Strategy

11 Leaders Show You How to Make Your Resume Stand Out

Ben Lawrence - Terkel HR Spotlight
Matthew Ramirez HR Spotlight
Shaun Connell - Terkel HR Spotlight
TK Morgan - Terkel HR Spotlight
Wendy Makinson - Terkel HR Spotlight
Piotrek Sosnowski - Terkel HR Spotlight
Seth Newman - Terkel for HR Spotlight
Ashlea Harwood - Terkel HR Spotlight
Saikat Ghosh - Terkel HR Spotlight
Stephanie Mantofel - Terkel HR Spotlight
Dominic Hutchings - Terkel HR Spotlight

11 Leaders Show You How to Make Your Resume Stand Out

Show Up in Person

As a business owner, I have this fantasy that a job seeker out there is more enthusiastic about working with my company than I am. And the primary way that job seekers can prove that is by walking into my office or, at a minimum, picking up the phone and calling me directly. Yet in 30 years, this almost never happens.

Ben Lawrence - Terkel HR Spotlight

Hard truth: We business owners don’t care about your resume, we care about your passion for our business and your hunger to be part of our team. Stop hiding behind a resume, get in front of it.

Wanna make your resume stand out? Visit the office of your dream employer! Ask to meet the president. Offer to volunteer to work there for a day, even if it’s just sweeping the floors. Hard truth: We business owners don’t care about your resume, we care about your passion for our business and your hunger to be part of our team. Stop hiding behind a resume, get in front of it.

Ben Lawrence, Founder, Wolf Heart Sales

Include a LinkedIn Profile

By including a link to your LinkedIn profile or your resume, you show your online credibility. After all, hiring managers can learn a lot about potential employees by checking out their LinkedIn profiles, so it’s always a good idea to include one in your resume. It shows that you’re willing to take extra steps to get hired, which is always an outstanding quality to have.

Matthew Ramirez, CEO, Rephrasely

Add Infographics or Visual Elements

This can be a timeline of your career growth, a visual representation of your skills and experience, or any other creative way to present your information. Adding color themes, icons, and other visuals can help your resume stand out among the competition, as long as it’s not vividly bright or garnished with busy patterns that clash with the content itself.

Shaun Connell - Terkel HR Spotlight

Adding color themes, icons, and other visuals can help your resume stand out among the competition, as long as it’s not vividly bright or garnished with busy patterns that clash with the content itself.

Align its colors and designs with the content, and help the recruiter screen through the entire resume in one go to get a general idea of your skills and experience. So, adding a visual element and the right color theme is a great way to differentiate your resume from the rest of the pack.

Shaun Connell, Founder, Writing Tips Institute

Make Your Accomplishments Scannable

The best way to help your resume stand out is to list your accomplishments with metrics in bold. A recruiter has tons of resumes to review; make it easy for them as they quickly scan your resume with the list of all of your significant accomplishments. When you bold your metrics, it captures the attention of the recruiter quickly. Try it out and watch your recruiter response increase.

TK Morgan, Founder & Visionary, Tuesday At 1030

Display Your Passion

My tip is not related to certain fonts or color schemes; it’s simply to focus on displaying your passion for the business and taking the time to, even via a summary, show that you not only (a) understand the business in-depth but also (b) genuinely want to work for them.

Wendy Makinson, HR Manager, Joloda Hydraroll

Show Your Personality

Showing personality in your resume can help you stand out from the crowd by giving the reader a sense of who you are as a person. A resume is not just a list of your qualifications and experience; it’s also an opportunity to show the employer what makes you unique and sets you apart from other candidates.

Piotrek Sosnowski - Terkel HR Spotlight

Including a bit of personality in your resume can help the reader get to know you better and make a more personal connection with you.

Piotrek Sosnowski,
Chief People & Culture Officer,
HiJunior

Including a bit of personality in your resume can help the reader get to know you better and make a more personal connection with you. For example, you might include a summary of your personal interests or hobbies, or highlight a specific personal or professional accomplishment that shows your character and values.

However, it’s important to strike the right balance with showing personality. While it’s okay to inject a bit of your own style and personality, it’s still important to maintain a professional tone and focus on your qualifications and achievements.

Piotrek Sosnowski, Chief People & Culture Officer, HiJunior

Include that Cover Letter

When looking at candidates, I always give extra attention to those who attach or send a cover letter with their resumes. This shows me they truly want the position and gives me a glimpse into why they would be a good fit or are interested. It’s a great way to get your resume to the top. It also adds a human element to it, as your personality may show more in the cover letter. Always send one; it may be the deciding factor in your hiring. I interview more candidates who send cover letters.

