When the going gets tough… Building resilient teams through mental toughness

Martin Carver

Primeast's Martin Carver provides courses in mental toughness

High failure rates among British businesses are expected to persist above pre-recession levels until 2015 at the earliest, according to the latest Industry Watch report by accountancy firm BDO.

In the face of such economic turbulence companies are under mounting pressure to ensure their staff - and in particular managers and leaders - are resilient enough and armed with the necessary tools to guide their organisations through the recession and onwards to a successful future.

Long associated with elite sportsmen and women, mental toughness is a concept that is increasingly in demand among organisations under pressure to survive, grow and succeed. A programme designed to build mental toughness, aimed primarily at giving staff the psychological skills and tools to adapt in a positive way to organisational change, seeks to harness people's capacity to harness the power of stress to improve personal and organisational resilience.

Harrogate-based people development company Primeast has worked with over 30 organisations to help them develop mental toughness over the last two years.

As the company’s head of organisational development and change, Martin Carver, reports a surge in demand for its mental toughness programmes, which can range from a simple personal employee assessment with feedback and a development plan to be delivered in house, to a six-month coaching plan with reassessments incorporated at the end of the course to track progress.

Clients tell us that nurturing resilience among managers and other staff is equipping them to battle through these extraordinarily tough market conditions

Martin Carver, Primeast head of organisational development

“Mental toughness gives you the focus and tools to persevere, as well as to recover quickly from setbacks,” says Carver. “We are receiving feedback from clients on how nurturing resilience among managers and other staff is equipping them to battle their way through these extraordinarily tough market conditions.”

Carver and his team use an online profiling tool which asks a series of insightful questions in order to assess an individual’s resilience and ability to cope with stress. A development report is created which gives HR managers, or employers, a snapshot of the person’s – or team’s - current mental toughness, providing tips and suggestions on how to toughen up where necessary across areas of challenge, commitment, control and confidence. It also indicates if someone is too tough, and potentially blind to the impact they create.

Used throughout both public and private sector, mental toughness programmes can be invaluable for organisations entering a period of restructure or other change. “When a business is undergoing a restructuring process, it’s common for its people to develop change fatigue,” explains Carver.

“A mental toughness programme can ensure that, psychologically, your managers and other staff have the readiness and propensity to take the business forward. How do employees cope when they have just lost colleagues in restructure and redundancies? It’s tough on the people who are leaving, but don’t forget those who stay behind and pick up the pieces.”

But the mental toughness nurtured by programmes like this is not about creating a workforce of warriors, tough to the point of aggression. The idea, says Carver, is to help people understand where they are in relation to challenge, commitment, control and confidence, to give them a focus so that they can adapt more quickly and efficiently.

"Different roles require different levels of resilience,” he says. “It might be necessary to ramp up an individual’s mental toughness to enable them to keep themselves and colleagues focused and pulling together as a team through a period of change.”

An over-emphasis on toughness though can be counter-productive, adds Carver. “We encounter people who score all tens on the toughness scale but they tend to be arrogant, bloody minded and difficult to work with. In these cases toughness can become a weakness.”

Top tips for developing mental toughness

Challenge

  • Work with someone else to help you review and prioritise your work, especially when things are changing quickly
  • Time management tools and techniques could help you be better organised

Commitment

  • Take time to understand the people around you – their strengths and weaknesses. Play to their strengths and don’t expect things that they can’t reasonably deliver
  • Recognise contributions from others and give praise where it’s due

Control

  • Start you next piece of work with a colleague – share the challenge and the problems!
  • Relaxation techniques, such as breathing exercises or yoga, could help you cope more effectively with stress
  • Remind yourself that what you do really does matter – identify the benefits of what you do

Confidence

  • Praise yourself when you achieve – and seek every opportunity to do so
  • Change your work environment temporarily to set new challenges
  • Find ways to make sure that if you have something to say you say it

Get a mentor

  • List five positives about yourself and work with a manager, friend or colleague to identify these

 

 

Have your say

* Denotes a required field

  1. Yes, I want to use these details every time

  2. I have read and accept the terms and conditions

  •  

advertisement

Useful Links

 

Related Articles

  1. The macho culture which often prevails in the kitchen is wholly unacceptable.
  2. A change management expert says that charisma is hugely important in a leader.
  3. How to stay sanguine no matter how bad things get.
  4. President Barack Obama's election campaign captivated the world and can teach business a lot.
  5. Becoming a genuine thought leader requires you to get 'REAL' - so says Mindy Gibbins-Klein.

 

advertisement