NAB
Having trouble concentrating at work? Russia’s invasion of
Ukraine has many of us “doomscrolling” even though we know it deepens
depression and anxiety. But companies can do more to help their staff cope with
these existential threats, according to David Rock, co-founder and CEO of the
NeuroLeadership Institute.
Rock has been working in cognitive leadership consulting for
25 years, and has helped Netflix, Microsoft and Zoom — to name a few — address
their people practices from a neuroscience perspective.
Rock spoke with Protocol about how prolonged
stress and trauma affect employees, and what companies can do to best support
their global workforce during this time.
“We have a heightened alert state about events in the world
and we’re starting to advise companies on how to think about this,” he says.
Rock thinks of the impact on our mental health in terms of
levels of threat.
“The brain is built to keep us alive, fundamentally,” he
explains, “And the way it does that is avoiding dangers and maximizing
opportunities. But first and foremost, we avoid dangers. And the way we assess
dangers is actually in three broad categories.”
The first level of threat that you detect is essentially
kind of feeling alert but not alarmed. “It’s like the equivalent of having two
or three coffees and focusing a lot. You are being productive, but you’re not
very creative.”
This could just as easily be triggered by your line manager
issuing a new deadline or sales target as something like an external news
event.
The threat level rises when your brain detects a potential
real problem on the horizon, and essentially prepares you for something really
bad.
“Level Two threat response is really poor for all kinds of
cognitive processing. That’s the feeling of being frazzled, of not being able
to focus. You’re not running screaming down the hallway, but you seem to keep
reading the same email over and over. That’s the state a lot of the world is in
right now.”
Rock has some advice for employers. One idea is to bring
people together under common goals. “If your company is able to help with the
crisis in Ukraine, for example, you might find that people rallying to do
something productive could really help everyone. People want to feel like
there’s something they can do. If this thing continues, there’s going to be
increasing upward pressure from employees for companies to act in every way
they can.”
In addition, talking about issue can help. This is like the
sorts of good management that was practiced under Covid when teams were distributed
at home. Connecting with people offsets the feeling of threat, Rock says.
“This is a great time to increase the all-hands meetings
where everyone’s on camera, and it’s a great time to increase your check-ins
with people: your team meetings, your one-on-ones. Some people will find this
time very, very difficult so I wouldn’t assume everyone’s just sailing through
all this uncertainty. A number of people will be really struggling.”
No comments:
Post a Comment