5 Common and Corporate Wellbeing Blind Spots that Cost Companies Dearly

Understanding and fixing them can transform your business.

Blind Spot #1: Wellbeing is considered separate from work performance

  • When your people are well, they will be high functioning.

  • This includes psychological skills, bodily health (sleep, diet, exercise), relationships, purpose, and balance.

  • When these wellbeing factors are enhanced, your people will be more motivated, energetic, engaged, and productive. And they will be more willing to take on challenges.

  • If you want to improve staff performance, start by improving their wellbeing.

Blind Spot #2: The CEO is not involved in the wellbeing strategy

  • Because you cannot separate wellbeing and work performance, CEOs and leaders must necessarily be interested in the wellbeing strategy of the organisation.

  • Corporate wellbeing is a key driver of the bottom-line, and even share market performance.

  • If your CEO is not yet involved in the wellbeing strategy, it’s time to start a conversation about why it matters.

Blind Spot #3: Interventions are focused on remediating problems rather than prevention or wellbeing enhancement

  • When your house is on fire, it’s urgent. It mobilises resources, and everyone celebrates when the crisis is over.

  • But if you stop someone’s house catching fire in the first place, you’ve achieved something much better. But there’s less urgency in being proactive, and no well-defined point of celebration.

  • Prevention isn’t sexy, but it is very important. There’s a lot workplaces can do to prevent anxiety, depression and chronic stress in their staff.

Blind Spot #4: Leaders who lack psychological skills are ill-equipped to support their teams

  • If you don’t know what healthy thinking is, how can you know if your thinking is healthy? How can you coach and support others to apply this crucial skill?

  • If you don’t know the purpose and function of emotions, how can you support others in their emotional self-management?

  • High performing organisations ensure their leaders understand, model and coach the skills required to have a healthy mind.

Blind Spot #5: Decision-making is not data-driven

  • Good intentions are nice, but they can be disastrous when relied on for corporate wellbeing strategy.

  • A scientific evidence-base is the most robust rationale for your decision-making.

  • By including data from your own staff, your strategy becomes even stronger.

  • Well-crafted wellbeing surveys enable you to direct your resources where they will have the greatest impact.

  • When you’re data-driven in your approach, you can have confidence in the outcome.

We help resolve these blind spots – get in touch if you’d like help with your corporate wellbeing strategy.

Author – Dr Tom Nehmy is a clinical psychologist and Director of Healthy Minds Education & Training

Esther Johnson

See: au.linkedin.com/in/est2035

https://meloncreative.com.au
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