|
May is Mental Health Month in the United States, and it has me thinking about some of the unique stresses and demands that come with the territory if you’re in our industry. While all types of businesses are facing challenges in today’s environment, retail and service professionals in particular have spent years adapting to staffing shortages, operational pivots, heightened customer expectations, safety concerns, and economic uncertainty.
As a result, many retail leaders now operate in a constant state of “performance stress.” The question isn’t whether pressure exists. It clearly does. At the same time, though, we need our leaders and teams to be able to push themselves, try different things, and adapt to the continual cycles of change and disruption, all while stepping up to new responsibilities.
The bigger question is whether that kind of pressure is sustainable. Retailers need to be able to recognize the difference between complacency, productive stretch, and chronic strain.
Are Your Leaders Stagnating, Stretching, or Stressed Out?
We have used the Comfort Zone Model to depict this dilemma for years at MOHR Retail. There is a common fallacy that it’s a good thing to spend most of your time in your comfort zone. To be sure, it does feel good to be coasting along on autopilot with no friction and no big surprises. The problem is, you’re not growing and developing when you’re in your comfort zone. At best, you’re treading water. At worst—and it’s becoming more of a risk in an environment where things are moving faster than ever—you could be falling behind.
While the comfort zone may feel safe, staying there indefinitely can hamper your ability to be more agile and adaptable in the face of new challenges. The fact is, growth only happens outside of your comfort zone. Of course, by definition that means it’s going to be a little uncomfortable.
Think about what happened when you were learning to ride a bike and you took off the training wheels. There were a lot of wobbles, uncertainties, and probably a couple of bruised knees before you got that balance down right so you could ride in a straight line. Any kind of growth usually comes with a bit of pain and pressure. But by journeying beyond the boundaries of what’s familiar, you will gain the confidence, mindset, and experience to better navigate the steep hills and winding roads ahead.
Balance is crucial: We’re not saying the comfort zone is the enemy. And this doesn’t mean you should always be pushing yourself or your team members to stay as far outside of it as possible. Instead, what we know is that remaining permanently inside your comfort zone limits growth, while remaining permanently too far outside of it creates burnout. The key is understanding how long and how far you stretch out of your comfort zone before you are depleted and suffer mental and physical fatigue.
The big takeaway? Short periods of stretch build confidence, agility, and capabilities. Continuous over stimulation without recovery erodes judgment, empathy, creativity, patience, and, eventually, your health.
Read on for a deeper dive into the Comfort Zone Model, including tips for recognizing burnout and for building a culture of sustainable performance.
|