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How to fix work-life balance for your team

May 28, 2020
Tom Moriarty says follow these three steps to reduce stress at work and increase motivation for you and your personnel.

I had a question from a work center supervisor who wanted to know how a leader can improve work-life balance for his personnel. The plant he works is in hot, loud, and dusty. The firm pays wages that are good, but there are nearby plants that offer more. This supervisor’s plant is in a constant struggle to attract, keep happy, and retain workers.

Human Capital

This article is part of our monthly Human Capital column. Read more from Tom Moriarty.

I define work-life balance as: “The level of personal satisfaction an individual feels with regard to the positive and negative effects of their job and how it affects their life on and off the job.” There are definitely limits on what a manager or supervisor can do, but by doing our best to reduce stress at work we can improve work-life balance.

How can a leader improve the work-life balance for their team members? My recommendation is to define the issues, identify how you can address those issues, and then put a plan in place to improve them.

Identify the issues. The first thing you need to do is get to know your team members. Every person has different motivations. A productive leader will spend time talking with each person to understand what motivates and what demotivates that person. This should be done periodically because people’s motivations change over time, especially with key life events like earning a certification or college degree, getting married or divorced, having kids, becoming more focused on retirement, etc.

Getting to know your team member’s motivations is one of the fundamental reasons for leader-to-team-member span of control. Organizational structures should be set up so a supervisor has between 8 and 12 team members. Senior managers to managers should be more like between 3 and 8 direct reports, as should managers to supervisors.

Identify the things that are dissatisfying and the things that are satisfying for each person. Dissatisfiers are things like compensation, fringe benefits, job security, working conditions, policies and administrative practices, and interpersonal relationships. Satisfiers are things like meaningful and challenging work, recognition for accomplishments, feeling of achievement, increased responsibility, opportunities for advancement, and variety of work.

Identify how you can address the issues. When you think about dissatisfiers and satisfiers, think about whether you can directly or indirectly affect each one. For example, you can directly affect dissatisfiers like working conditions, policies and administrative practices, and personal relationships. You can indirectly affect dissatisfiers like compensation, fringe benefits, and job security by helping the person obtain new skills and gain more value to the organization.

Most of the job satisfiers are things that a leader can improve directly. By empowering team members to take on more responsibilities, they can provide meaningful work, challenging work, a feeling of achievement and increase the variety of work.

Put a plan in place. Generally speaking, you should first address the job dissatisfiers and address issues that affect the largest percentage of your team first. Dissatisfiers create more stress than satisfiers relieve. Address the things that affect the largest percentage of your team because it will have the biggest impact on the greatest number of people.

Look across all the people in your work center and see if there are recurring themes. Are the work conditions poor for everyone? Are policies too onerous? Address those issues first. It will become obvious to your team that you have noticed the issues and are doing something about it.

Next, sit down with individual team members and ask them what things are dissatisfying to them, and what satisfying things they would like to do. Create an individual plan for each person. Use these items as goals on performance evaluations. Interact with each person weekly; informally ask them how they are doing relative to the goals. Make opportunities for them. Empower them.

Improving how someone feels about their work will reduce stress at work and at home. Not everyone will want more responsibility, but everyone likes dissatisfiers to go down and satisfiers to go up. Go forth and do great things.

About the Author: Tom Moriarty

About the Author

Tom Moriarty | P.E., CMRP, President of Alidade MER, Inc.

Tom Moriarty, P.E., CMRP is president of Alidade MER, Inc., a consulting firm specializing in asset management, reliability engineering, and leadership improvement. He is a member of SMRP (Florida Chapter Board Member and CED Director), a past Chair of ASME’s Canaveral Florida Section, and author of the book “The Productive Leadership System; Maximizing Organizational Reliability”. He has a BSME, an MBA (organizational development), is a licensed professional engineer (PE) in Florida, and a Certified Maintenance and Reliability Professional (CMRP). Contact him at [email protected], (321) 773-3356, or via LinkedIn at www.linkedin.com/in/alidade-mer.

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