Wednesday, February 3, 2016

15 factors that affect how employees respond to change

Here are 15 factors that can affect how your employees respond to change:

1. Control

The amount of input and influence the employee has around the change, goals, processes and outcomes.

Research on stress shows that the degree of control a person has in a challenging or unpleasant situation is the No. 1 factor influencing their stress level. In other words, the more control an employee has in any situation, the more change, challenge and uncertainty they can handle without stressing out.

2. Predictability

The degree of clarity around what will happen and when it will happen, and the ability to connect cause and effect.

During difficult times, if employees know what will happen next, it creates what psychologists call “perceived control.” Even if they don’t have any actual control over what happens next, knowing what will happen creates the feeling of control, as opposed to the helplessness of not knowing what is going to happen.

The old saying about “the fear of the unknown” speaks to this phenomenon.

3. Clarity

The degree of clarity around organizational and departmental goals, possible scenarios, current states of affairs, how the changes will affect the employee, the mechanics of the change and how the employee’s performance contributes to business goals.

Just as with predictability, having clarity-knowing what is going on-creates the feeling of perceived control.

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4. Understanding

How well employees understand the reasoning behind the change-the “why.”

To paraphrase Friedrich Nietzsche: Employees can handle just about any “what” if they understand the why.“

Humans have an innate drive to make sense out of what is happening to them. Being able to understand why a difficult situation is happening helps create a feeling of control. When we don’t understand why something is happening, we feel helpless and anxious.

5. Meaning

How employees explain to themselves what the change means in terms of their leaders’ character and their leaders’ attitudes toward employees.

For instance, "Our big layoff was something our leadership team had to do, and they did everything they could to avoid it” would be one way employees could explain the event.

They also could assign the following meaning to the event: “The leadership team couldn’t care less about us and see us as expendable. That’s why they immediately went for the big layoff as the solution.”

These two very different characterizations would elicit very different emotional reactions and therefore different stress levels.

6. Time frame

The time lapse between when change is announced and when it takes place, as well as the amount of time employees have to adjust to the change.

The less time people have to prepare for change, whether tactically or emotionally, the more stressed out they will become.

7. Degree of change previously experienced

The amount of stability and security that employees have previously experienced and have come to expect; conversely, the amount of change they’ve had to adapt to in the recent past.

If employees are used to very little change in their work life, a major change will be far more traumatic than it would be to employees who are used to change.

We all have a limit to how many major changes we can experience without feeling overwhelmed. Thus, if employees have had to deal with major changes in the recent past, they are more likely to be at their adaptability limit than are employees who have not.

8. Organizational climate

The overall mood and emotional ambience of the organization, and the degree of good will between employees and management.

The more positive the emotional climate, the more resilient the workforce and the less stress employees will feel during challenging times.

9. Relationship with supervisor

The level of trust, respect and goodwill the employees feel toward their supervisor, and how open they feel they can be with their supervisor.

The more open and trusting this relationship, the more willing employees are to ask for the information they need, voice their concerns and feel heard, all factors that reduce stress and build resilience.

10. Organizational relationships

The level of camaraderie among employees, as well as the norms regarding openness and authenticity.

Good relationships mitigate stress and its effects. Because relationships play such an important role in resilience, the stronger the relationships in the organization, the more resilient the workforce.

When people feel that they can share their burdens with others and that others “have their back,” they can handle greater adversity than those who feel as though they have to go it alone.

11. Personal relationships

The quality of the employee’s family and social network, and the amount of support one can count on from their network.

An employee’s personal relationships can have either a net positive or net negative effect on stress levels.

Good relationships buffer people from stress; bad relationships are a major source of stress. Thus, an employee’s personal relationships have a significant impact on their overall stress level and ability to handle challenging times at work.

12. The ability/opportunity to “work through” one’s response

Employees’ ability to discuss his or her thoughts and feelings about the change to the point where they can “move on” to the next step.

“Ability” refers both to the employee’s individual skill level and comfort with discussing difficult issues, and how factors 8, 9, 10 and 11 affect their opportunity to do so.

13. Current stress load

How much stress an employee is experiencing from work and from his or her personal life.

If their current stress load is already high, their capacity for handling more challenge will be less than a person with a lower stress load.

14. Self-efficacy

The employee’s perception of how adequate his or her skill set will be in meeting the challenges and new requirements brought about by the change.

The greater a person’s self-efficacy, the more they have a “Bring it on; I can handle it!” response to change.

15. Resilience

The employee’s overall capacity for dealing with stress, pressure and change.

Resilience is our ability to “not sweat the small stuff,” perform well in demanding situations without getting stressed out, bounce back from adversity and respond flexibly to change.

With greater resilience comes an increased ability to handle change, challenge and uncertainty.

A version of this article originally appeared on TLNT.

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