Seth Newman, Director, SportingSmiles

Follow Up

In any job application, you’re going up against many other candidates. No matter how you set up your resume, nothing is going to represent you better than yourself.

If you have the opportunity, it’s worth finding out who the hiring manager is and having a conversation with them about the role. It shows enthusiasm, but it also gives you the opportunity to find out more about the role. That way, you’ll know if it’s right for you, but you’ll also have a head start when you’re interviewed.

Ashlea Harwood, HR & Office Manager, Darwen Electrical Services

Put Your Best, Important Information First

Who doesn’t want a standout resume? It is the first step to getting a dream job. If a recruiter doesn’t like your resume, you can’t express what you know and your skills. Maybe you are better than your resume sounds, but getting through the resume screening can give you a chance to prove yourself.

Saikat Ghosh - Terkel HR Spotlight

Most of the time, a recruiter doesn’t read a complete resume to find your skills and achievements. So, it’s better to make it easy for them by presenting them in summary at the top of the resume.

Saikat Ghosh,
Associate Director, HR & Business,
Technource

Use the summary section in the resume to put the most important things about you. Present the essence of your best skills and achievements in the summary. It is because most of the time, a recruiter doesn’t read a complete resume to find your skills and achievements. So, it’s better to make it easy for them by presenting them in summary at the top of the resume.

For this, choose the format of the resume that has a summary section, or you can add it to the page if it is not there. This type of summary can stand out on your resume, and you can get an interview call. So, save the best for the most important information.

Saikat Ghosh, Associate Director, HR & Business, Technource

Use Specific Numbers and Action Words

Be specific with numbers and results by using powerful and action words. It doesn’t matter what role you are in; you have created an impact. “I increased revenue by X% by doing XYZ.”

Action words can include: saved, acquired, retained, expanded, boosted, etc.

Stephanie Mantofel, Founder, Bright Link Talent

Focus on Clean, Easy-to-Read Templates

Consider using a clean, modern layout with plenty of white space to make the resume easy to read. The key is to find a balance between a visually appealing design and a professional, easy-to-read layout.

Dominic Hutchings - Terkel HR Spotlight

Don’t fall for commercialized CVs. A simple resume with a clean layout and plenty of white space is easier for recruiters and hiring managers to read and understand.

Dominic Hutchings,
Business Development Manager,
Wellpack

Don’t fall for commercialized CVs. A simple resume with a clean layout and plenty of white space is easier for recruiters and hiring managers to read and understand. This is important when they are reviewing many resumes. The content of what you write and how you sell your skills and expertise matters.

Dominic Hutchings, Business Development Manager, Wellpack

Every Effort Adds Up!

Every pointer presented by these leaders makes sense, and leaving any of them out of your resume would surely mean giving up on advantage. So the trick is to use every effort in the book to create a resume that not just stands out but also goes all the way even when it’s against some of the best candidates out there.

So add every component that’s mentioned here, and customize your resume not just in line with the position you’re looking to bag but also the employer’s needs and business plans. It’s all about creating a winning mix that stands out!

Do you have a tip that can help in creating a winning resume? Or is there another insight you’d like to share with readers across the globe?

Write to us at connect@HRSpotlight.com, and our team will help you share your insights.

Employee and Organizational Well-being: A Burnout Prevention Strategist’s Guide

Employee and Organizational Well-being: A Burnout Prevention Strategist’s Guide

Companies everywhere are looking for innovative ways to improve workplace health and wellness. An epidemic of burnout and quiet quitting have companies searching for solutions that support employee well-being and, ultimately, the organization’s health. 

Here are 3 practical and efficient solutions to help you tackle burnout and promote employee and organizational well-being.

1. Create a psychologically safe environment to talk about stress and burnout

Fear is the primary reason employees do not talk to their manager about the stress and burnout they’re experiencing. Fear of losing their job. Fear of losing respect. Fear of losing the next big promotion.

Fear is a powerful motivator. Even though employees are stressed, worn out, and burnt out, they’re afraid to talk about it. Rather than finding long-term solutions to their health and productivity challenges, they give as little as possible as they work on fumes.

The first step toward building a sustainable workplace health and wellness plan is to develop a psychologically safe environment to discuss stress, challenges, and burnout.

So how do we do this? By modeling from the top. Leaders must demonstrate that it’s not only safe to talk about stress but encouraged. Here are a few ways leaders can model appropriately.

