Let’s be honest: chasing performance without thinking about wellbeing is a fast track to burnout. In today’s workplaces, the real competitive edge doesn’t come from overdrive—it comes from resilience. And resilience doesn’t mean “pushing through.” It means creating the kind of environment where people can perform well and stay well.
Noticing Burnout in Someone Else? Here’s What to Say and Do
Your Star Employee Might Be Struggling—Here’s Why
It’s Okay to Say “I’m Struggling”—Even as a Leader
A belief that you’re not allowed to struggle.
That leaders must be resilient, composed, always calm—even when they’re burning out behind the scenes. But here’s the truth: you’re human first, leader second. And the moment you allow yourself to say, “I’m not doing great right now,” you create space for others to do the same.
Leading with Care: Supporting Recovery from Burnout and Stress
Burnout isn’t a buzzword—it’s real, rising, and reshaping the way we think about leadership in Australian workplaces. We know how it shows up: exhaustion, cynicism, poor performance, disengagement. What we talk about less is what happens after. After someone’s hit the wall. After they take leave. After they return, quieter than before.