burnout

Fri 17 May 2024
The state of California has proposed new legislation that will discourage managers and supervisors from contacting their employees outside of contract work hours. If enacted, this legislation could significantly impact modern work expectations in California and potentially across the country. 

Setting work boundaries is crucial for individuals to avoid burn-out and keep a healthy work-life balance. However, it is challenging for professionals to set these boundaries with their supervisors and bosses when each party has a different understanding of the expectations. A legal obligation to honor contract hours as the only available hours for an individual will set a clear boundary, beneficial to promoting balance for both direct reports and executives. 

When managers stay past normal work hours and email, chat, or contact others on their team they send implicit communication that those receiving the communication should be working as well. Even if a superior says they do not expect overtime, their sending of emails or messages implies to others that they should be working as well. Getting a late-night email from a boss can be stressful and lead to overworking and burnout of professionals across all levels. Limiting these communications will enable individuals to truly log off at the end of the day and step away from work. 

The California law is based on a concept called “right to disconnect.” Right to disconnect means that once an employee is outside of explicitly stated contract hours, they have no obligation to respond to any communication unless related to an emergency or schedule change within the next 24 hours. Several countries around the world have adopted this mentality working to promote work-life balance and mental health, France, Canada, Portugal and others work to support their citizens (CNBC).

Nevertheless, monitoring employee contact outside of contract hours is a challenging task and will likely take weeks or months for the turnaround in the government to report a complaint to eventually charge a fine to the individual in violation. To better promote work-life balance in this sphere, managers and leaders should consider new ways to limit work to work hours. For example, managers should set clear, explicit team expectations for work and communication habits. Additionally, managers and leaders should be considerate in utilizing their team's preferences and experiences to create a team norm. 

To further promote work-life balance, managers should consider “transition time” to and from work that will optimize efficiency and energy within a team. Transition time is a short amount of time in between different parts of a person's day that allows a small break to reflect and prepare to move forward while leaving the stress from the previous focus behind. Transition time helps mitigate stress and burnout and aids in creating feelings of control and preparedness. Many individuals may have transition time on a train or in a car during a commute. Through the COVID-19 pandemic transition to online work, many individuals lost their transition time between work and home life changing professionals' ability to recharge and prepare for the next phase of their day. 

Although it is sometimes challenging for managers to limit work contact, managers should be deliberate in promoting transition time. When a team member has adequate time to mentally prepare for their day, they will have higher energy and show increased efficiency while at work. On the other hand, without transition time, individuals may come into work feeling disorganized or unprepared, leading to a disheveled and inefficient work day. Once managers have set clear expectations with their team, they may focus on promoting autonomy for their team's growth and learning. 

Moving forward, promoting transition time for remote or hybrid employees is a great tool for improving focus and preparedness in the workplace along with prioritizing mental health and work-life balance. Transition time is a critical component of a person's day that encourages well-being and productivity. Here are 3 tips for individuals trying to find transition time to cultivate healthy habits and optimize performance. 

  1. Make Lists
Transition time can appear in all different mediums. For example, some individuals may like to sit and listen to music or meditate. To be effective in using transition time, individuals should consider making lists to prioritize what items need to be handled in a day in which order. For example, an individual may get to work and create their work to-do list for the day and after work, they could do the same thing for their home life. Or, an individual could use transition time every day after work to create their to-do list for the next day. Either way, lists are a great tool for transition time to focus on activities and priorities. Knowing the order of tasks, time constraints and priorities allows for increased productivity and efficiencies throughout the day. 

2. Recap Activities
Transition time could be a moment of reflection or a recap of big events. For example, if an individual is nervous about a meeting, they may take time before to prepare their resources and a moment after to reflect and recap the meeting. Using transition time in between different focuses enables individuals to leave the stress from the first task behind and move into the next task energized and prepared. 

3. Set Boundaries
As discussed above, after-hours communication and messages from bosses can be a significant stressor in an individual's personal life. Using communication boundaries and set expectations can add to the impact of transition time. If an individual logs off for the work day at the end of contract hours and takes a moment to reflect and prepare for the next day but is later contacted by their boss, the value of their transition time is lost. Transition time works best when individuals are shifting from one focus to another, but if after-hours communication is occurring, this deteriorates the benefit of transition time for the direct report who is now asked to shift back to work mode. 

In working to prioritize mental health, work-life balance, and boundaries in the workplace, it is crucial for direct reports and their superiors to fully understand the mental impact of burnout and its causes. Managers who promote balance and well-being for their employees will see increased productivity and focus within their teams. 


