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Talking to Your Employees About Stress at Work

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Deborah Grayson Riegel

1:39:30

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  • 1 - Stress in Todays EverChanging Work Environment.mp4
    04:52
  • 2 - Key-Terms.pdf
  • 2 - Worry Stress Burnout Lets Define Our Terms.mp4
    05:30
  • 3 - Why Do We Need to Have the Talk about Stress at Work.mp4
    03:14
  • 4 - APGAR.pdf
  • 4 - Stress at Work What Does it Look Like.mp4
    03:52
  • 5 - SelfCheck Activity How Confident Do I Feel Right Now.mp4
    01:55
  • 5 - Self-Assessment.pdf
  • 6 - Whats My Role How Managers and Colleagues Can Step in without Overstepping.mp4
    05:46
  • 6 - Whats-my-Role.pdf
  • 7 - Understanding why your Colleagues Might be Afraid to Share.mp4
    02:57
  • 8 - Managing your Personal Beliefs about Mental Health.mp4
    04:30
  • 8 - What-do-you-Believe.pdf
  • 9 - Creating a Culture of Trust.mp4
    03:43
  • 9 - Four-Types-of-Trust.pdf
  • 10 - Types-of-Bias.pdf
  • 10 - When Stress Meets Stereotypes How to Be Mindful of Bias.mp4
    05:42
  • 11 - Four Mindsets to Adopt to Help Your Colleagues Navigate Stress.mp4
    05:01
  • 11 - Four-Mindsets.pdf
  • 12 - Activity Applying the Four Mindsets.mp4
    03:34
  • 12 - Activity-Applying-the-Four-Mindsets.pdf
  • 13 - Emotions-List.pdf
  • 13 - Using RAIN with Yourself and Others.mp4
    04:54
  • 13 - Using-RAIN.pdf
  • 14 - Three Kinds of Empathy How to Show that You Get It.mp4
    04:48
  • 14 - Three-Kinds-of-Empathy.pdf
  • 15 - Listen without Distraction How to Be Present When Someone is Sharing.mp4
    04:37
  • 16 - Ask Powerful Questions Getting More Information without Pushing or Prying.mp4
    04:35
  • 16 - Powerful-Questions.pdf
  • 17 - Offer a Help Menu 20 Ways to Support Your Colleagues.mp4
    04:37
  • 17 - Offer-a-Help-Menu.pdf
  • 18 - Activity What Kind of Help do you Need.mp4
    02:07
  • 18 - Activity-What-Kind-of-Help-do-you-Need.pdf
  • 19 - Guidelines.pdf
  • 19 - Guidelines for How to Talk About What Matters Most.mp4
    02:55
  • 20 - Tips for Helping Team Members Manage their Stress.mp4
    03:34
  • 20 - Tips-for-Helping.pdf
  • 21 - Strategy 1 Carve Up the Turkey Together.mp4
    04:00
  • 22 - Activity Carve Up a Turkey.mp4
    00:41
  • 22 - Activity-Carve-up-a-Turkey.pdf
  • 23 - Four-Lens-Approach.pdf
  • 23 - Strategy 2 Use The Four Lens Approach.mp4
    03:05
  • 24 - Strategy 3 Focus on the Bright Spots.mp4
    03:18
  • 25 - Course-Summary.pdf
  • 25 - Pulling it All Together and What To Do if Youre Having a Tough Time.mp4
    03:35
  • 26 - Self-Assessment.pdf
  • 26 - Wrap Up & Self Check Activity.mp4
    02:08
  • Description


    Simple Strategies for Making Conversations about Mental Health Easier

    What You'll Learn?


    • What your role is and isn’t when a colleague shares mental health concerns at work
    • How to create a climate of trust, so that colleagues feel comfortable sharing personal information
    • How to mitigate bias when it comes to discussions about mental health at work
    • A variety of strategies for helping your colleagues with stress at work, without overstepping
    • How to ask powerful questions that feel inviting and supportive, rather than prying or judgmental
    • What to do when a colleague’s stress impacts their productivity — and yours
    • How to reduce stigma and increase inclusion when it comes to mental health
    • What to say and what not to say to someone who is struggling
    • What to do if you’re having a tough time, too

    Who is this for?


  • Anyone curious about stress, burnout, anxiety, mental health and mental illness - for themselves or others
  • Professionals with people management responsibilities
  • Team members and individual contributors who want to be able to support their colleagues during stressful times
  • Leaders who are committed to creating a culture of inclusion and psychological safety around health and mental health
  • Human Resources professionals
  • Employee Wellbeing professionals
  • Diversity, Equity, Culture, and Inclusion professionals
  • What You Need to Know?


