Close Menu
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
    TRENDING :
    • Public media is struggling under Trump. L.A.’s KCRW may have found the way forward
    • The journey to a no-compromise foldable smartphone
    • Claude is becoming more agentic. Amanda Askell is thinking through what that means
    • The Battle for Black Brooklyn
    • The marketing funnel is dead. Here’s what replaced it
    • How a New York Primary Wound Up at the Center of the AI Storm
    • World Cup or not, high performers get these 3 things wrong about pressure
    • Adobe is rolling out agents for its Creative Cloud apps. It will be a lifesaver for creatives
    Populist Bulletin
    • Home
    • US Politics
    • World Politics
    • Economy
    • Business
    • Headline News
    Populist Bulletin
    Home»Business»Your team needs a supportive manager, not yoga and meditation
    Business 5 Mins Read

    Your team needs a supportive manager, not yoga and meditation

    Business 5 Mins Read
    Share Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Telegram Email Copy Link
    Follow Us
    Google News Flipboard
    Share
    Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Email

    You might remember ZenBooths—Amazon’s contribution to corporate well-being. These were booths installed in the middle of warehouses, equipped with a fan, a potted plant, and a monitor playing meditation videos. The company called them mindful practice rooms. Employees called them despair chambers. The internet called them coffins for workers—workers who, incidentally, didn’t even have time to use the bathroom because of crushing productivity demands.

    ZenBooths are, I think, a fitting metaphor for modern corporate wellness. According to Gallup, employee engagement dropped to 20% in 2025—the lowest it’s been since the COVID-19 lockdowns. Companies are pouring money into all kinds of initiatives, convinced they’re building attractive workplaces, while their employees quietly disengage. Why is this happening, and what can we do about it? Here are a few observations from my own experience.

    STRESS AS A SYMPTOM OF POOR MANAGEMENT

    University of Oxford researchers analyzed data from more than 46,000 employees, comparing those who used corporate wellness programs with those who didn’t. None of the practices produced any meaningful improvement in employee well-being.

    Wellness programs rest on a simple assumption: if someone is stressed, give them a tool to relax. The problem is that this approach treats symptoms while ignoring the conditions that cause the stress in the first place. Those conditions—surprise—tend to be unrealistic workloads, micromanagement, a lack of feedback, and messages landing in inboxes after hours. Employees feel all of this through their daily interactions with their manager: how tasks get assigned, how they measure performance, and whether working hours are respected.

    In a separate study, Gallup found that employees who view their team’s management practices as ineffective are roughly 60% more likely to report high levels of stress.

    If your team has is less proactive and burning out faster, the problem almost certainly isn’t a shortage of wellness programs. Moments like these are a signal for managers to take a hard look at their own decisions first.

    A SUPPORTIVE MANAGER IS THE KEY TO TEAM WELL-BEING

    I manage a team of 90 people. Until 2022, we worked out of an office in the Ukrainian city of Kherson and were firm believers in in-person collaboration. Our health check surveys consistently show the sense of connection we built over 10 years of working side by side motived people most.

    Russia’s full-scale invasion of Ukraine forced us to scatter across different cities and countries, and we moved to fully remote working. I had to introduce new online formats to keep people engaged: regular one-to-ones with team leads, short team syncs focused on priorities and blockers, and open Q&A sessions where the team could ask about decisions and changes in the way we work.

    We can’t hold in-person events right now, but we’ve still managed to preserve a healthy atmosphere despite the distance and the limited opportunities for team building.

    Here are the five approaches I’ve found most effective.

    1. Cover the basics. A reasonable workload, a flexible schedule, and fair pay aren’t perks—they’re the foundation. If a person can’t take sick leave without it costing them, no wellness tool will relieve the pressure. In our case, the most basic need after the war began was physical safety. I understood that no one could be productive while they or their loved ones were under bombardment. So, until every member of the team had settled somewhere safe, I redistributed work, flexed our processes, and personally helped people with relocation. Our clients didn’t notice.

