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Professional Services

Award-winning expert's tips for wellbeing in the workplace

National Small Business of the Year head Alexis Powell-Howard gives home-town talk

Wilkin Chapman partner Teresa Thomas, centre, with Alexis Powell-Howard of Fortis Therapy & Training, right, and Ruth Hardy, senior business manager at Hays at Oaklands Hall Hotel, Laceby.(Image: Wilkin Chapman)

Creating employee wellbeing focus groups and supporting those managing people are key ways in which businesses can improve physical and mental health in the workplace, advises a regional expert.

Award-winning Fortis Therapy & Training, led by Alexis Powell-Howard, joined leading regional law firm Wilkin Chapman solicitors and HR recruitment specialists Hays for a presentation and workshop entitled People, Organisations and Wellbeing.

Alexis, whose firm won the 2019 National Small Business of the Year Award, said: “People in your organisation are your most treasured resource, even though there will be times when it may not feel like that.”

Taking inspiration from internationally-known HR guru Jack Welch, she explained the need for managers to recognise the need to support individuals – especially those who were newly-promoted.

“Across all sectors there is an issue around people getting promoted because they are already very good at what they are doing, but then their role becomes about managing people and that can be really tricky. Managers need training on managing people. We know from the research that increasingly ‘management style’ is being cited by employees as increasing work-related stress,” she said.

Urging managers to find ways in which they could have ‘honest conversations’ with employees, she emphasised the importance of keeping people motivated, especially in times of change or growth.

“Working to someone’s strengths and focusing on that is always better than concentrating on a weakness. Their weakness may be someone else's strength within the team and vice versa,” she said.

Healthy organisations have engaged teams, with working environments that did not impact on mental and physical health, she said. And, added Alexis, to achieve that firms needed to ensure all their key leaders and members were on board with any strategy that promoted employee wellbeing.