REGISTER NOW: Uncomfortable Conversations: The Skills Crisis
REGISTER: 8THIRTYFOUR Skills Survival School Founding Cohort

Culture, Our Favorite C-Word

Written by

Share This Post:

punch today in the face text with a brick wall

A staggering 61% of Americans experience loneliness. In the COVID-19 era, just 37% of full-time workers exhibit high levels of resilience—or the ability to recover quickly from challenges—according to Cigna’s latest studies.

2020 knocked us all on our asses. We truly believe our culture at 8THIRTYFOUR has allowed us to build a stronger team and set a good foundation for 2021. We’ve made mistakes along the way. We’re growing, and it’s been hard and a bit painful at times, but ultimately, our culture has allowed us to prevail.

Mental health needs to be the focus in 2021. We must put our workers first and cultivate an environment where they can ask for help, be honest about their struggles and feel supported.

A study by Cigna identified that among workers who reported feeling lonely, more than one in 10 admitted the quality of their work often or always suffered. Workers who experienced loneliness were also five times more likely to miss work due to stress and thought about quitting their jobs more than twice as often as workers who were not lonely.

Not a single business owner could have planned for a pandemic, work from home and the mental health struggles both would cause.

The best advice we can give you is what worked for us.

Make it okay to ask for help

It isn’t easy admitting you are struggling. We are taught to “suck it up,” which isn’t going to cut it anymore. Your employees must have a designated individual on staff who they can speak with to express concerns, fears and struggles. Our HR & Finance Manager is the first stop for our staff, although they can approach any person on our leadership team. They can chat with her or our President, and the matter is then discussed in our leadership meeting.

Put policies in place

We implemented mental health days shortly after work from home became mandatory. We also made sure we reached out to each staff member to check in. We let them know it was okay to not be okay.

We’re still learning, and we’ve gotten things wrong. The only thing we can promise our staff is our commitment to them and the promise we will do better.

Building an empowered culture was Kim’s goal 15 years ago when she started 8THIRTYFOUR. Several years ago, culture fell off the rails and didn’t get back on track until the Entrepreneurial Operating System® was fully implemented.

EOS® gave us a baseline to make decisions and a system to follow to ensure we kept culture on track and focused on transparency and accountability.
If you haven’t heard of EOS®, reach out, and we’ll add you to our monthly support group.

Responses

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Search

Recent Posts

Something on Your Mind?

Everyone knows the skills gap exists. Not enough people are asking what it's actually costing us.

Kim is partnering with mibiznetwork for a new series focused on the Hard Cost of Soft Skills - what skills are missing, what businesses are doing because of it, and most importantly... the fix. 

You can watch the first episode intro at the link in bio.
This is your Monday reminder that nobody has it all figured out at first.

Owning what makes you weird and unique takes time... and work. 

You can start that work at a Big Deal Energy workshop. First one is on June 23. Link in bio.
The brands winning in AI search aren't doing anything new; they just never stopped doing what worked.

Kim was quoted in incmagazine alongside business leaders talking about generative engine optimization, and her message is one worth hearing right now. The terminology is different, the tools are different, but the foundation is exactly the same.

Full article at the link in bio.
Big Deal Energy starts with questioning the status quo and the rules you've been told to follow. They were built for blending in, not standing out.

Thank you to fox17morningmix for the spotlight on our upcoming workshops. 

Watch the full segment at the link in bio.
Being open and being honest aren't the same thing, and according to Grace Gavin, most leaders haven't figured that out yet.

Grace is the co-founder of Know Honesty, and she joined Maddie on the Happy Hour Hustle podcast to talk about the communication gaps costing teams more than they realize.

If you lead people, this episode is for you. Link in bio.