FUTURE TALENT March-May 2019 | Page 42

O ON TOPIC CEO of mental health charity Mind; in October that year, the Thriving at Work report was launched. “It really outlined the human cost of not supporting employees around their mental health, but also the financial impact for businesses, government and the economy as a whole,” explains Faye McGuinness, head of workplace wellbeing programmes at Mind. The review has, if not caused, then coincided with, an apparent sea change in attitudes. The 2018 Employee Wellbeing report by the Reward & Employee Benefits Association found that, if employers follow through on their intentions, nearly 80% of UK companies will have a defined mental health strategy by the early 2020s. Good intentions, but what can they actually do and, more importantly, will it work? ental Health First Aid (MHFA) England has trained nearly 400,000 people in mental health first aid. In November 2018, it sent an open letter to prime minister Theresa May challenging the government to prioritise its manifesto promise to give equal weight to physical and mental first aid. The letter was signed by some of the country’s biggest employers including Thames Water, WH Smith, PwC and Ford. “The thinking behind it is straightforward,” says Jaan Madan, workplace lead at MHFA England. “Everyone knows a physical first- aider, so why not train someone to spot the signs of mental health distress and teach a simple and robust framework so they can have a M safe and guided conversation before, importantly, signposting the most appropriate professional help? It’s a very simple set of skills. “We also have a seven-day instructor programme. In the past couple of years, we’ve seen businesses start to put their individuals through this programme, so they can then have that resource internally.” Mental health first aid is patently valuable; having people in an organisation who can spot signs of mental stress could save lives. However, like physical first aid, it’s patching up. Other tools are needed: you can’t build a house using only a screwdriver. “This is why we have a whole organisational approach,” says Madan. “The most successful organisations take that approach rather than just saying ‘we’re going to give everyone some fruit and reduced gym membership and run some MHFA courses’. This is really about a culture change.” Employers have access to a raft of wellbeing tools – fruit and gym memberships included. There are training organisations such as MHFA England, free online resources, including Mind’s Mental Health at Work gateway, and employee assistance programmes, often outsourced to healthcare providers. Some employers take a pic ‘n’ mix approach, selecting different services from different sources. Many of the options chosen – helplines, paid therapy, resilience training – while having value, address symptoms rather than causes. This is where things can get challenging for employers. Changing a working culture takes time, but it’s not impossible, with imagination and determination 42 // Future Talent f you have an organisation where wellbeing is a problem, that may be as much to do with the culture of the organisation as anything else,” says Dr Martin Edwards, a reader in organisational psychology and HR management at King’s Business School. “For example, we’ve seen a growth in resilience training: employees learning to be more resilient under conditions of stress. That’s almost blaming the employee for not being able to deal with stress the culture may be putting them under. It’s putting a plaster on the problem. “One would hope that employers are also evaluating possible sources of stress within the workplace, to see whether there’s something in their organisational culture, or how jobs are designed, that could be creating the negative wellbeing. It’s a difficult thing for an organisation to self-reflect on and diagnose and change.” Collective heads, however, are regularly buried in the sand, muffling some tricky questions. Do ingrained attitudes to targets, absence and time-keeping drive employees to tears or drink? Does devotion to team collaboration software create ‘digital presenteeism’? Is flexible working blurring the lines between office and home life? Changing a working culture, a mindset, takes time, but it’s not impossible, with a dash of imagination and a heap of determination. For instance, a significant number of companies are turning to a four- day week on full pay and noticing improved productivity (see article, page 52). Old-fashioned performance reviews are being replaced by a slew of alternatives, from phone apps to something called ‘conversation’. US technology company Next Jump has taken things even further: its ‘lifetime-employment’ policy means that it never fires anyone based on performance. Ever. And it isn’t an act of charity. “We used to adopt the Jack Welch model of getting rid of your bottom 10%,” Next Jump’s I “