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Supporting mental and emotional well-being in the workplace is one of the largest growing trends of our time.  The market for mental and emotional well-being support, referred to as “Transformational Technology” has market estimates for consumer demand in the hundreds of billions1.

Yet mass adoption and understanding are not at the levels that reflect these trends.  Which is understandable when looking at the adoption curve of physical fitness after WWII and the adoption curve of nutritional fitness throughout the 80s and 90s.  Personal growth and self-care practices take time to grab hold as initially people are fearful and skeptical of the benefits.

Google’s Head of Personal Growth and Founder of the “Search Inside Yourself Leadership Institute” Chade-Meng Tang recently stated, “Within companies there is a growing awareness of the importance of employees “emotional fitness”, mirroring the same journey of acceptance that physical fitness exercise took in the last century”2.

While employers recognize that Well-being in the workplace is now more important than ever, considering well-being initiatives for your company can be overwhelming.  There is ample research highlighting that while developing talent skills is important, developing well-being is increasingly being intertwined into the employee development offering3.  Research exists highlighting the growing recognition of the interrelationships between talent development and individual well-being in both the employer experience and overall workplace planning3.

With all this information, where does one start, how do you become more informed around what is right for your company and implement initiatives all the while tracking and understanding the benefits?  Holistic programs sound nice but, because of the siloed nature of many organizations, can be daunting to implement. It is hard enough for some companies to support one wellness program across its organization due to how independently certain divisions, department or offices operate, let alone a company-wide well-being program.

The following framework around initiatives & engagement can be useful to small or large organizations interested in pursuing a well-being in the workplace strategy.

#1 – Guidance, Framing & Education

This information may be new or unfamiliar. Consider working with an expert who has the ability to communicate a deep understanding of this space customizing it for your company, why it is important and how best to deliver the message with relevant supporting content, research, expert input and societal trends in a manner that is real, relatable and accessible.

#2 – Pacing

Adoption will take time. Initial focus should be on listening, educating and building awareness.  Take time to understand what is right for your company’s culture; understand the needs and obstacles that exist, where stigmas may lie and set a roll-out plan best suited for your environment.

#3 – Creativity, Curation & Excitement

Bring in experts & thought leaders to help ground topics, curate group events, exercises and lectures based on specific needs and interest, package resources & information in a relevant way and understand what stimulates excitement and triggers boredom.

#4 – Needs Assessment, Data & Success Metrics

Perform needs assessment through surveys, one-on-one and group discussions highlighting where, how and in what ways mental & emotional well-being support is most useful. Set your goals & objectives and gather data (no matter how basic) as it will help build confidence and trust in the process.

#5 – Champions & Early Adopters

Leadership and stakeholder buy-in will play a crucial role in de-stigmatizing initiatives and spur adoption. Who within your company has an established practice, a voice that people gravitate towards or a leadership position of influence?  Empower them to lead, share their stories and be a part of the creative process.

#6 – Change is OK

What may work at one point in time for your company, may shift at a later date. Be open to the dynamic nature of your initiatives mirroring the needs of your employees as they grow and evolve, the times as they change and the advancements in our understanding and comfort in this space.

#7 – Keep Employees Engaged and Informed

Summarize data and findings sharing often, continue to find creative ways to keep employees educated and informed and focus on building a culture that values personal growth as more and more employees require that of their employers.

Building awareness and implementing well-being initiatives in your company is a process that takes time, but you’re not alone.  Major sports teams, Fortune 500 companies, leading institutions and non-profits are all dedicating significant resources in the form of time & capital towards understanding and implementing these initiatives as the returns are significant.  Price Waterhouse Coopers estimates that for every $1.00 spent on creating a mentally and emotionally healthy workplace, companies can recoup $2.30 in benefits gained by the organization4.

Lean on outside expertise, empower champions & early adopters within and make it a priority so that you achieve the benefits & change in company culture that is readily available, improving the bottom line and more importantly the lives of your employees & their families throughout your organization.

I M Human helps companies and organizations support the emotional well-being of their employees and implement actionable and measurable initiatives. 

 SOURCES USED

1 Techcrunch – Science and technology will make mental and emotional wellbeing scalable, accessible, and cheap – Nichol Bradford – October 17, 2016

2 The Guardian – Google’s head of mindfulness: ‘goodness is good for business’ – Jo Confino – May 14, 2014

3 Deloitte University Press – Unlocking human potential – February 2017

4 Price Waterhouse Cooper – Creating a Mentally Healthy Workplace – May 2014

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Tags:

Benefit Plan Design Health & Wellness

Categories:

Members & Employers

Tags:

Benefit Plan Design Health & Wellness

Categories:

Members & Employers
Cathy Mahaffey

Cathy Mahaffey
Guest Blogger, Chief Executive Officer at Common Ground Healthcare Cooperative

Cathy Mahaffey was named as the Chief Executive Officer of Common Ground Healthcare Cooperative in 2014 after playing an instrumental role in the start-up and capitalization of the health insurance cooperative. She brings a unique perspective to the role, having discovered a passion for the non-profit side of the insurance industry after working for The Alliance early in her career. She’s known as a relentless advocate for consumers, and in a previous leadership role helped launch the Farmers’ Health Cooperative of Wisconsin, a nonprofit insurance purchasing cooperative that successfully help Wisconsin farmers and agribusinesses gain access to higher quality health coverage.

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