Fri 27 December 2024
In today’s fast-paced work environment, clear and consistent communication between employees and their managers is paramount to success. A critical aspect of this communication is being able to effectively understand workload capacity, and recognize when an employee is approaching a stage of burnout. To ensure that no one is overburdened with tasks, managers need to ensure and consider the circumstances of each employee. To effectively follow through with this both the employee and manager must have a platform or system to communicate and openly discuss workload, stressors from the work environment, and potential feedback. Additionally, goal setting should be a primary focus and metric used along with benchmarking to follow and understand employees’ productivity capacity. Open communication prevents burnout, enables a more productive team, and, fosters a healthy workplace culture. A primary concern of communication with employees and managers is understanding the workload is capable of each person.

1. Fostering Transparency in Workload Management
A primary concern of communication with employees and managers is understanding the workload manageable by each person. Every employee has different limits and boundaries for the work they’re able to complete and different strengths and weaknesses enabling them to be efficient in different roles. When a team goes without a platform for communicating workload, it is common for employees to become overwhelmed, which leads to an ineffective and frankly unorganized team.

When employees are able to communicate their capacity to their managers, they can indicate whether they are at full capacity or if they have bandwidth for additional tasks. This transparency not only helps managers allocate work more effectively but also gives employees a sense of control over their responsibilities. By understanding what their team members can handle, managers are better equipped to balance the distribution of tasks in a way that maintains productivity without overwhelming anyone.


Capacity management strategies are used to optimize the resources of a team, and ensure that workloads are matched to employees' capacity if employees have already taken out multiple projects adding more tasks could lead to an overwhelm and decrease productivity. AIM Insights is a primary resource companies can utilize to organize and align goals, benchmarks, and progress for managers and their direct reports. AIM Insights enables managers to analyze and track capacity and expectations in a transparent measure with their employees. Aim insights enable managers to analyze and track capacity and expectations in a transparent measure with their employees.

2. Identifying and Preventing Burnout
Burnout is a prevalent concern in the current workforce. Commonly in industries where high pressure and deadlines sculpt team culture, professionals are feeling burnout and changing careers accordingly. Without being monitored burnout severely impacts employees and the organization as a whole, possibly causing irreparable damage in the loss of valuable talent, but, burnout doesn’t become apparent until the individual has really reached their tipping point. So employees may hesitate to raise concerns, and then the employee will have found a new employer before resolving the issues or bringing them to someone’s attention. 

This is another prime example of why communication platforms are crucial for maintaining a beneficial work environment, and culture. If employees have a direct channel to communicate struggles and concerns, they can easily share their feelings and their experiences within the team. A productive executive team will help managers identify patterns or signs of burnout early on. 


When managers actively communicate with their direct reports about their work experiences and stress levels, they can provide effective solutions, such as redistributing tasks or potentially modifying to more realistic deadlines. This proactive approach is paramount to sustaining a healthy, productive workforce and ensuring that employees can thrive in their environment. 

3. Preventing Overload
Employees already staffed on multiple projects can be added to others which will generally cause a decrease in performance. Frequently, this snowballs into a plethora of other issues, including low-performance reviews, low engagement, employee turnover, and overall negative workplace culture. On the other hand when employees are utilized they may feel unimportant or unvalued, which can lead to to an engagement or a lack of motivation. The key is for managers to find the right balance, and they can only do so through effective communication and clarity with their direct reports.

A productive communication platform would allow managers to keep track of individual workload and assignments, allocate tasks and review each person‘s capacity, and analyze how much of an employee's time is being utilized, through real time visibility and data analytics into the status of each employee managers can make better informed decisions on the day-to-day tasks and assignments for each of their team members.


AIM Insights allows tracking metrics, and can be useful across different measures for a variety of users. The implementation of overall management ratings will enable a variety of users to understand the skills and efficacy of an individual. An implemented tracking system would enable managers and employees to view progress, assignments and expectations and establishes open and direct communications. 


The ability to communicate workload capacity, concerns, and availability is crucial for maintaining productive workplace culture, and balance. By providing employees with the opportunity to communicate and share their experiences with their managers, organizations can optimize their workforce. Effective communication and capacity management are paramount to fostering a culture of transparency, trust in collaboration for every level to thrive in. By prioritizing transparent communication and supporting employee well-being, organizations can build a resilient, engaged workforce that drives long-term success.



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