  • Update your out-of-office reply and email signature to clearly state your working hours. Perhaps include a statement, such as, “I will respond to your email within my working hours. There is no expectation to reply until you are at work.”
  • Send an email to employees at the end of the day, saying, “I’m heading home from work now to be with my family. I hope you enjoy your evening as well.”
  • Post as much on your social media channels about your rest life as your work life. Make work-life balance something to celebrate.

2. Train managers to have emotionally intelligent conversations with direct reports

Most managers care for those they supervise and want to see them succeed. Part of doing so is having conversations about productivity, effectiveness, and stress management.

During a recent workshop I presented to leaders of a national, multi-site corporation, a leader mentioned having gone to counseling to help with her stress levels. I asked what made her feel safe to not only access her benefits package counseling resources but share having done so with colleagues. She said her manager shared a story of a time of great personal stress and the impact a counselor had on her well-being. When her manager admitted reaching out to a counselor, she felt it would be ok to do so herself, which was a life-changing decision.

Here are a few recommendations for how managers can authentically open the wellness conversation while prioritizing effective work practices and employee well-being.

  • Help employees understand expectations, discuss which tasks are high, medium, and low priority, and train employees to manage their day and week based on importance. While workloads may be high, acknowledging them and helping employees prioritize their work can create a huge advantage.
  • Ask those you manage how they are doing, and genuinely listen. Respond with empathy to show you truly care. Ask what you can do to help.
  • Authentically share how you deal with stress, including the resources that have helped you most.
  • You will build trust by seeking to understand your direct reports’ struggles and responding with empathy. When employees trust your intentions, they are more likely to engage with resources provided by the company.

3. Implement quarterly burnout assessment checks to improve employee wellness and productivity.

A challenge of workplace wellness programs is collecting data on the plan’s efficacy. For example, how do you know what is causing employees the most significant workplace stress and which initiatives are making a difference?

Research shows six factors create burnout in an organization:

  • Overwhelming workload
  • Lack of control
  • Lack of reward
  • Lack of community
  • Lack of fairness
  • Conflicting values

These factors speak to company culture and cannot be fixed with a simple day off. Organizations often do not see a significant return on investment with their workplace wellness plans because initiatives do not address the root causes of employee stress.

By identifying and understanding the six factors affecting employees, organizations can manage workplace stress with short-term resource solutions and long-term culture design.

Why burnout is relevant now

I have created the most comprehensive Burnout Assessment available and offer it free to companies worldwide. The assessment provides both a Professional Profile based on the six factors noted above and a Personal Profile, evaluating the effects of burnout on a person’s health.

Companies across sectors use the Burnout Assessment, including corporate, non-profit, healthcare, and educational institutions. It provides a free, people-focused, data-driven assessment to evaluate critical cultural factors causing workplace stress.

Start with leadership

Download the free Burnout Assessment

  • Engage the leadership team, which, depending on your organization, may mean the C-Suite, Directors, or senior management team. Explain that the company is looking to strengthen its workplace health and wellness plan and will use the Burnout Assessment to evaluate employee stressors and risks. The leadership team will be the first to complete the assessment to create an authentic and psychologically safe process for all.
  • Ask leaders to complete the assessment, and be prepared to share their results during the next leadership team meeting.
  • During a leadership meeting, ask questions about what it felt like to complete the assessment, what the outcomes represent, and how to have psychologically safe and emotionally intelligent conversations with direct reports once the Burnout Assessment is implemented company-wide.

Implement the Burnout Assessment company-wide

  • Have managers send the Burnout Assessment to those they oversee, explaining the company’s vision to strengthen workplace health and wellness.
  • Invite direct reports to complete the assessment and prepare to discuss the results in a one-on-one meeting. I recommend asking employees to disclose their Professional Profile only, which will give you the data you’re looking for, as the Personal Profile may feel too personal and private.
  • Ask employees thoughtful questions, such as, “What did you notice?”, Do you have any concerns?” and “What changes would help you?”
  • Offer support and resources to address the challenges exposed by the assessment. Point to company workflows and automation, benefits packages, and employee assistance programs.
  • Re-evaluate quarterly and compare results to see where improvements have been made and what cultural shifts need to happen.

Over time, you will notice themes and patterns emerging as you implement the Burnout Assessment across your organization. You may find that certain factors arise in specific departments within the company, allowing you to address issues specifically and accurately. Because ultimately, happy, healthy employees create healthy organizations that thrive.

