Supportive and responsive managers understand the needs of their workers and help to break down the stigma and discrimination surrounding mental ill health.
Every organisation talks about managing change. Few talk about feeling it. Behind every restructure, new system, or strategic shift are real humans — with uncertainty, hope, and often quiet fear. For leaders, guiding people through change isn’t just a communication exercise. It’s an emotional one
Every organisation talks about managing change. Few talk about feeling it. Behind every restructure, new system, or strategic shift are real humans — with uncertainty, hope, and often quiet fear. For leaders, guiding people through change isn’t just a communication exercise. It’s an emotional one.
Resilience” has become one of the most overused words in the modern workplace. We hear it everywhere — in leadership programs, HR strategies, even job ads. But what if the way we talk about resilience is quietly contributing to the very burnout we’re trying to prevent?
For years, leadership was defined by strength, decisiveness, and control. But the workplace is changing — and so are the expectations of those who lead it. Today, people want something different. They want leaders who listen, understand, and care. Enter: compassionate leadership.
Burnout used to look obvious — long hours, visible exhaustion, the person who finally hit a wall. Now? It’s quieter. More subtle. More sophisticated. People are burning out while looking fine on the surface. They’re still delivering, still smiling, still saying “All good!” in team meetings. But inside, they’re emptying out.