    2. Be a coach, not a controller. Delegate the task and the right to choose how it gets done. That kind of autonomy makes people feel they’re shaping the outcome, not just following instructions—and that has a direct impact on engagement. A couple of years back, I had a complex technical problem on my hands. My first instinct was to pick the solution myself, but I handed it to my development team instead. They chose their own approach and delivered a stunning result.

    3. Lead by example. If you send emails at midnight and never take vacation or sick days, your team reads that as the norm. Talking about work-life balance is worthless when the manager’s actions say the opposite. When leaders model healthy habits, it defines the culture for everyone else.

    4. Be interested in people, not just tasks. We run check-in meetings where team members can share how they’re doing in general, and watercooler meetings where we talk about anything except work. It helps a manager stay in touch with the team and catch things before they become problems. Even in first interviews, I personally ask candidates more questions about their lives than about their work.

    5. Don’t be afraid to hear the truth about yourself. Most managers never get honest feedback on their work—not because everything is perfect, but because there’s no real channel for it. People won’t air their concerns in all-hands meetings. That’s why I hold regular one-to-ones and actively seek input from the team. Whatever doesn’t come up in those conversations, we surface through anonymous surveys and team health checks.

      Companies that take employee well-being seriously start with an honest question: Are our managers creating an environment where people want to work? The best wellness program is a working environment you don’t constantly need to recover from.

      Illia Smoliienko is the chief software officer at Waites.



      Source link

      Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email

      Related Posts

      Public media is struggling under Trump. L.A.’s KCRW may have found the way forward

      June 19, 2026

      The journey to a no-compromise foldable smartphone

      June 19, 2026

      Claude is becoming more agentic. Amanda Askell is thinking through what that means

      June 19, 2026
      Top News
      Business 2 Mins Read

      Trump says Toyota plans $10 billion U.S. investment — Toyota says, not exactly

      Business 2 Mins Read

      Toyota was quick to pump the brakes on a claim President Donald Trump made this…

      Fed minutes show deep division at the December meeting

      December 30, 2025

      This Google alternative has a ‘No AI’ function. Search visits are soaring by double digits

      May 28, 2026

      How the Olympic cauldron became its own spectacle

      February 7, 2026
      Top Trending
      Business 7 Mins Read

      Public media is struggling under Trump. L.A.’s KCRW may have found the way forward

      Business 7 Mins Read

      It was a textbook addition of insult to injury. When President Trump…

      Business 3 Mins Read

      The journey to a no-compromise foldable smartphone

      Business 3 Mins Read

      The first chapter in the smartphone’s history was a story of consolidation.…

      Business 8 Mins Read

      Claude is becoming more agentic. Amanda Askell is thinking through what that means

      Business 8 Mins Read

      Amanda Askell spends her days thinking about how to ensure Claude, Anthropic’s…

      Categories
      • Business
      • Economy
      • Headline News
      • Top News
      • US Politics
      • World Politics
      About us

      The Populist Bulletin was founded with a fervent commitment to inform, inspire, empower and spark meaningful conversations about the economy, business, politics, government accountability, globalization, and the preservation of American cultural heritage.

      We are devoted to delivering straightforward, unfiltered, compelling, relatable stories that resonate with the majority of the American public, while boldly challenging false mainstream narratives that seem to only serve entrenched elitists, and foreign interests.

      Top Picks

      Public media is struggling under Trump. L.A.’s KCRW may have found the way forward

      June 19, 2026

      The journey to a no-compromise foldable smartphone

      June 19, 2026

      Claude is becoming more agentic. Amanda Askell is thinking through what that means

      June 19, 2026
      Categories
      • Business
      • Economy
      • Headline News
      • Top News
      • US Politics
      • World Politics
      Copyright © 2025 Populist Bulletin. All Rights Reserved.

      Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.