About Bonita Eby

Bonita Eby is a Burnout Prevention Strategist and CEO of Breakthrough Personal & Professional Development Inc., specializing in burnout prevention and wellness for organizations and individuals at the intersection of health and leadership development.

Download your free Burnout Assessment today.

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Simple and Efficient Wellness Initiatives: The Biz Latin Hub Story

Simple and Efficient Wellness Initiatives: The Biz Latin Hub Story

We asked HR and business leaders around the world the all-important question of how their workplace wellness initiatives are impacting their workforce. Among our responses, we received this wonderful piece of insight from Craig Dempsey, and we just had to share all that Craig had to say about their simple and efficient wellness initiatives at Biz Latin Hub!

At Biz Latin Hub, we make every effort in order to ensure our employees feel comfortable whilst working in the office. For the past few years, we have constantly been implementing and improving these processes for the benefit of all our staff.

Clean, tidy and well-decorated offices

Firstly, we believe it is essential to maintain a high level of cleanliness at all times. We have someone in charge of that mission throughout the working day. 

We also keep the office bright and colorful, which has an important impact on morale. There are paintings spread around the office and plants for additional color. As well as being decorative, plants improve air quality, are a source of well-being, and also improve the productivity of employees.

In addition to our efforts to boost morale, we provide our employees with high-quality technology and working materials so they can provide a top-class service to our clients.

Balanced and healthy diets

Regarding nutrition, I believe a healthy and balanced diet is essential in order to be proactive and energetic. 

The majority of employees start working by 9 am, so they should have time to get up a little early and have a good breakfast (the most important meal of the day?)

At the workplace, we then provide fruit baskets daily to keep everybody in good spirits and full of energy (citrus fruits, bananas, apples). 

We also provide several types of tea and coffee (as any good office should) to stay alert throughout the day and a water cooler, so everyone stays hydrated. In addition to the pleasure that hot drinks provide, they can also boost intellectual and physical capacity.

Like most companies, we have a small lunch room with cutlery, plates, cups, microwave and many other things that could be useful for our employees and their well-being.

Everyone is free to have snacks or eat outside in the sunshine. Our employees have the freedom to take their breaks when they so desire and are therefore not forced to have a heavy lunch to keep them going through the day.

A united team goes the extra mile

In relation to corporate culture, our devoted HR team is constantly adding more and more events to the staff calendar. 

We organize team-building events to strengthen bonds and improve team cohesion so all employees can get to know their co-workers more deeply. 

In addition to this, we celebrate milestones with enthusiasm and with the whole team. For example, we recently celebrated the company’s 8th anniversary, and the atmosphere was amazing. These events allow the team to spend lots of pleasant time together whilst at work.

Sometimes, after certain events or by the request of an employee, we will organize team meals that everyone is invited to after a day at the office.

We also provide access to workshops such as language classes, photography classes, and sports events.

Our employees have access to training throughout the year and the possibility to progress to more important positions within the company, especially management positions.

Thanks to all of this, everybody’s sense of belonging becomes stronger and our offices at Biz Latin Hub offer a great social climate.

Hybrid work to satisfy everyone

This highlights a very topical subject that, since the Covid-19 pandemic, has affected many workplaces.

I think it is important for everyone to be able to balance their family and professional life. Remote working or hybrid work allows for more flexibility and suits many people.

According to a recent study, about 80% of employees worldwide have found a better balance between these two important parts of their lives since starting hybrid/remote work agreements. 

This can also generate better productivity in some cases and even reduce levels of stress. 

As it often is in big cities, a significant part of our team lives a fair distance from the office. Travel time is greatly reduced by working remotely, and it allows them to save money on top of that. This time and money can then be used for other parts of their lives, further improving their work/life balance. This is an excellent compromise and many of the team have expressed positive opinions on our recently developed hybrid work strategy. 

This being said, some people prefer to work from the office, which is fully understandable, whether it is for social reasons, communication, or something else. In our case, most of the employees come in 3 days a week to the office and then work from home for the rest of the week. Obviously, there are some exceptions depending on the needs of the employee. On Fridays, we usually ask everybody to come into the office as we often hold important meetings and/or celebrations at the end of the working week.

I personally prefer to be working in the field with my collaborators. It saves me from being on my computer all day. At the office, our computers are programmed to change color after 5:30 pm, so our employees don’t work overtime and it prevents eye strain. 

