CATALYST Issue 3 | Page 66

L Last Word | Catalyst Wellbeing at Work How to Design, Implement and Evaluate an Effective Strategy Cary Cooper and Ian Hesketh, Kogan Page, 2019. A t a CIPD event in late 2018, psychologist Professor Sir Cary Cooper went on the offensive against what he termed the “quick fixes” many organisations adopt to improve employees’ mental ill-health. He urged employers to focus on the underlying causes. Rather than offering only “easy” solutions such as “mindfulness at lunch”, organisations need to integrate wellness within their organisations and train their managers in the people skills to create supportive work cultures. Now, together with fellow academic, Ian Hesketh, Cooper has published a hands-on, practical manual to help HR professionals play their part by creating the right infrastructures and strategies for workplace wellbeing. Wellbeing at Work is a step-by-step guide to designing and implementing a wellbeing strategy, from getting buy-in from the right people through to measurement and evaluation, with cases studies, tips and exercises along the way. We all know that stress at work not only blights the lives of individuals affected, but also has a detrimental effect on productivity and performance. HR teams are well-placed to make a difference and this book provides the tools (and reassurance) they need to create workable strategies to reduce anxiety and improve engagement to the benefit of everyone. Brave New Work: Are You Ready to Reinvent Your Organization? Aaron Dignam, Penguin Portfolio, 2019 A aron Dignam’s book opens with a couple of fascinating challenges. He shows us an organisation chart and asks us to identify when it was created. Then, he contrasts two types of traffic control: the traffic light and the roundabout. It’s an absorbing way to introduce two of the major themes of his new book: the fact that it’s even possible for us to recognise an organisation chart from 1910, and the inertia inherent in what he calls an operating system (in this case the traffic light) despite evidence that roundabouts, alexandermannsolutions.com 66 which require drivers to think and use their own judgement to follow simple rules, are safer, cheaper and still work during power outages. Welcome to Brave New Work, a manifesto for evolutionary organisations, the roundabouts bucking the trend in a world full of traffic lights. These are organisations that exhibit different mindsets and use purpose and transparency to create cultures where individual responsibility is encouraged. The direction is clear but serendipity is also allowed; where structures are decentralised but coherence is retained. Working through 12 ‘domains’, covering everything from strategy to workflow to compensation, Dignam advocates a new way of working, better suited to the world today, complete with guidelines and activities for change. Buckle up; it’s a wild ride, but a thought-provoking one.