Bosses who are stressed usually struggle to manage well. And they’re less equipped to help employees who are under pressure.
“With the right training, managers can nurture psychologically safe work environments where mental health and wellbeing are championed and employees can flourish,” says Taylor. So normalize talk about well-being with onsite opportunities such as therapist sessions, meditation demonstrations or sessions, well-being seminars, etc.
4.Pair Them
Below-average managers might benefit from the experience and expertise of above-average managers. Try mentoring or partnerships where bosses who struggle can learn from, ask questions of, and get feedback from others.
5.Know When to Move On
Some managers can’t improve. Others don’t see issues and will choose not to improve. When bad managers are unwilling to try, it’s likely time to move on.
“HR should note that great leaders aren’t built in day seminars and change cannot happen instantaneously overnight,” says Taylor. “Real development requires continuous learning and investment in formal training and upskilling for leaders from organizations.”
Help Employees Under Bad Managers
Employees who’ve been working under poor leadership will likely need some attention. They probably suffered for some time and need a refresh on goals, expectations and feedback.
Here are three ways to do that:
1.Get More Feedback
Whether employees brought a bad boss to your attention or not, they likely need to feel they can “share feedback openly, without fear of any negative repercussions,” says Taylor.
Offer them several channels — one-on-one meetings, roundtables, anonymous email, if necessary, and employee portals — to share thoughts and feelings around their bosses.
“Organizations should strive to create a psychologically safe environment for their employees,” says Taylor.
2.Build a Culture of Trust
Employees who’ve worked for a bad boss probably don’t have a positive outlook on the culture. For now.
So start by helping those employees rebuild a positive team culture with connections and trust. Give them time and resources to connect outside of daily work — perhaps with group meals or breaks.
When appropriate, “focus on understanding the impact of leadership on team well-being. A key question to ask is, ‘How are you feeling?'” says Taylor.
It gives them time and space to share thoughts and find their place again.
3.Realign
If there is a team shakeup, work with employees individually to review and update personal goals, job responsibilities and expectations. Once you’ve worked with each person, help the team get realigned so they can move forward together in a positive direction.
Information provided by: HR Morning
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