To Sum It Up

In conclusion, we understand that there is a strong correlation between productivity, motivation, and well-being at work. Therefore, we do our best to repeatedly improve our health and well-being initiatives and enact them to form a workforce that consistently improves their state of mind and their ability to thrive at work.

Craig Dempsey is the co-founder and chief executive officer of Biz Latin Hub Group

About Craig Dempsey

Craig Dempsey is the co-founder and chief executive officer of Biz Latin Hub Group, an organization dedicated to assisting investors in Latin America and the Caribbean via the likes of company formation and tax advisory, as well as through recruitment and payroll outsourcing. 

Craig holds a degree in mechanical engineering, a master’s degree in project management, and other certifications covering logistics, personal management, and government administration. Craig is an Australian military veteran and has been deployed overseas on numerous occasions. He is also a former mining executive with experience in Australia, Canada, Colombia, and Peru.

Craig is based at the BLH head office in Bogota, Colombia.

Do you have some valuable insights or stories you wish to share with our readers? It could be a few lines or even a full-fledged guest post!

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13 Factors Impacting Your Team Productivity

13 Factors Impacting Your Team Productivity

HR teams around the world fight the productivity fight each day, within their own teams and out on the work floor of the businesses they serve.

What is team productivity, and why is your team productivity nosediving?

The HR Spotlight team set out to find answers to these questions, and here we are to provide you with a list that helps you identify shortcomings and shows you where you might be going wrong.

What is Team Productivity?

To shed more light on what team productivity is all about, let’s consider workers A and B contributing to the productivity charts of the company they work for with their own set of tasks and responsibilities.

Employee A is doing wonderfully well at the workplace and has all the traits from self-motivation to work ethics that keep delivery and performance 100%.

On the other hand, Employee B suffers from low morale and a general dislike for every task placed at their desk each day, which means that the delivery and performance B brings to the table is only 50%. Put the two together, draw out an average, and you know your team productivity stands at 75%.

But is this team productivity number of 75% only because of the high performance that A delivers and the low performance of B? Or are there other factors at play behind the scenes? Is this even the right method to derive team productivity? Or does this method take the spotlight away from other prevalent factors at the workplace and beyond?

Of course, employee contribution does drive productivity, but will the resolution of the problem on an individual level provide all the answers?

Factors Impacting Your Team Productivity

Well, as it turns out, team productivity has to do with a lot more than employee productivity, and here’s the list that tells you why your team productivity is nosediving.

#1: Recruitment

Your recruitment process is where it all begins, so yes, the recruitment strategies you have in place do have an impact. After all, it is your recruitment process that determines the percentage of As and Bs in your organization. It also determines the overall commitment you’re able to derive from your employees through all that you offer them right from the recruitment stages. If your recruitment isn’t being done right, it has a direct adverse impact on team productivity.

#2: Onboarding

Your onboarding process determines the commitment you derive from your employees. When an employee meets a highly driven HR team and is introduced to managers who are heartily sharing stories of how they lead a workplace that is all about performance and productivity, this approach rubs off on employees.

On the other hand, when new employees are met with a lethargic onboarding process and interact with a team that is not very willing to inspire or lead from the front, chances are they witness this same attitude playing out on the work floor too. Under these circumstances, even the most productive employees will find it challenging to keep up their drive to perform well.

#3: Managers and leaders

Are the managers and leaders at your workplace an inspirational lot? Or do they suffer from performance and productivity issues too? When the ones who lead are lost, how can they lead their teams toward optimal performance?

In the absence of managers and leaders who believe in leading from the front, no team can even create a team productivity roadmap, to begin with. If your managers are uninspiring, do little to trace the negatives in your team, do even less to inspire, and are just not committed to their roles, your team productivity is bound to nosedive.

#4: Productivity roadmap

No matter how self-driven, self-motivated, and well-trained, every employee requires a productivity roadmap that clearly references their tasks and responsibilities and shows them exactly how they can contribute to the team’s productivity. When this roadmap is unclear, when it is vague enough to confuse employees, or when it doesn’t even exist, team productivity will undoubtedly take a hit. After all, even the best workers need direction and know at least the basics of their production schedule to deliver their best. Without this roadmap, even the best efforts of an outstanding workforce are wasted.

#5: Learning and development

Every workplace requires a set of learning and development practices that help employees do better. When your workplace does not commit to learning and development and has a workforce that isn’t learning anything new or even forgetting what they’ve learned until now, you will soon have a team that just isn’t as capable as their peers who are exposed to regular learning opportunities.

