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Leaders: How to stop panicking... and carry onWorking from home is the new corporate way of doing business as lockdowns and quarantines continue in several countries across the world in a bid to curb the spread of the coronavirus. As employees adapt and settle into making one location a place of recreation and professional productivity, some are adjusting to working harder than they ever have because of panicked leadership. ![]() © Thomas Pajot – 123RF.com Likely reasons for the panic are the sudden increased pressure, the challenges of remote working when one is accustomed to ‘walking the floor’; calling impromptu meetings; sitting next to employees to oversee completion of critical tasks; or delegating tasks at the water cooler. Compounding the situation is the emotional stress and the gaping economic uncertainty that lies ahead; the virus has “severed the flow of goods and people, stalled economies, and is in the process of delivering a global recession. Economic contagion is now spreading as fast as the disease itself...” – Harvard Business Review. These times require leaders to be calm, optimistic, pragmatic and courageous, to inspire teams for continued business output. Bear in mind though that stress and anxiety are not the enemies of great leaders, they are healthy natural responses that need to be managed constructively. If left unchecked, a panicked, anxious leader can exacerbate the situation, leading to apathetic and burned out employees. Here are four tips to help leaders overcome panic and distress:
![]() © Thomas Pajot – 123RF.com We are in the middle of a global change and nobody knows exactly what the “new normal” will look like. Retrenchments, salary cuts and shorter working weeks have already been implemented by many organisations with more cost-cutting actions to follow. Regardless of how we feel and behave, the situation is what it is; what is at our discretion is how we choose to react. We get to decide what meaning we give to the situation and this in turn influences how we behave. It could be a time to: reflect and improve skills; reinvent ourselves; restrategise; adapt to a changing world; or a time to find the strength to get through. About Maiyo FebiMaiyo is the founder and managing director of Native Worx, a boutique consultancy that empowers leaders to position transformation as an essential part of an organisation's growth & development through solutions in change management, corporate affairs and building a culture of personal accountability. View my profile and articles... |