The result: The stress is expressed, but not necessarily handled better. The thoughts continue to go around in circles without any new perspectives being added. This creates an additional blind spot for companies. When employees deal with their stress primarily in private digital space, operational causes often remain invisible. And the problems with overload, unclear expectations or constant availability are only noticed when the effects are already clearly noticeable.
Mental overload in a work context is rarely caused by a single trigger. As a rule, several stress factors act at the same time: increasing task complexity, tight deadlines, a high frequency of decisions and the expectation of being available at all times. Occupational science findings underline that task-related working conditions in particular – such as work intensity and scope for action – are closely linked to well-being and health. When designing work, this means actively balancing requirements and resources and systematically considering the effects of new work systems and technological changes.
Organizations therefore have a concrete design task: mental stability does not arise solely through individual offers, but through the general conditions under which work is carried out. The decisive factors are:
- understandable decision-making processes,
- realistic objectives, and
- an understanding of leadership that takes performance requirements and load limits into account equally.
3 starting points to anchor mental stability
Successful organizations therefore take an integrated approach. Three levers can be identified particularly clearly:
- Removing taboos through leadership: Managers determine whether stress can be discussed. Dealing openly with mental stress creates trust and enables early intervention.
- Integration into everyday work: Support has an impact when it is available continuously and at a low threshold. This includes clear prioritization structures, realistic goals and spaces for reflection within the team.
- Digital support as a scaling factor: Digital solutions can make evidence-based support widely accessible. The prerequisite is responsible design that takes technical quality, data protection and clear boundaries of automated communication into account.
Skilled labor shortages, technological transformation and new circumstances are changing the demands on organizations and employees alike. Performance does not just depend on qualifications or technology. What is crucial is whether it is possible to create stable conditions for mental health. Organizations that systematically take mental stability into account reduce risks, strengthen motivation and secure their ability to innovate in the long term. Anyone who continues to treat the topic as an optional “nice to have” risks creeping losses in productivity with direct economic consequences. (pg/fm)
