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This conversation explores an article that argues corporate America's traditional focus on employee resilience has created unsustainable "survival mode" workplaces, leading to chronic stress and burnout. The authors propose shifting organizational efforts toward fostering genuine thriving, defined as the simultaneous experience of vitality and learning. Central to this transformation is cultivating employee agency—the capacity for intentional choice and belief in one's efficacy—which the article supports with evidence-based interventions across several domains. These interventions include strategies for resource stewardship, developing cognitive flexibility through methods like the AIR model, improving procedural justice and communication transparency, and strategically investing in social connection infrastructure and material security. Ultimately, the article contends that transitioning from survival to thriving is not merely an ethical choice but a strategic imperative that enhances performance, talent retention, and long-term competitive advantage.
See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
By Human Capital InnovationsThis conversation explores an article that argues corporate America's traditional focus on employee resilience has created unsustainable "survival mode" workplaces, leading to chronic stress and burnout. The authors propose shifting organizational efforts toward fostering genuine thriving, defined as the simultaneous experience of vitality and learning. Central to this transformation is cultivating employee agency—the capacity for intentional choice and belief in one's efficacy—which the article supports with evidence-based interventions across several domains. These interventions include strategies for resource stewardship, developing cognitive flexibility through methods like the AIR model, improving procedural justice and communication transparency, and strategically investing in social connection infrastructure and material security. Ultimately, the article contends that transitioning from survival to thriving is not merely an ethical choice but a strategic imperative that enhances performance, talent retention, and long-term competitive advantage.
See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.