  • Students should understand that this course is not a Mental Health First Aid course
  • Students should understand that this course is not training to be a counselor, therapist or other mental health professional
  • Students should understand that this course is not designed to teach you to diagnose any mental health conditions
  • Students should understand that this course is not a substitute for connecting your colleague with a licensed mental health resource
  • Students should understand that this course is not preparing you to be part of an EAP (Employee Assistance Program)
  • Students should understand that this course is not a substitute for your organization’s existing practices around having these conversations
  • More details


    Description
    • What if my colleague tells me they’re overwhelmed all the time — what am I supposed to do?

    • What if my direct report’s stress is stressing ME out?

    • What do I do if my teammate is having a hard time at home — but I don’t want to pry into their personal life?

    • At least some of my colleagues are remote. How am I supposed to know how they’re really feeling?

    • The pandemic is on its way out. Shouldn’t people be over it already?

    If you recognize that stress, burnout, and anxiety are at an all-time high — and you want to know how to help your colleagues without backing away or overstepping — then this course is for you.

    A recent study of more than 2,000 global employees found that 38% of people say their company has not even asked them if they are doing okay.

    That’s not okay.

    Each of us has a responsibility to create an open, inclusive, and safe environment for our colleagues to bring their whole selves to work, including their mental wellbeing. In fact, research has found that feeling like you can share openly at work leads to better performance, engagement, employee retention, and overall well-being.

    And yet, talking about mental health and mental wellbeing at work can feel intimidating, overwhelming, and too personal. But it doesn’t have to be. In this course, you will learn how to have conversations with your colleagues or direct reports that help them feel safe sharing their stress — and help you feel well-equipped to handle whatever comes your way.

    I created this practical Udemy course for you — assuming you are NOT a licensed mental health professional (and don’t plan on becoming one by next week). This course draws from my education in psychology and social work, my decades of work as an executive coach in Fortune 100 companies helping leaders at all levels navigate stress at work, the research I conducted for my book, “Overcoming Overthinking: 36 Ways to Tame Anxiety for Work, School, and Life” and my personal experience as someone who lives with mental illness -- and is living a happy, healthy, successful life.

    This is the ultimate self-help course: it’s helping you to help others around you (and you’ll definitely pick up some practical stress management techniques to use personally, too!)

    So what will this course cover?

    • Why we are so stressed right now (and why it’s not going away anytime soon)

    • Why we all need to have “The Talk" about stress at work

    • What does stress actually look like?

    • How we can step in without overstepping

    • Understanding why your colleagues might be afraid to share

    • Managing your personal beliefs about mental health

    • Creating a culture of trust

    • Don’t assume you know who is stressed out: How to be mindful of bias

    • How to show empathy without getting sucked in

    • How to listen when someone is sharing something personal

    • How to ask questions without pushing or prying

    • What to say and what not to say to someone who is struggling

    • Offering a "Help Menu" of 20+ ways to support your colleagues

    • Practical strategies, tips, and tools for helping others deal with anxiety, overwhelm, and burnout

    • What to do if you’re having a tough time, too

    Whether you think that mental health is way too personal for work -- or you can’t wait to start talking to your colleagues about how they’re coping -- this course is for you.

    Who this course is for:

    • Anyone curious about stress, burnout, anxiety, mental health and mental illness - for themselves or others
    • Professionals with people management responsibilities
    • Team members and individual contributors who want to be able to support their colleagues during stressful times
    • Leaders who are committed to creating a culture of inclusion and psychological safety around health and mental health
    • Human Resources professionals
    • Employee Wellbeing professionals
    • Diversity, Equity, Culture, and Inclusion professionals

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    Deborah Grayson Riegel
    Deborah Grayson Riegel
    Instructor's Courses
    I’m an instructor of Management Communication at the Wharton School of The University of Pennsylvania, and I partner with both Columbia Business School and Duke Corporate Education as a speaker and coach for their custom leadership development programs. I have also served as a Visiting Professor of Executive Communications at the Beijing International MBA Program at Peking University, China, where I prepared senior leaders from around the world to communicate more effectively in a growing global marketplace.As a regular columnist on leadership and communication for Harvard Business Review, Inc., Psychology Today, Fast Company and more, I focus on sharing practical, research-based approaches to common workplace challenges.I consult for companies including Amazon, BlackRock, Bloomberg, KraftHeinz, PepsiCo, and The United States Army. I combine my background in cognitive and social psychology, leadership coaching, presentation skills, appreciative inquiry, and, perhaps most importantly, improvisational and stand-up comedy, to help leaders and teams think on their feet and make thoughtful decisions about their impact. I believe that the most successful leaders are those who balance professional credibility with personal authenticity, combining their deep expertise with transparency about where they need to grow.I am the mom of twins Jake and Sophie, the wife of a fellow leadership coach, Michael, and the favorite human of our rescue dog Nash.
    Students take courses primarily to improve job-related skills.Some courses generate credit toward technical certification. Udemy has made a special effort to attract corporate trainers seeking to create coursework for employees of their company.
    • language english
    • Training sessions 26
    • duration 1:39:30
    • English subtitles has
    • Release Date 2022/11/22