In addition to affecting team productivity, the lack of learning also leaves employees less capable. They learn nothing new, have nothing to show for all the months or years they’ve spent at your company, and soon enough, will realize that all they’ve done is work without learning anything worthwhile. And one look at the productivity numbers will show that they haven’t contributed a lot on that front either.

#6: Remuneration, perks, and benefits

Different factors drive every employee in your team, and it is up to you as a leader to provide the right balance. When you fail to do so, employee performance will face a negative impact too. The remuneration your employees receive on a regular basis and the perks and benefits that add up to this fixed amount are major influential factors on this list.

Suppose you do not offer suitable remuneration, and the perks and benefits in line do little to drive employees to give their best. In that case, there is a strong chance that your productivity numbers will reflect this lack of motivation.

#7: Growth opportunities

Promotions to the next seat in the hierarchy, better positions within the team, or even a full-fledged bump to the post of a manager are all key influencers that inspire employee productivity. Employees are driven hard by the motivation to grow within the team and even more by opportunities that lead them to managerial positions. In the absence of these opportunities, employees have little to work towards, and this means that your productivity will nosedive too.

#8: Ownership issues

When employees know they are being held responsible for certain productivity factors, they also plan their input accordingly. In the absence of ownership, employees find it difficult to peg responsibilities on themselves. This means that the onus of performing well at the workplace seldom finds its way to them. If your team hierarchy lacks this critical element of ownership and creates a rather vague ownership structure, it can affect productivity negatively too. After all, when employees don’t even know what they’re responsible for, how can they measure the effort required to accomplish them?

#9: Work distribution

Every employee has unique strengths and weaknesses, and when the work they do matches this unique list, the output is of the same caliber too. For example, if your employees are being allotted tasks that they’re not really good at, it would be a joke to expect high team productivity. On the other hand, when you’re able to identify each employee’s strengths and prepare a work list that makes the most of these strengths, productivity is bound to spike. Not paying enough attention to the work distribution process is, therefore, one factor affecting team productivity.

#10: Project management

A solid project management system helps managers define every work process and distribute responsibilities to the right members of their team and enables real-time tracking of every function. It shows managers as well as employees where they stand at any given point of the project in terms of schedule and output.

When your team does not have a robust project management system in place, there is no way to measure output against the requirements of the project, and even the timeline goes haywire. So if the project management system your team relies on isn’t the right one, you can be sure that this factor is draining your team’s productivity too.

#11: Employee freedom

Employee freedom is a rather delicate subject, and every manager who heads a team knows how tough it is to create the right balance when it comes to allowing certain employees freedoms and disallowing others. When the balance is right, team productivity is hardly an issue; when it’s wrong, the direct adverse impact on productivity is quite evident. So what is employee freedom in this context?

Suppose your managers are micro-managing the entire workflow and not giving employees the freedom to make even the most minor decisions. In that case, your employees do not have enough space to give their best and work freely. On the other hand, if your managers are not paying enough attention to their employees’ work patterns and it’s all haywire from a team’s point of view, this approach contributes to a productivity nosedive too.

#12: Teamwork

You can have 10 of the world’s best players on your team and still lose the easiest of games if there is a lack of teamwork and camaraderie among the players. This is how it is at the workplace too. If the employees on your team do not get along with each other, if there is a dearth of collaboration and communication, and even worse, if there are employees who make deliberate attempts to sabotage the performance of others, there’s no way your team productivity can stay away from the damage caused by such an environment.

The lack of teamwork contributes to a drop in productivity in more ways than you think, and even the ease of projects and simplicity of work schedules will cease to matter under these circumstances.

#13: Health and wellness

The health and wellness of your individual employees add up to the health and wellness of your team. And while encouraging your workforce to pay attention to their physical and mental health is always a good thing, ensuring that this is a thing at the workplace is crucial too. After all, your employees easily spend the most waking hours of their day at the workplace, and what they do here regarding their health is also influential to their well-being. In the absence of company commitment to employees’ health and wellness, team productivity is sure to bear the brunt.

Pulling Your Team Up from a Productivity Nosedive

Now that you know the possible reasons behind the nosediving productivity of your team, you can lay out the plans to tackle each problem too. At HR Spotlight, we have all the answers you need to latch on to high-productivity models at your workplace and enable the HR team to do more than they ever thought they would.

Do you have any more factors you think we can add to this list? Or is there something else you’d like to share with us?

Write to us at connect@HRSpotlight.com, and our team will help you share your insights.