

So what makes a bad boss, and what makes a good leader?

How can bad bosses become good leaders?

How to Be Happy at Work

How to Be Happy at Work

Experiencing happiness at work isn’t a matter of stumbling upon the profession that is ‘perfect’ for us and then riding that wave of joy into retirement.

Rather, like wellbeing, happiness is made up of a bunch of different components that can be experienced in many different jobs and workplaces.

So what are the key factors that we can apply to different jobs to have a better chance at finding happiness at work?

How Can Leaders Create Connectedness at Work?

How Can Leaders Create Connectedness at Work?

Workplaces can be the drivers of positive mental health outcomes.

We live in a world where a huge number of people suffer from mental ill health and access to help is poor. As employers, why not go a step further from just ‘not making things worse’ to actually making things better?

Creating social-connectedness at work is one opportunity for leaders to impact their people positively. Loneliness experienced at home can seep into the workplace and leaders have the power to not only prevent work-based loneliness, but combat loneliness overall.

Workplaces can be the engines that drive a socially connected world.

How can leaders create an environment that fosters social connection?

Do you need a Circuit Breaker?

Do you need a Circuit Breaker?

Circuit breakers are a simple solution to a potentially deadly and costly problem. When a circuit trips, we simply open the fuse box, flick a switch, and providing there is no deeper fault going on, we reset the system.

Now, imagine if we could do this with our brains. How much potential damage to our mental and physical health could we prevent if we had an automated switch that simply cut off the power to our unhelpful thought patterns before they escalated to breaking point?

What is Psychological Well-being at Work?

What is Psychological Well-being at Work?

Most people are familiar with the terms burnout and stress, and have an understanding of what poor workplace mental health looks like. But what is it that we are aiming for? What does a psychologically ‘well’ workplace look like?

How to Talk About Mental Health at Work

How to Talk About Mental Health at Work

Mental Health - we all have it, and yet it can be difficult to talk about, especially at work.

October 10th 2023 is World Mental Health day and the theme this year is ‘Mental Health is a universal human right.’

How do you actually bring up the topic? Or, if someone else lets you know they’re struggling, how should you reply?

How to Protect Yourself From Burning Out (Without Doing Yoga)

How to Protect Yourself From Burning Out (Without Doing Yoga)

In our last blog we covered how to identify burnout risks, and how to protect yourself at the recruitment stage by spotting which organisations or job roles might pose a high risk to individuals.

In this blog, we will cover some of the steps that individuals can take to lower their burnout risk and protect their mental health at work when they find themselves in a job role or organisation that may present a higher risk.

How to avoid burn-out and keep your spark alight

How to avoid burn-out and keep your spark alight

Perhaps the best thing an individual can do to avoid burn-out is to work for an organisation that has a robust Psychosocial Risk Management plan in place to support positive workplace mental health outcomes and protect their workers from chronic stress.

But how can you choose the right job? And what other practical steps can individuals take to protect themselves from burnout and feel good at work?

How to Change: A Practical Guide

How to Change: A Practical Guide

In part one of our guide to change we looked at the ‘stages of change’ model. In part two, we will consider five practical strategies to successfully facing change and how we can apply those change strategies in ways that benefit both our performance and our mental health.

Here are five keys to change that we can keep in mind the next time we are either faced with change, or we decide to strive for change.

How to Change: A Psychology-Based Guide to Updating your Life

How to Change: A Psychology-Based Guide to Updating your Life

This is the first in a three-part blog series about change in which we will cover: The Psychology of Change, a Practical Guide to Change, and How to Manage Change (in both yourself and others) while minimising negative mental health outcomes and optimising positive ones.

Change is a constant throughout our lives, and change can impact our mental, physical and emotional health in a myriad of ways.

it can be helpful to separate all of the cultural and mental clutter that surrounds goal-setting and behaviour change and figuring out how best to do it, when and how you want to and are able to, and not because an internet personality who exudes the scent of bran flakes while they do burpees at 5am makes you feel like you would somehow be a better person if you could force yourself into the same habits.

How to Increase Your Social Connectedness - Even if You Work Remote

How to Increase Your Social Connectedness - Even if You Work Remote

Developing strategies to increase opportunities for social connection is a major research concern that is impacting public health policy globally at multiple levels; from the design of community living spaces to employment regulations, public health campaigns and how we harness technology.

What can individuals do to ensure they are getting the social connection they need for mental and physical wellbeing?

Firstly, establish how much social connection you need.

How Can We Control Work-Related Stress?

How Can We Control Work-Related Stress?

Stress: so ubiquitous, the idea of preventing it altogether might seem a bit like trying to hold back an incoming tide.

But stress doesn’t need to be an inevitable part of life, and it definitely doesn’t need to be an inevitable part of work.

How can employers control work-related stress?

Psychosocial Risk Management and the Three Ghosts of Christmas

Psychosocial Risk Management and the Three Ghosts of Christmas

The weather is bitter, the poorhouses and the prisons are full, and a money-hungry employer is keeping a shrewd eye on the company’s heating bill while his overworked and shivering clerk tries to remain optimistic in the face of inflation.

The year is 1843, but it could as easily be 2022.

Cane Toads and Wicked Problems: Seven Golden Rules for Successful Psychosocial Risk Management

Cane Toads and Wicked Problems: Seven Golden Rules for Successful Psychosocial Risk Management

Psychosocial Risk Management and the Cane Toads of Australia are both what we call ‘Wicked Problems'.’ That is, a problem which is difficult to solve because of complex and changing requirements that interact with each other, to the point that there is no single solution.

Think about your Psychosocial Risk Management process (or any other process that has been implemented by your organisation as a way to solve a problem). Did it solve the problem? Or did it create other problems?

Psychosocial Risk Management Series - Part 1: What is Psychosocial Risk?

Psychosocial Risk Management Series - Part 1: What is Psychosocial Risk?

What does a shared hatred of bad parking have to do with Psychosocial Risk Management within a world-renowned aeronautical engineering company?

Recently, a friend told me about the staff communications channel within their new job role. The channel includes a multitude of totally non-work related employee group chats, on topics ranging from a love of cats to photos and commentary of terrible parking in their neighbourhoods.

Why would an organisation - especially one with a very serious image - encourage what some might consider frivolous oversharing of personal trivia during company time?

The answer - (in part, at least): Psychosocial Risk Management.